Wednesday, June 5, 2013
Laban ng UP Law, Laban ng Lahat!
UP Law is in crisis. Managed recently like a factory desperate to meet product standards in the face of growing criticism of its passing rates and rankings in the bar exams, the college has decided that, instead of developing students who underperform, it should be weeding them out.
Since June 2012, the UP Law admin has been haphazardly implementing revisions in academic policies aimed at dismissing as many students as possible under its watch. The admin started with the reinstatement of the QPI rule in addition to six other ways a law student may be dropped from the rolls. Under the QPI rule, freshmen must annually meet a 2.85 GWA while upperclassmen must have a yearly GWA of 2.75 to stay in the college. Despite promises of prospective application from Dean Danilo Concepcion, the QPI rule can now cover all of the upperclassmen’s grades since entrance into the college. Thus, students who previously never imagined the possibility of such rule must now, all of a sudden, meet its requirements; else, they are dismissed.
The QPI rule was followed by open directives from Dean Concepcion to mercilessly give students failing marks, as relayed by members of the faculty. For the freshmen of AY 2012-2013, the situation was aggravated by the mid-semester decision to implement departmental multiple-choice final exams despite the fact that law professors use substantially different syllabi and course content. Finally, the admin has also decided to institute grade ranges for appeals: Now, only freshmen with a GWA of 2.869 to 2.880 may appeal for retention while upperclassmen must have a cumulative GWA higher than 2.75 to be able to appeal.
The result is the 110: Out of only 667 enrolled students in the college, 17 were dismissed from the first sem and 93 were in danger of being dropped from the rolls by May 2013. Of this 110, only 23 appeals were granted.
While the University aims at quality education, this cannot be holistically had without respecting basic students’ rights and welfare. The hallmark of a UP education is not the rigor of the national university's academic requirements, which any other university or bar-oriented law school can provide, but its libertarian atmosphere of learning that produces critical and professionally prepared Iskolars para sa Bayan. With the University's tradition of academic freedom, UP students learn, develop, and mature into the leading practitioners and scholars our developing nation needs.
UP Law's unreasonable policy direction to kick out its students, all potential lawyers for the people, is a regressive move that pulls us backward from students' rights to student repression. While the college's recent poor performance in the bar exams cannot be denied, why must the admin transfer the burden of improving passing rates and rankings to the students? Instead of being interpreted as the mistake of underperforming students, poor performance might be a signal for UP Law to start rethinking its curriculum, its professors' syllabi and styles of teaching, and its ancient modalities of learning such as daily recitations designed to instill fear in students.
Seen from a larger perspective, the ease with which the UP Law admin instituted anti-student rules magnifies the shaky ground upon which the academic rights we enjoy today stand. We realize that college administrations are empowered to drastically and arbitrarily change policies without student consultation, and that these changes can be applied retroactively to the disadvantage of students.
The crisis in UP Law is therefore a reflection of a larger crisis in our University. While we take pride in UP's brand of academic freedom, we must ask: Are we really free? Until today, we assert that our tambayans are a right and not a privilege, that the implementing rules of the STFAP cannot be arbitrarily changed every year to the disadvantage of students deserving lower brackets than what are assigned, and that we have a right to see our grade breakdowns prior to official recording on the CRS. Indeed, while rules on student discipline are about to be consolidated this year in the 2012 Code of Student Conduct, UP ALYANSA's longstanding call to draft a code of students' rights have yet to even be considered.
The struggle for students' rights in UP is therefore far from over. Until the students victor, we must continue to fight for our rights. This academic year, we start with UP Law.
Suspend the QPI Rule in the UP College of Law!
No to unjust and unconsulted academic rules!
Iskolar para sa Bayan, pagtagumpayan ang ating akademikong kalayaan at mga karapatan!
Friday, March 22, 2013
ALYANSA's policy recommendations on STFAP and other tuition policies forwarded to the UP administration
Dialogue with Asst. Prof. Richard Philip Gonzalo (the official in charge of revising UP’s tuition programs) on STFAP and other tuition policies on 21 March 2013 at Malcolm Hall 307, UP College of Law.
