Background
A couple of weekends ago, there was the
ACET (Ateneo College Entrance Test). I remember that particular weekend
because my groupmates and I were preparing for our report in Perennialism
inside the campus, while making sure that we would not be part of the traffic
jam in certain hours along Katipunan.
The following Monday, right before our
report, we were discussing in class about the "changes" in curriculum
as compared to the past. Many examples of "changes" were given
in class, but in the end, a classmate mentioned (wherein Ma'am strongly agreed)
that there is really not much of a difference between education in the past and
at present time, which would be a great dismay to Pragmatists (a philosophical
viewpoint that we just finished discussing the week before that time).
For a fleeting moment, while I was
thinking of an ideal educational setting wherein our students undergo authentic
assessments, utilize real Higher Order Thinking Skills (HOTS), and maximize student
learning time through the use of current technology, I found myself thinking
about the ACET again, the other college entrance tests, and all other
standardized tests that students need to take. What do our learners need to
know and what do they need to undergo in order for them to enter the
universities of their choice? Are our college entrance tests and other
standardized tests measuring HOTS or the rest of what traditional schooling
teaches us?
IS
THIS THE (unofficial) PHILIPPINE EDUCATIONAL GOAL?
Standardized tests and college entrance
tests somehow negate other non-traditional approaches to education because
these tests are the immediate concern of our students, their families, and
in turn the schools too. We want our students to receive higher
education, of course, and they need to pass the college tests, so having that
as a goal (without necessarily saying that it is a goal of education), we then
give our students the typical traditional type of schooling that would allow
them to pass the entrance tests they need to pass. Are these the
unofficial and unwritten Philippine educational goal? -- to have high scores in
the NAT (which used to be NEAT) and the NSAT, and to pass the college entrance
tests?
If we try to aim for an education that
is truly authentic, relevant, and aiming for HOTS, wouldn't that mean we need
to have a complete overhaul of the system we are used to -- from preschool,
primary school, high school, college, and graduate school and so on. How would
students be chosen to enter a university for instance? Definitely the ACET and
all the other standardized tests should be changed too, right?
As I explained earlier, it was only for
a fleeting moment that I thought of this... It remained unspoken and unwritten.
Our group continued to report on Perennialism, and life went on. I went back to
work the following day, and I did not think about it consciously again, until
the following class meeting when the group of Progressivism reported.
They ignited the question in me.
Actually, two questions were ignited in me.
That was one. And the second was – in
which school would you put your children?
I personally was a product of a
traditional school in grade school and high school, but I somehow encountered
more progressive professors in the university or at least those who were
attempting to be more progressive with their approach (which I can only
identify now that I am aware of what being progressive truly means).
Okay, I would have to correct myself
here. I am not just a "product" of those schools I attended and
neither are the rest of the people who attended their own schools, progressive
or otherwise. I was born with a certain disposition as a child and so did
everyone else. It would be a matter of both "nature" and "nurture"
how a person becomes who he/she is. Because I am not in the position to speak
about other people's experiences, I would now just refer to mine.
Prior to going to school, I was more
observant and quiet, a stark contrast to my two older siblings who were very
outspoken. People would not even know that I was around, because I'd sit
quietly in a corner and watch others. If I were suited to attend an all-girls
Catholic school rather than a progressive one, I wouldn't know. I don't think
my parents were aware of that when they made their choice in the late
1980s. I just remember that we were to receive Catholic education because
my parents did not. They were students of the state university and the
preparatory school of the university, and so they needed to rely on our chosen
schools to make us more Catholic.
We were sent to traditional Catholic
schools -- an all-girls school for the females and an all-boys school for the
male. We grew up going to Sunday mass as a family every week, and yet not all
five of us children became truly practicing Catholics if given a choice. One
point that could be taken here is that one could not rely on the school alone
to mold children. There are so many factors involved such as disposition of the
human person, family life, school experiences, other human interaction, and
what a person makes out of all these.
Now that I am studying Education and this
question is directed at me, I am stumped. Where would you put your child?
GOALS
OF A PROGRESSIVIST EDUCATION
From what I have understood in the
report about Progressivism, a growing child and his/her needs are of utmost
importance. Education would be directed
at social reform, and education should provide freedom that would allow a
child’s natural development. Again, the goals sound very ideal and appealing. Who
would not want an education like this? Even with this option/approach present to us today, majority of our schools still utilize the traditional approach to education.
I guess the other important question
now is how possible is it for the progressivist goals to be attained in our context? How much of these goals are truly
attained in progressive schools in the Philippines? And what are the beliefs of the stakeholders?
PARENTING
and MAKING CHOICES
I began to think of the school where I
could put my son in the future. Should it be a progressive or a traditional
one? If I put my son in a progressive school, how would he eventually fare in
the universities with very traditional approaches to Education? How would he
enter the universities in the first place? If I put him in a traditional school, would I be depriving
him of what he could actually learn and become? How would my son fit in these kinds of schools?
Then there is the concept of home schooling.
I have heard rave reviews about home schooled children, and how the issue of
socialization is being addressed by sending these children to activities with
other home schooled children such as soccer, capoeira, violin lessons, etc. It
reminds me somehow of American colonists’ farmhouses in the 1600s where plenty
of children used to be schooled at home or the royal European bloods who had
their teachers/tutors at home.
With the various schools we can choose from now, is this a stand made by
particular parents that the schools we have are not good enough? Or are more parents afraid for their
children who could possibly be exposed to bullying and possible gun pointing
within campus walls at a young age?
I am currently teaching in a school
that holds the position of practicing the best elements of progressive and
traditional approaches. We have a
small class size with a maximum of 25 students. I teach a class of 11 girls who
seem to be the recipient of all the new methods and insights I am gaining
from graduate school. I see the
school bloom and grow with one year being added each year. Because I am within that system, I see
our strengths as much as I see our mistakes. I am a part of it, growing as an
educator myself, making my own mistakes and learning from them as well.
Having a traditional and Catholic education myself and being immersed in a Catholic international school that practices some progressive approach to education, I still cannot answer the question on which school to put my child in. I have not decided on where to put
my son in the future.
I do have my inclinations and inkling, but I cannot fully decide on it for now. Perhaps it’s because I have not met my son yet. He is still currently kicking inside my womb as I type this. And without knowing him, I cannot make a full decision for him. After all, I believe that he comes to this world not as tabula rasa. He comes to this world as the person he is, with a disposition that he has, and then once I know those, we can decide where it is best that he becomes who he wants to be.
I do have my inclinations and inkling, but I cannot fully decide on it for now. Perhaps it’s because I have not met my son yet. He is still currently kicking inside my womb as I type this. And without knowing him, I cannot make a full decision for him. After all, I believe that he comes to this world not as tabula rasa. He comes to this world as the person he is, with a disposition that he has, and then once I know those, we can decide where it is best that he becomes who he wants to be.