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VOLUME XXIV No. 17
Tagbilaran City, Bohol, Philippines
November 07, 2010 issue
 

Education crisis? - Not if country listened to CPG

 

DECADES of neglect has caused a chronic illness to the country's education system, one that may have never happened if the country listened to former President Carlos P. Garcia half a century ago. In fact, according to Education Secretary Bro. Armin Luistro, the Boholano president has seen the “education crisis” and called for changes to heal the problem. As early as 1959, Garcia has called for a review of the government's financing program for the elementary and secondary schools to make it sustainable. The year before that, the Boholano teacher, orator, poet, lawyer and public servant, apparently felt the problem and suggested reforms.

He accordingly called for a full day instruction for primary education and lobbied for reduced size of classes from 60 to 40. That same year, the poor man from Sitio Luy-a, Barangay san Roque has called for the use of vernacular instruction on the first two years in the elementary, Luistro, who was the keynote speaker during the 114 th Carlos P. Garcia Day in Bohol enumerated the reforms proposed by the most illustrious Boholono son. Apart from a living a distinctive life as politician and statesmanship who helped prop up the precursor Association of South East Asian Nations in the South East Asian Treaty Organization, Luistro said he believes that the Garcia's first two years as a public school teacher at the Bohol Provincial High School has shaped his personality. Luistro sees the two years of his (CPG) life as the most critical as his being a teacher in the public school had in him the greatest impact on how he was to cover his government after he would assume the country's top seat after the death of President Ramon Magsaysay.

CPG made a lasting impression on how to care for our bother Filipinos, Luistro intoned, not after reminding Boholanos of the Filipino First Policy and the Austerity program he played to the hilt. “Every President leaves a lasting legacy, he left his by enunciating the Filipino First Policy.” And when we see the government urging for the public-private sector partnership being frontloaded by the 2oth century Aquino Administration, as early as 1961, the private-public sector partnership has already been used by Garcia to help the public schools, Luistro said. (racPIABohol)

 
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