Photo by JC Tejano (@jctejano on Instagram).
UP ALYANSA, BUKLURAN UP System, and other youth and student groups forward its position paper on the university's STFAP and other tuition policies to the UP Board of Regents, UP President Alfredo Pascual, the UPD Office of Scholarships and Student Services (OSSS), and Asst. Prof. Richard Philip Gonzalo (the official in charge of revising UP’s tuition programs).
ALYANSA and BUKLURAN's policy recommendations include the following:
- Repeal of Article 330 of the University Code, or the "no pay, no admission" rule
- Transparency in the STFAP by explaining to students in writing how their brackets were assigned
- Flexibility by reducing the proposed two-year bracket renewal period to one year
- Online STFAP application with the submission of electronic, instead of physical, documents for verification
- Equal application of STFAP bracketing for second-degree and graduate students without hiking tuition levels
- Yearly review of the STFAP by the admin and students
- Mode of payment in installments
- Deferred payment option without interest
- 100% tuition coverage of the existing student loans program
- Transportation allowance for UPCAT passers from distant areas
READ OUR POSITION PAPER IN FULL AT http://bit.ly/Z2Kxyc.
Iskolar para sa Bayan, pagtagumpayan natin ang QUALITY, RELEVANT at ACCESSIBLE EDUCATION... PARA SA UP, PARA SA BAYAN!
Monday, March 18, 2013
UP ALYANSA on the tragedy in UP Manila
We are one with the UP community in grief and frustration over what has transpired to one of our fellow Iskolars just recently. It is unthinkable that the state university, the university that should supposedly provide quality, relevant, and accessible education to Iskolars ng Bayan, would deprive an Iskolar of her right on financial bases. This should serve as an alarming wake up call to the administration to repeal repressive and unjust policies such as “no payment, no enrolment” schemes and forced Leave of Absence policies.
Problems like these are what socialized tuition and financial assistance are meant to solve; financial ability should never be a hindrance to our right to education. But it is obvious that the principles of socialized tuition have not been met. The administration has failed to do all it can to meet the needs of its Iskolars.
UP ALYANSA will continue the call for a higher budget on education. But in addition to this, we call for the administration to show that the higher budget we have received is used for the students; the administration must be transparent in its use of funds, always aiming to accommodate the students. We cannot tolerate the administration allowing the denial of education to Iskolars ng Bayan.
The principles of socialized tuition must also not be perverted. We call for review, consultation, and revision of the current STFAP scheme. The bracketing system must be revised to adequately accommodate the students. The payment policies must be relaxed to allow students to study in spite of their immediate financial ability. Lastly, loans and financial assistance programs must be made accessible and favorable to the students so that socio-economic condition will never be a hindrance for the availing of the state education that is due to them.
As we maintain our principles of social justice and social progress, we will continue strive to ensure that education is quality, accessible, and relevant. Although sad and mournful, we must now wake up to the realities of failures and let-downs of the current system and policies. As Iskolars para sa Bayan, we must actively involve ourselves in reformation that will support and accommodate the marginalized, powerless, and oppressed sectors of society as well as our fellow Iskolars para sa Bayan.
Thursday, February 21, 2013
Principled disagreement and anonymous black propaganda: A challenge
Over the past few days, I have been receiving reports of anonymous efforts to bring down Alex Castro in the race for USC Chair. As a fellow candidate and in behalf of UP ALYANSA, I wish to voice my strongest condemnation against these malicious attempts.
The campaign is a time not just to show off each candidate's and each political party's strengths and victories, but also a time to educate and to engage in a healthy, passionate, and principled discourse.
In the earlier part of this week, members of ALYANSA made a principled disagreement with Alex Castro's citation of wrong information on the sin tax law. Rooted in our advocacy to make this campaign more about platforms and less about personalities, we demanded an apology from Alex Castro and a retraction of the misinformation that the 15% allocation for tobacco farmers has been stricken off the sin tax law. To this day, we have not received any apology or retraction; so, our principled disagreement and demand continue.
