Gov’t to spend P92.3 B for new teachers, classrooms, books, labs
Government will be spending P92.3 billion next year to hire more teachers, build classrooms, close logistical gaps and meet the growing needs of 25 million public school students.
Senate President Pro-Tempore Ralph Recto described the proposed outlay as “unprecedented” both in money involved and expected outcomes.
Noting that the Department of Education’s budget will almost double to P309.4 billion next year from P174 billion in 2010, Recto said “mere simple addition was not the math used in computing it.”
“Numbers don’t lie. The government is investing more money in education,” he said.
For next year, government will be creating 39,066 teacher positions, which will cost P9.35 billion in initial salaries.
If hired, it will raise the number of authorized DepEd positions, including those of non-teaching employees, to 709,000, Recto explained.
“Also in the 2015 national budget is a funding request for P52.88 billion for the construction of 31,728 classrooms, repair of 9,500 classrooms, purchase of 1.3 million chairs, building of 13,586 toilets and water facilities, and 455 technical-vocational laboratories,” Recto said.
Government will also be buying 70 million textbooks and other instructional materials at a cost of P3.46 billion.
It will also outfit 24,208 classrooms with computers and IT equipment. “These e-classrooms, some of which will be WiFi-able, will have a total price tag of P8.53 billion,” Recto said.
To boost science and technology education, some 7,733 science and math laboratory equipment packages worth P4 billion will be procured.
Recto had earlier bewailed that 36,328 elementary schools “do not have a decent science lab.”
Other expenditures, he said, are in the form of direct assistance to students or for the training of teachers. “It will not just be about portals and mortar but helping people to achieve their potentials.”
Under this category is the P8.4 billion earmarked for one million Government Assistance to Students and Teachers in Private Education (GASTPE) scholars.
The GASTPE program involves the buying of seats in private schools to accommodate the spillover of enrollees from congested public schools.
As to teacher training, P2.05 billion will be set aside for the “retooling program” for 160,000 teachers to prepare them for the K to 12 curriculum.
Recto said public schools “will not only be nourishing the mind but the body as well” as it will enroll 630,000 undernourished kids in a feeding program for which P1.37 billion will be appropriated.
“Ito yung programang hindi ka lang magpapasok ng karunungan sa isip kundi pagkain rin sa katawan,” Recto said.
To bolster school participation rate, DepEd will also be reaching out to one million out-of-school youth under the “Abot-Alam Program”, which will include alternative learning schemes and adult classes, all of which will cost P1.97 billion.
On a problem bugging many schools – the lack of land to build classrooms on -P200 million will also be appropriated for the purchase of school lots, Recto revealed.
Recto said education spending of the government “is a combination of catching up with existing backlogs and frontloading for future needs.”
According to Recto, the government’s K to 12 program requires huge investments and the budget is amortizing in advance what needs to be bought.
“Previous budgets were downpayments. The 2015 budget is a continuation of the installment plan,” said the senator.
While DepEd’s budget is officially pegged at P309.4 billion in the National Expenditure Program, the Department of Budget and Management claims that when other education-related expenditures lodged in other departments or parked in Special Purpose Funds are transferred or spent, they could boost DepEd’s budget to P365 billion.