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Saturday, November 23, 2024

PHINMA policy forum advances equal access to private tertiary education in PH with year-long program

Philippine-based conglomerate PHINMA facilitated the Private Education Toward Nation Building, a policy forum powered by its educational arm, PHINMA Education. 

PHINMA holds its Private Education Toward Nation Building Forum with over 150 education stakeholders in attendance to advance the dialogue on the complementarity of private and public tertiary education in the Philippines. Photo shows (from left) PHINMA Corporation Vice President for Public Affairs Peter Perfecto, Program Director of Global Schools Forum (GSF) Kavita Rajagopalan, and Education Specialist for Higher Education at the Asian Development Bank (ADB) Meekyung Shin.

Through presentations by Kavita Rajagopalan, Program Director of Global Schools Forum (GSF) and Meekyung Shin, Education Specialist for Higher Education at the Asian Development Bank (ADB), the forum steered and encouraged discussion on the way private tertiary education institutions could complement public education in the Philippines as a response to the current educational crisis in the country.

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“While the public sector’s education spending per person in the country has grown robustly over the past 25 years, we continue to perform poorly in international standardized student assessments. This is a clear indicator that we have much to do and increasingly little time to do it,” said Ramon del Rosario Jr., Chairman and CEO of PHINMA Corp. 

“We in the private sector believe that we can contribute to changing the course of history. Private education institutions can complement the public sector in improving the quality of education in the country,” he added.

Dr. Chito Salazar, President and CEO of PHINMA Education, also emphasized that “there should be complementarity between the private and public sectors, where the private sector can offer education services that normally come from public schools.” 

“This is so the government will not need to build or produce new schools. The public and private sectors need to work together to really maximize our efforts, facilities, and resources to solve the learning crisis,” Salazar said.

The Private Education Towards Nation Building Forum, held at The Fifth at Rockwell, Makati, gathered over 150 education leaders and stakeholders, including heads of the Philippine Association of Colleges and Universities (PACU), Philippine Business for Education (PBEd), Private Education Assistance Committee (PEAC), and Catholic Educational Association of the Philippines (CEAP).

A 2021 study by the Philippine Institute for Development Studies (PIDS) revealed that education spending per person had increased over the last 25 years, with educational expenditures increasing by about 6.4% annually within the last 15 years alone. This surpassed the growth in per capita income. 

Filipino households bear the brunt of these expenses, contributing to the nation’s poor performance in international standardized student assessments.

In the 2018 Program for International Student Assessment (PISA), the Philippines ranked lowest among 79 participating countries in reading comprehension, and second lowest in both mathematical and scientific literacy.

To help fill this gap, Global Schools Forum (GSF) Program Director Kavita Rajagopalan noted the importance of foundational education–or teaching the basic literacy, numeracy, and transferable skills to schoolchildren–in the Philippine context.

“86% of education innovations originate in the non-state sector,” said Rajagopalan. “The sector is a powerful partner for driving the innovation in education needed to end the learning crisis.”

Meekyung Shin, Asian Development Bank (ADB) Education Specialist for Higher Education, also noted that almost all developing countries in the Asia and Pacific are middle income countries, which means that they face surplus in lower level skills and big shortages in higher level skills. 

“As successful countries like Korea and Japan have shown, private education plays a critical complementary role in improving access, quality and relevance of higher education,” Shin said.

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