But when a supposed screenshot of an alleged chat conversation between Alex and a "friend" cropped up, I was personally disappointed. Today, a perverted statement entitled "Sex Will Fix" was released in different areas in campus.
These are exactly what ALYANSA has been campaigning against. While we make sure to maintain our principled disagreement with Alex Castro and KAISA on the level of issues and platforms, efforts like these serve as roadblocks to our dream of an informed student body.
The anonymity of these efforts reveals exactly their purpose: Nothing more than to regress to personality politics and blur this campaign into becoming a pageant of reputations rather than clear platforms. I personally challenge the people behind these efforts to come into the open and make a principled choice to inform, rather than to maliciously attack. I challenge the people behind these to reveal their identities and the USC Chair candidate they support, if any, so the students may decide for themselves what to make of the propaganda.
As student leaders, it is our duty to inform and shape the debates in campus to become a discourse of principles, integrity, ideology, and platforms. This campaign is not about me; it is not about Alex Castro's alleged chat messages or motives. This campaign is about the students and their right to make an informed choice on their next University Student Council.
Carlo Brolagda
ALYANSA USC Chairperson candidate
February 20, 2013
Carlo Brolagda
ALYANSA USC Chairperson candidate
February 20, 2013
Tuesday, February 12, 2013
WE MADE HISTORY.
WE MADE HISTORY.
In a year, we passed in Congress the reproductive health and sin tax bills into laws. Through mass mobilizations and various direct negotiations, we convinced the government to increase the budget for the University and other state universities and colleges. After decades of systemic corruption and misgovernment, we detained former President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo and impeached her former Chief Justice Renato Corona.
In a year, we have mainstreamed the discourse of gender equality in campus. We stood firm in our condemnation of fraternity-related violence and, for the first time, filed a case as students against warring fraternities. We have institutionalized fiscal transparency and mechanisms of accountability in the USC. We have freed the USC from its former captivity in outdated dogma and transformed it into a body truly reflective of our passions and aspirations.
Today we are at a critical juncture, faced with an obvious choice: Do we continue our momentum of progressive change or do we fall back into irrelevance and empty rhetoric?
ITULOY NATIN ANG NAPAGTAGUMPAYAN. Our victories have only begun. As we weave our individual stories of hopes and dreams, we realize that, as a collective, we are headed towards one destination. As we build on our successes, we affirm our shared journey towards genuine student empowerment, social justice, and social progress.
PARA SA UP. In the advancement of our rights and welfare as Iskolars para sa Bayan, we abandon intangible promises and choose concrete solutions. We refuse sloganeering by merely opposing. We choose to propose. We have chosen to forward amendments based on students’ rights which have been successfully incorporated into the Code of Student Conduct. We choose a more just and equitable system of socialized tuition. We choose to formalize our freedoms and liberties with a national law on students’ rights and welfare.
PARA SA BAYAN. As we fight for the marginalized, oppressed, and powerless sectors in our society, we go beyond oversimplified classifications. We engage government from the outside and within. We refuse to battle wrongs with another wrong. We choose to be proactive. We have chosen to challenge impunity and patronage politics with a freedom of information law. We choose to end indecent labor conditions with a security of tenure law. We choose to address gender inequality with an anti-discrimination law.
Victory after victory, our choice becomes clearer: We choose to continue making history.
ITULOY NATIN ANG NAPAGTAGUMPAYAN. PARA SA UP, PARA SA BAYAN!
VOTE STRAIGHT ALYANSA SA USC ON FEBRUARY 28!
Monday, November 26, 2012
AS ONE NATION, WE SHALL NEVER FORGET
As one nation, we have claimed on countless occasions that we
could move forward as one body with one spirit, one Filipino people amidst the
physical and cultural barriers that separate us. We have envisioned a society
where the laws of the land apply to all, leaving no one exempt from necessary
reprimands and penalties in times of posing considerable threat and causing
damage to others.
