President-elect Ferdinand “Bongbong” Marcos Jr. wants to bring back the glory days of the Philippines when it comes to academics.
“We have to do a lot to recover our very good grading before,” Marcos said in a press conference Monday, June 20.
“Pag ka tayo tinitignan ng Asia, yung literacy rate, yung pagsalita ng english, pati sa science, sa math, mataas tayo noon eh (Whenever our Asian neighbors looked at us in the past, they would see that our literacy rate, our english speaking skills, as well as our science and math proficiency were high),” he said. "Kailangan natin balikan yan. Mahirap mag-compete kung hindi natin ayusin yung training ng mga kabataan natin (We need to go back to that. It will be hard to compete if we can’t fix the training of our youth),” the 64-year-old son of the late President Ferdinand Marcos Sr. said.
One of the first major decisions that Marcos made coming out of the May 9 elections was to designate his UniTeam running mate, Vice President-elect Sara Duterte as incoming Department of Education (DepEd) secretary.
This made Duterte the first name in the incoming Marcos Cabinet.
In the same presser, Marcos bared his instruction to Duterte to assist and train the country’s teachers.
“Ang aking laging pinapaalala sa kanya ay yung mga teacher. Kailangan alalayan ang mga teacher, kailangan i-training ang mga teacher para maganda ang maging trabaho nila (What I always remind her about are the teachers. The teachers must be assisted, they must be trained so they may perform their jobs better),” Marcos said.
“Ang mga teacher naman, yan ang pinakamadaling turuan, yung teacher eh (Teachers are the easiest people to teach),” he said, adding that there must be a “a program in place to support our teachers not only in terms of their benefits, of course that’s an important part of it…but also in terms of other support, in terms retraining, in terms of supplies, equipment.”
Marcos earlier expressed confidence that Duterte would do “a great job“.