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Retain Bilingual
Policy, National Teachers Group Asks Solon
Gullas Bill is Unconstitutional, Congress Told
By Tony PE. Rimando
DAVAO CITY—The National Organization of Professional
Teachers Inc. (NOPTI), the only association of public and private
school mentors accredited by the Professional Regulation Commission
(PRC), has cautioned the House of Representatives against adopting
English as the principal medium of instruction in basic education
as it batted for the retention of the bilingual policy of the Department
of Education (DepEd), it was reported here.
NOPTI president Dr. Martha Alegre-Mogol told participants
in the 2005 National Educators Congress held here recently that
the organization’s warning came after House Bill No. 2894
was endorsed by the House committee on basic education.
Mogol said the bill, authored by Cebu Rep. Eduardo
Gullas, sought to change the decades-long bilingual policy and require
English as medium of teaching in the elementary and secondary schools.
Mogol also said the bilingual program—which
calls for the use of English as medium of teaching in the subjects
Science, Mathematics and English and the use of Filipino in other
subjects—is mandated by the Constitution.
“Unless Congress first amends this constitutional
provision, it cannot pass another law which violates such provision,”
she said.
She also said that NOPTI, which has thousands of
teachers-members nationwide, found out the bilingual program has
not only upgraded the academic advancement of school children but
has also improved their fluency of the national language.
The NOPTI board members, who come from DepEd’s
17 regions, have disputed the claim of Congressman Gullas that the
bilingual program has caused the English deficiency of many students,
Mogol said.
She said NOPTI had noted that deficiency of students
in English as well as in science and mathematics is largely traced
to factors other than the bilingual policy.
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Originally published in the Manila Bulletin on November 20, 2005.
Reprinted with permission.
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