Throughout the course
of our history, however, we have seen long years of tedious battles in court
that ended with implicated influential personalities walking away from heinous
crimes as free men only because of some loophole they claim to have found. And
yet we have seen how the victims and their families rallied the honest proofs
of how their fundamental rights have been trampled on like mere pieces of
trash. Is this how we want our own history textbooks to depict the Philippine
justice system?Indeed, justice delayed is justice denied.
Three years ago, 58
civilians were brutally murdered in Maguindanao. This massacre of innocent
Filipinos was set against a backdrop of political rivalry where those caught in
between the crossfire unwillingly gave up what could have been longer and
happier lives. Defenseless civilians were cruelly killed in a show of force
that left the whole nation outraged and dejected. But beyond the mourning and
the anger, the Filipino people did not fail to express their
disappointment in the government because of its lack of immediate response to
such a heinous crime. While there were already loud talks of whoever was behind
the catastrophe, it took a while before these claims were examined and acted
upon.
We, in UP Alyansa,
understand and fully believe in the value of honoring the due process because
it is fair and just – it is democratic and constitutional. However, we
also believe in the timely delivery of answers to the public and the
enactment of concrete courses of action in an appropriate timeframe.
Serving justice is not
just about releasing a ruling and handing out penalties whenever the court
finishes its examination, no matter if this takes decades. Serving justice
means efficient examination so the court can hand out its ruling and
corresponding penalties within an appropriate timeframe because those who have
done wrong, no matter how popular, powerful, and influential they may be, must
be punished in the shortest amount of time possible, given that due process was
upheld. We are certainly not for merely railroading punishment on all those
accused. We clamor for an efficient justice delivery system that acknowledges
the value of a realistic and truly responsive timeframe.
We acknowledge that
the judiciary also has other concerns outside the Maguindanao Massacre as this
is not the only case left unresolved. Nevertheless, we call for justice
for the 58 victims as this crime of extreme proportions manifest how
the rich and powerful have, and perhaps always can, maneuver their way out of
fair and suitable punishment.
We Filipinos still
live in terror because we know that none of the influential, so-called
masterminds who have been implicated were already proven guilty. We know that
until they are placed permanently behind bars and made to stay there for the
rest of their lives to make up for what they have done, they can still be
exempt from punishment and therefore set free, once again able to seize control
and forever reign in terror.
As one nation, let us
push for a lasting respect for the dignity of the human being and fundamental
freedoms, the foundation of a true democracy, through the immediate enactment
of the Anti-Enforced or Involuntary Disappearance Act and
other measures. As one nation, let us clamor for the timely delivery of
justice, and most of all, for the end of the culture of impunity that
haunts the Philippine justice system.
Thursday, November 22, 2012
Students march from Ateneo to UP, rally for Straw Bill
By Pamela P. Baluyot on November 21, 2012 in Beyond Loyola
STUDENTS FROM different
universities and youth groups in Metro Manila came together to celebrate the
International Students’ Day by marching from the Ateneo de Manila University to
the University of the Philippines (UP) Diliman last Saturday, November 17. The
participants of the parade expressed their support for the passage of House
Bill No. 2190, otherwise known as the Students’ Rights and Welfare (Straw)
Bill, in Congress.
Aside from students from UP
and the Ateneo, students from De La Salle University, Pamantasan ng Lungsod ng
Muntinlupa, the Polytechnic University of the Philippines, the University of
Santo Tomas and the University of the East also joined in the march. Members of
Akbayan Youth, World Youth Alliance (WYA) and the Student Council Alliance of
the Philippines were also present.
The celebration was a first
in the Philippines. Mickey Eva, president of the Coalition for Students’ Rights
and Welfare and currently Vice Chair of UP ALYANSA, said, “We organized the
event to call for [participation in the fight] for students’ rights and welfare
since it is international students’ day. The focus is, of course, students’
rights. We wanted to use this day to capture the attention or the imagination
of the entire country to focus its laws and policies also on students’ rights.”
