\5 "^/V^T* A V> ^V^v^.* /'^X ^^^, ^^ - o > ^OV" ^^0^ THE PHILIPPINE PUBLIC SCHOOLS AT THE PANAMA-PACIFIC INTERNATIONAL EXPOSITION ■>y8/.i«v<^ \LiM>.*-J^, /Jwi-*.^u*<^ *y THE EXHIBIT IN THE PALACE OF EDUCATION ORGANIZATION AND ADMINISTRATION OF THE PHILIPPINE PUBLIC SCHOOLS FACTS AND FIGURES ON THE ISLANDS AND THE SCHOOLS .v-^" v^K PRESS OF MAKNELL & COMPANY SAX FRANCISCO. CALIFORNIA 1915 Do of Do DEC : : I9I5 THE PHILIPPINE PUBLIC SCHOOLS AT THE PANAMA-PACIFIC INTERNATIONAL EXPOSITION ABACA COIL BASKET IN PHIIJPPINE DESIGN. THE EXHIBIT IN THE PALACE OF EDUCATION. The exhibit of the Philippine public schools at the Panama-Pacific Inter- national Exposition is located in the northwest corner of the Palace of Education. The exhibit centers in the large Rotunda at the intersection of First Street and Avenue A, and covers approximately 1 0,000 square feet of space. The headquarters of the exhibit are located in the corner of the building. Immediately outside and facing on one side of the Rotunda is the information desk where visitors may register. The public is invited to call upon the information desk and the force of demonstrators for information of whatsoever nature concerning the exhibit, the schools, the country, and the Filipino people. Referring to the official classification of the Departments of Education and Social Economy, the exhibit is to be found under the heads: elementary schools, secondary schools, higher educa- tion, special education in agriculture, special education in com- merce and industry, education of the subnormal, special forms of education, text-books, school furniture and school appliances, physical training of child and adult, agencies for the study, investigation, and betterment of social and economic conditions, economic research and organizations, hygiene, labor, co-operative institutions, and recreation. The exhibit consists of wall charts, class written work, pub- lications, references, statistics, compilations, administration fea- tures, text-books, models, designs, plans, research work, school library work, school museum work, scientific and technical dis- plays, graded industrial courses, transparencies, photographs, lan- tern slides, moving pictures, an industrial working exhibit, a force of demonstrators, and a sales department of school-made indus- trial articles. Through these, it is the purpose to show the com- plete public school system as it is now organized from grade one, the lowest work of the primary course, through the high school classes; first of all, the idea of centralized school management; campaigns for standard school buildings and sites ; office manage- ment; the public welfare movement; school finances; literacy progress; training in public health and citizenship; special cam- paigns to improve standards of living; the special training for girls; classroom methods; academic progress; standardization of school text-books and courses of study; the industrial program; the play movement and school athletics; gardening and agricul- ture; economic research work; design and dye work; and, in an industrial way, the great campaign to make use of the local wealth of raw materials in the household industries, the improve- ment in standards of workmanship, and the employment of typical weaves and designs of Malayan origin. Stated most briefly, the exhibit presents the complete public school system of the Philippine Islands, with balanced curriculum embracing academic instruction, industrial training and vocational guidance, athletics and play ; organization and administration. From its very nature, the industrial branch is capable of fuller representation in an exposition than any other; and it is precisely upon industrial and commercial features that emphasis is placed in the exhibit, in order that the schools, by the publicity which they give, may do their part to bring the markets in touch with the industrial possibilities of the Islands. Organization and System An inspection of the exhibit begins naturally at the Rotunda. The first of the chart groups takes up the organization of the Philippine Bureau of Education and its place in the government. Incidentally, the entire government organization is explained in graphic form. This group also treats of the property