Lower House approves expanded aid to students, teachers in private schools, may lead to tuition increase

By: Reigh John Bench Almendras
January 30, 2025
2727

Photo from: DepdEd: Private Schools in the Philippines Can Continue Blended Learning Option For SY 2022-2023

The House of Representatives (HOR), in its final reading with 200 lawmakers in the affirmative, zero in the negative, and three abstentions, approved House Bill (HB) No. 11214 known as the Private Basic Education Vouchers Assistance Act which seeks to expand financial and training assistance to private school teachers and students.

HB 11214 aims to recalibrate sections of Republic Act (RA) 8545 known as the Government Assistance to Students and Teachers in Private Education Act (GASTPE) and provide more avenues for faculty and students of private schools to achieve quality education in the country. 

In its press release in affirmation of the bill, the Senate explains the intention of the initiative, stating “The bill supports teachers by providing in-service training funds, scholarships for advanced studies, and financial support for institutional enhancements in accredited private basic education schools.” 

If approved into law, HB 11214 will be implemented to select qualified schools and will be under the Department of Education (DepEd) which shall establish the Bureau of Private Education (BPE). 

BPE, as a new office under DepEd, will oversee the implementation of the voucher program and ensure that all participating private schools comply with quality and efficiency standards to be set upon the approval of the bill.

The approval of the bill will also lead to permission for accredited schools under DepEd to increase their tuition fees provided that 70% of such increase will be allotted to  the payment of “salaries, wages, allowances, and other statutory benefits of teaching and non-teaching personnel, except administrators who are principal stockholders of the school,”

“At least 20 percent of the tuition increases shall go to the improvement or modernization of buildings, equipment, libraries, laboratories, gymnasia, and similar facilities and to the payment of other costs of operation,” the bill read.

Groups representing teachers and staff of educational institutions contested the bill, arguing that its approval into law might result in an increase in tuition fees without restraint. 

The Council of Teachers, Staff of Colleges and Universities in the Philippines (Cotescup) shared that the previous version of the bill repeals Section 5(2) of RA 6728, which dictates that 70% of the subsidized amount for tuition fee or its increases shall go to the payment of salaries, wages, allowances and other benefits of teachers and staffs of private schools.

Pasig City Rep. Roman Romulo, in addressing groups’ concerns, noted that the bill reflected the terms of the current law—that 70 percent of a tuition hike would go to the salaries and benefits of teachers and staff.

Comments

  1. Letran suffers heartbreaking loss against rival San Beda, ends NCAA 101 run as first runner up.
  2. Honoring Bonifacio: Rallying Against Corruption
  3. Knights return to familiar territory with an old foe standing in the way
  4. Letran sweeps Perpetual, back in the Finals after 3 years
  5. Preparing future tourism professionals, one event at a time
  6. AquaKnights close out NCAA Season 101 with steady finish
  7. Gilas dominates first round of FIBA qualifiers, gears up for second window against New Zealand and Australia
  8. Speak Up forum tackles the value of “diskarte o diploma”
  9. Knights silence Altas to take semis game 1
  10. Thousands join ‘Trillion Peso March’ as Filipinos demand accountability
  11. Estrada’s triples burn chiefs, Knights semis bound
  12. Woman, Life, Freedom
  13. Knights extend season hopes after trouncing Chiefs
  14. Letran launches E-Waste Management Program
  15. Letran kicks off 405th founding year with Colegio Week 2025, return of amusement rides
  16. Manalili leads charge against San Beda, drops 26 to close elimination round
  17. Final phase of NSTP Lecture Series 2025 promotes advancement rights and inclusion for marginalized sectors
  18. Pride on the line: Ricardo, Knights stay locked in despite non-bearing San Beda showdown
  19. Once a Knight, Always a Knight: Celebrating the 108th Letran Alumni Homecoming
  20. How Uwan and Tino exposed the Philippines’ fragile defenses
  21. Enlightening the unwary: A committed mission to end human trafficking
  22. Officials outline the start of Nazareno 2025 Festivities
  23. Beyond the Boards: Vince Petalver’s Journey to Success
  24. ROSARIUM: Prayers for living evils
  25. Letran storms back, halts Castillo’s heroics to top EAC
  26. PH launches ASEAN 2026 chairmanship with focus on AI, and regional unity
  27. Letran Chess Team seeks breakthrough in next matchup versus Perpetual
  28. LCV, CED hold bloodletting drive in partnership with DOH-PBC
  29. Letran slips in Group B standings after tough loss to Benilde
  30. Enrile passes away at 101, a lifetime of power and controversy remembered
  31. “RICH is open for everyone” – RPD
  32. Finding Her Way: How Evita Aberilla Turned Uncertainty into Triumph
  33. Typhoon Uwan death toll climbs to 27
  34. From Provinces to the City: Letranites’ Lives Away from Home
  35. Letran-Manila students hold outreach day promoting health, rights, and culture for the elderly
  36. To Keep Going: One Step Back, Two Steps Forward
  37. NSTP Lecture Series 2025 opens; highlights culture, gender, and governance
  38. ICC warrant for Sen. Dela Rosa under verification by DOJ over drug war allegations
  39. Estrada leads redemption win, defuses Heavy Bombers
  40. Marcos Jr., VP Sara Q3 trust, performance ratings drop – OCTA Survey
  41. 114 fatalities under Typhoon Tino – NDRRMC
  42. Dela Rama hits game-winner as San Sebastian snaps Letran’s hot streak
  43. Letran’s Manalili steps up, claims NCAA Player of the Week award
  44. Bill seeks lifetime validity, free issuance of PWD IDs
  45. Santos, Omega shine as Letran cruises past Arellano for fifth straight win
  46. PH orders full implementation of ‘Sagip Saka’ Act to boost farm incomes