The 23-year-old bill pushes
for the legislation of a magna carta for all students in all Philippine
schools, colleges and universities.
Ateneo Sanggunian President
Gio Alejo said, “We’re lucky as Ateneans because we’re able to participate in a
process like this, but other schools do not have the same privileges.” He
raised the concern of many students, such as tuition fee increase and the
insufficient budget for student councils and other activities.
Ninian Sumadia, a member of
Akbayan Youth, also mentioned security and safety on campus as among the
problems that need to be addressed. She cited the alarming violations of
students’ rights and welfare, such as rape cases and frat-related violence in
many schools across the country.
Meanwhile, WYA Regional
Director Christine Violago brought up issues concerning the poor quality of
facilities and education in many schools. “For WYA, the human person is the
greatest resource of the country, [which] is why we need to invest on
education,” she said.
When asked what the
ordinary student can do to help this campaign for students’ rights and welfare,
Eva said, “You could simply share for the education of students’ rights in your
university; you can report cases of Straw violations with the NYC [National
Youth Coalition] and you can also be as educated as other advocates when it
comes to students’ rights.”
Once implemented, the Straw
Bill is geared to address the concerns many students across the country are
currently facing. Heart Diño, chairperson of the UP Diliman student council,
said, “We want to continually spark the change as students… What we want now is
to really mobilize and capacitate the students [to fight] for their rights.” ###
Click for the original THE GUIDON article HERE.
Tuesday, November 20, 2012
In numbers, voice, and vision, youth power reigns at Int’l Students Day fete
By Tricia Aquino, Photos by Analy
Labor · Monday, November 19, 2012 · 12:01 pm
Jensen Gomez, a band from College
of Saint Benilde, rocks out at the UP Diliman Palma Hall. Photo by Analy Labor,
InterAksyon.com.
Some
200 students paraded from Ateneo de Manila University to the University of the
Philippines Diliman to mark International Students’ Day on Saturday,
culminating at UP’s Palma Hall to celebrate students’ rights and welfare with a
cause concert.
School
colors didn’t matter as students from Ateneo, College of Saint Benilde, De La
Salle University, Pamantasan ng Lungsod ng Maynila, Pamantasan ng Lungsod ng
Muntinlupa, Polytechnic University of the Philippines, University of Santo
Tomas, University of the East, UP Diliman, UP Manila, and UP Los Baños gathered
not only to have a good time, but to call for the passage of the STRAW
(Students’ Rights and Welfare) bill, as well.
Students from different
schools come together on International Students' Day, November 17, 2012. Photo
by Analy Labor, InterAksyon.com.
Essentially,
House Bill No. 2190 recognizes the rights of students to education and as
such entitles them to learning in an environment that promotes and honors their
rights and welfare; it asserts their political and civil rights in
decision-making policies inside and outside their school, especially in matters
affecting the rights and welfare of students.
Akbayan
Representative Walden Bello spoke to congratulate the students for throwing
their support for a piece of legislation that he and fellow members of the
House of Representatives had been advocating for years.
“The
purpose of the Students’ Rights and Welfare Bill is really to
institutionalize the participation of students in educational governance,” said
Bello, the bill’s principal author, to the crowd. He noted that hrough the
“key piece of legislation,” all students will be able to attain “quality
education” for their “better good.”
Akbayan Representative Walden Bello speaks about the Students' Rights and Welfare Bill, of which he is principal author. Photo by Analy Labor, InterAksyon.com.
Noel
Cabangon, who gave his rendition of Bob Marley and the Wailers’ “Get Up, Stand
Up,” called on the youth to always do so for their rights. He said, “The youth
are instrumental to change in our country. We saw that during the Martial Law
years. Who took the lead to topple down the dictatorship? The students. Change
started from the students. Even if you look at the history of other countries,
where do revolutions begin? Where does change begin? From the students.”
This
was the reason why he lent his voice to the event.