and finan- cial matters of the public school system. Many visitors will be surprised to learn that the entire cost of education in the Phil- ippines, and of the operation of the entire Philippine Government for that matter, is paid by the Filipino people themselves through a well-ordered system of taxation. Not one peso towards the payment of Philippine Government expenses comes from the United States. The next chart shows the distribution of the more than 4000 public schools throughout the Archipelago, the rural or "barrio" schools, the central schools, and the higher provincial and special schools. This map shows that the school system which had its beginning in Manila sixteen years ago now reaches the farthest isles of the group and the remotest mountain settlements. The main wall in the pedagogic exhibit is occupied by the two charts covering the Philippine public school system and the general course of study. Subsidiary charts set forth further details of the system: the growth in enrollment from practically nothing in 1 898 to more than 600.000 at the present time ; the unit system of education with its economic and social aims; and the balanced curriculum with academic, vocational and physical features; but above all these, the fact that absolutely all of the instruction in the public schools is carried on in the English language, taught to Filipino children who speak in various parts of the Islands several separate and distinct Filipino dialects of a Malay tongue. (The Spanish language is limited almost entirely to a small percentage of the older generation of well-to-do families who were educated under th° Spanish regime.) The system chart explains the primary curriculum ; the several special courses provided in the intermediate grades, largely vocational ; the secondary work providing for further specialization in a minor professional way ; and the professional and cultural courses in the several colleges of the University of the Philippines. The course of study chart covers only the general course of the system ; by means of six color schemes is shown the propor- tional time allowed throughout the course for physical training. education in English and literature, mathematics, citizenship and health preparation, mdustnal work, and music and drawing. All the studies of the eleven-year general course are covered in this classification ; similar information for the other intermediate and secondary courses is available in the exhibit. The next group of charts takes up the industrial instruction in the schools, and summarizes the many phases of industrial work which have attention throughout the eleven-year course. THE TECHNICAI, EXHIBIT— INDUSTRIAI, FOUNDATIONS. DESIGNS. DYE WORK. The striking feature is the differentiation in work for boys and girls in the primary grades, and specialization in the intermediate grades. Many details of the work and observations on the results are given in subsidiary charts. When the pupil enters school, he takes up industrial work just as he does arithmetic or any other subject, and he is not advanced from one grade to another until he has finished the prescribed work and secured satisfactory ratings, be his assigned task a home garden, a basket, a piece of embroidery, a lesson in cooking, or a wood exercise. Another group of charts covers the organized movement for play and athletics carried on by the schools throughout the Islands. Every pupil who enters the schools takes part in some physical exercises and has regular supervision in his play, as in any other branch in the curriculum. The general organization from the school team to the annual national meet is explained, with mention of Filipino interscholastic records. Industrial Foundations In the special booth provided in the technical and scientific exhibit are found some of the fundamentals upon which the entire vocational program is based. In the forms of photographs, her- barium sheets, raw materials, prepared materials, and articles in unfinished and completed forms, here are shown the products of the forest, field, and swamp — the grasses, sedges, fibers, stems, roots, woods and other materials which are the basis of the handicraft industries of the Islands. Many of these industrial materials have long been known