The way tuition rates are going up, however, quality education is soaring beyond the reach of a growing number of Filipinos. Apart from basic tuition, many schools are collecting miscellaneous fees that sometimes approximate the amount of the tuition itself. Even some public schools have learned to collect such miscellaneous fees from impoverished students.
The other day the Commission on Higher Education put its foot down, imposing a cap on increases in tuition and miscellaneous fees in private colleges and universities. CHED officials do not want increases to go beyond the inflation rate. Yesterday Malacañang ordered a similar rate cap on state-run higher educational institutions.
This is surely welcome news for the public. Now the government must make sure the cap is implemented. The government lacks personnel for most functions in the provision of education. Some school operators learned to collect miscellaneous fees precisely to go around limits on tuition increases. Growing complaints from parents and students alerted education officials to the problem. If the government lacks personnel to enforce the cap on fee increases, it should provide a mechanism through which complaints can be filed quickly by parents and students. If miscellaneous fees cannot be eradicated, the government must meet with educators to standardize the types of fees that can be collected. School operators should welcome these moves and cooperate. In these hard times, unless they are operating the best schools, they could price themselves out of the market.