Akbayan Representative
Walden Bello sings Bob Marley and the Wailers’ “Get Up, Stand Up” with musician
and activist Noel Cabangon. Photo by Analy Labor, InterAksyon.com.
“I’m
here because there is a need to protect the rights of students inside the
schools. There should still be room where they can express their sentiments
without fear from being suspended or expelled, etcetera.” Respect, he added,
should also be given to “the right for students to be heard not only in the
issues (at) school but also the issues outside of it, because they are also
first and foremost citizens of this country.”
Four
other musical acts made heads bob during the celebration: Kaleidoscope Eyes,
Jensen Gomez, She’s Only Sixteen, and Miko Pepito.
These students marched
along Katipunan Avenue, Quezon City, calling for a piece of legislation that
will protect their rights and welfare. Photo by Analy Labor, InterAksyon.com.
“It
was fun for everyone,” said Mickey Eva, leader of the event’s organizing team
and president of the Coalition for Students’ Rights and Welfare. The group is
made up of student organizations all over the country. “It was the first time
that the celebration for students’ rights and welfare, and for International
Students’ Day, was this big. I’m very fulfilled that these organizations came
together, worked with each other, for the promotion of students’ rights and
welfare.”
With
lawmakers and civil society organizations supporting them, he said, “It gives
us optimism and hope.”
InterAksyon.com
is a proud media partner of the event. ###
Click for the original InterAksyon.com article HERE.
Saturday, November 17, 2012
Students parade for their rights on Int’l Student’s Day, November 17
By Elyse Go, InterAksyon.com ·
Friday, November 16, 2012 · 5:48 pm
“#SARAPMAGINGESTUDYANTE lalo
pag napasa ang STRAW Bill” is probably what these college
students would want to shout out as 1,000 participants are expected to
march along Katipunan Avenue in Quezon City on November 17 (Saturday) in
observance of International Students’ Day.
The parade is inspired
by the annual event commemorated in Europe that began with political origins
but later on evolved with the intention of celebrating the diversity of
cultures thriving in its universities.
Mickey Eva VIII,
president of the Student’s Rights and Welfare group, an alliance of 60
organizations and 40 universities nationwide, said in a media conference that
for the first time, the Philippines will be celebrating International Students
Day with the rest of the world through its lineup of activities.
In the same media
conference, Eva said that the mission of the national commemoration is to show
the important voice of the youth in shaping the country’s future. Thus, the
coalition, she adds, is also pushing for the legislations of the Students’
Rights and Welfare (STRAW) Bill or House Bill No. 2190.
Former Congresswoman
Risa Hontiveros, champion of the Bill, describes the significance of the event:
“It is the worldwide event that honors the push for the rights and capabilities
of the students, as in the Philippines, through the call for passage of the
Students Rights and Welfare (STRAW) Bill.”
The parade starts
outside Ateneo’s Blue Eagle gym at 3 pm and to sent off by Ateneo’s Sanggunian
President Gio Alejo. It will end at the steps of UP Diliman’s Palma Hall at 5
pm, where a concert will take off.
Part of the concert
program are messages by Akbyan Party List Rep. Walden Bello, author of the
Bill; Asec. Gio Tingson, Commissioner at Large of NYC; Hon. Cecilia Quisumbing,
Commission on Human Rights; Mr. Harvey Keh of Kaya Natin; Noel Cabangon, Vice
President of Dakila; and Ms. Christine Violago, World Youth Alliance Regional
Director; and Mr. Lance Katigbak, Executive board member of Philippine Model
Congress.
In partnership with the
STRAW coalition are other organizations: the Student Council Alliance of the
Philippines, National Youth Parliament, Akbayan Youth, Young Progressives
Southeast Asia, and Dakila.
Hontiveros and Eva will
lead a pledge of commitment and signing of manifesto in support of of the Bill,
to be witnessed by other invited political leaders and government officials.
The concert program of
activities shall be hosted by UP Alyansa ng mga Mag-aaral para sa Panlipunang
Katwiran at Kaunalaran.
Click for the original InterAksyon.com article HERE.
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