| "Parents
take the first responsibility to educate their children."
BOOKS and school buildings
alone do not make a learned child. Bulacan learned this the
hard way when results of the National Education chievement
Test (NEAT) given to public elementary school students came
back with horrendous results.
In 2000, a typical student
from Bulacan showed a report card thatwould make his mother
weep: a rating of 39.40% in Math and a slightly better 40.23%
in English. The national averages were hardly any better at
50% and 52% but
with this dismal performance, Bulakeño students were
already scraping the bottom of the pan.
Jolted to its feet, the
provincial government turned the educational system inside
out to determine what’s causing poor reading, computational
skills, and dismal comprehension
in Bulacan’s 496 schools. They found out a crucial cog
to a child’s learning wheel was missing: the parents.
“Parents take the
first responsibility to educate their children, not the teachers,
not DepED,” said Governor Josefina M. dela Cruz.
Project JOSIE (for Joint
Systems Improvement in Education) was thus launched in February
2001 to address the issue. It had two objectives:improve learning
competency in English and improve computationaland comprehension
skills in Math.
The project covered elementary
school students from grades 1 to 6. From 2001 to 2004, it
required P35 million in funding from the provincial government
and grants.
A special workbook was developed
for students, written by the teachers themselves. The books
were designed to match local needs and cost only P23 compared
to P120 in commercial bookstores.
Parents and teachers were
linked in an organization called SAMAKKA (Samahan ng mga Magulang
sa Karunungan at Kabutihan).
The 2003 NEAT results showed
remarkable improvement in learning performance: 76% in reading
skills and 72% in comprehension skills; and 82% in computational
skills and 71.5% in mathematical comprehension skills.
Despite political wrangling
in the province, Gov. dela Cruz is confident the project will
outlive her term of office.
“Politicians will
always listen to the people’s demands. Whoever succeeds
me cannot ignore this project,” she said. “This
is one project that has moved on its own in spite and despite
me.”
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