LGUs, schools, education advocates target zero dropout in public schools

Published by rudy Date posted on March 10, 2011

MANILA, Philippines – Mayors and top level local government officials, school administrators, and other education advocates who attended Synergeia Foundation’s 8th National Education Summit have committed to hammer down to zero the dropout rates in public schools in their localities.

Synergeia trustee Washington Sycip encouraged the participants to focus on the reduction of dropout rates and not just improving public schoolchildren’s performance. He said good education would lift families across the country from poverty, as well as ensure that democracy would work.

“When people are hungry, they sell their votes. Only when poverty is reduced will democracy really work in this country,” Sycip said.

Over a hundred top level representatives (mayors, vice-mayors and other LGU officials) from almost 50 municipalities from Cagayan Province to the Autonomous Region for Muslim Mindanao attended the Summit. One provincial governor, Sarangani Gov. Miguel Rene Dominguez, headed the province’s contingent.

There were also 114 educators from the Department of Education like teachers, principals, supervisors, and superintendents who supported the new target, as well as education advocates from the corporate sector like Metrobank Foundation and Team Energy.

Synergeia president and CEO Milwida Guevara said efforts to reduce dropout rates would complement measures to improve students’ achievement tests through trainings for teachers, administrators, and parents as well as getting community support.

During the workshop sessions, participants agreed that supporting the DepEd’s Alternative Learning System (ALS) that targets out-of-school youth is the country’s hope for bringing children back to school. In ARMM where the USAID-funded Education Quality and Access to Learning and Livelihood Skills Project invested heavily on hiring instructors specifically for out-of-school youth, the ALS program has started to bring children back to school.

The 8th National Education Summit was organized with the assistance of the DepEd, DILG, USAID, World Bank, Ford Foundation and Ateneo de Manila University. It was held last Feb. 18-19, at the Ateneo Professional Schools in Makati City. –(The Philippine Star)

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