to the established industries; many of them have been discovered and worked out in the experiments of the schools under systematic economic and indus- trial surveys. The dye features are purely the result of school enterprise and have been worked out by foreign scientists in great detail for the most important of the industrial materials. One case here contains a display of the graded industrial courses, elementary and advanced, showing the processes in the teaching of some of the principal industrial lines. Another very impor- tant work placed with the technical exhibit is that of preparing for Philippine products a series of structural and ornamental designs of Philippine or Malaysian origin. The school exhibit in Philippine design work shows the progress made in the search for suitable motifs. These studies cover the Islands and include the old handicraft designs, some from the fauna and flora of the country, and some from the primitive art which still remains, particularly among the mountain peoples. The arrangement of such motifs in appropriate natural tn CD O 3: t-J tn LJ CQ ui — I ^ O- a UJ 1 h- m -CE 0. LJ ZD Irl a > LU Li. LlJ _j 1 xt q: CD 1 9 s i 1 „ii J i 1 ILISH ETTLEMENTS AIN PEOPLES ^ g a s 1 - § '^ 3 i liii ESTAB ERMANENT SI AMD OVING MOUNT ►_ 1 S § _j K ■ ■ ' ^ ti. i ji liii 1 i 1 11 a. a: to § 5 w » r-- 5 ■^ -* '^ i g„i i is 1 a.,iZ i " 1 ^ 55^3 s i £ X * DEVELOP E PUBLIC ;ncouragi MESTEADI tT? ^ i 1 53 2 i z UJ ' _j"'o S^jg Sis;ss oc u a: 3^1 SsSSs =3 ? !=i -^ u. "* i g 1 1 §1 1 i|l ^ 3 ^ 1 s en !j m g 1 LU i = S 1=3 sl 1^ i EASE Y AND QUA ^E POODS OME INDUS il2 ^ ijiiii is 1 E i 2 S a: 3 § 1 1 ff ►= UJ 1 Z ^ 3 oLaJ SJCJ i i - INCR ;ty qualh PHILIPPII VELOP A H! S 1 ^ I "c=3 >- £ ^ ' ' 1 £ 5 E £3=: '-' S <= s Is * 5 S 1 ^ = S ^1 i ? 1 1 - 1 11 — LiJ i fe^ = l_j_l a: a g g n i :° 5 E ^ cjn ^ 2 i I5 V) X -s- « J -^ S i55 3 g 1 i i 1 i ill i «n" g "^ tn Ui ffi ^ 1 1 s i |:if zS* S 7 S § u 1 s "■ i s - j|li LiJxQ-q: ^ 2 3 K UJ t ^ 1 f^ i i «J — 0.0 3ci::Dn- 3E S 5 ^ Q X Z 5 — i * cj azui£ -=i g 5 s £ £ "^3 ^^ ° > * f C3*t — = " Si ^ St: t-> <=) S 13 •-* tn X ^ ^ PRI DEQUATE FOOD STOP RiCE Z UI ^ z ^ & "„ "alii s s » ■* m « 1 1 i ffi 1 - e i i 1 = 1! 5f 3 ■" i 1 g 3 1 5 5 ^ ffi s 1— >- n cc * 1 ./, 2 S » 11: z o« =£-£ LlJ UJ LlJ 09 ' tn — 3£ (_) 5 ^ S — S LlJ INCREASE RICULTURAL EFFICI AND DEVELOP HE GRANGE MOVEM ^ = ° ^ i "^ s i ° - r« = g s s^ 3 "^ s £ t! 1 s *: S = ■ '^ i 1 •"is " lis a. t9 1- ■< S ^ 0- g i ^ H bi H lij Uh ^ H H W t/; r/5 H W n P< 'hJ W H X < w W Hh w rr| H •a ll, § Q « s- < « < Q X ^ — in 1—-: ^ 3 3 ?Uf= UJ D D ^ 3 D D K- K t- IVERSIT TO SEVEN YEAR c ) m ^^ D E75 5 C=3 UJ < -I _1, _ 2 It K J -J £ E g m z z — 3 u _i -) in n CCS tn UJ S [u - — . ^ 3 3 3 B _l§ 3 s § or ^. ^ s < 2 ' UIqR \^ z — J UJ ° m a m - g- q: < RME HREE YE tn LU Bs If! o r— LU □ < LoJ" ~»n ID UJ ■5 f- 5 ^in 1— 13 en ir ID □ U I 01 I ° 8 u I LJ L3 UJ >- r3 UJ z o: -r 1=1 LJ L^ ^ 2 PRIMARY FOUR YEARS in 1 J |_,_| 5 > on UJ C3 ■ tj z UJ L3 ^ S C/> — 1— LU * ^ s g s S ° o o o := z z «a -a ■^ ^ tn ^ 1 ^ - 1 - ■a. tb z se C3 C3 LJ tb ■z. UJ tn z "2 UJ t: « g z 3 p tf? c= ^ ? i s S i S O O C=l •^i ■ 5 CK >- -a CD £ C3 3= uj S d: >- D ■^ ?S ™ Z3 U :e a. tn ^ 33 Normal School, the Philip^ipe School of Arts and Trades and the Philippine School of Cra wins', one double period daily Shopwork, one double period daily Studj- period Gnule VI Grammar and Compo- sition Reading: and Spelling Arithmetic Drawing, three double periods a week Study, two double pe- riods a week Shopwork, three con- secutive periods daily Grade VII Grammar and Compo- sition Reading and Spelling Arithmetic, d a 11 y or two double periods a week Drawing, two double periods a week Estimating, one double period a week Shopwork, three con- secutive periods daily Course for Business Grade V Grade VI Grade VII Grammar and Compo-Grammar and Coinpo- sition sition Reading and Spelling Reading and Spelling Reading and Spelling Arithmetic Arithmetic Arithmetic Geography Geography Geography Histor>- and Govern- ment Spelling and Dictation Spelling and Dictation Business Correspond- ence Penmanship and Plain Bookkeeping Bookkeeping Lettering Typewriting Typewriting Typewriting HIGH SCHOOL COURSE OF STUDY— 4 Years First Year Second Year Third Year Fourth Year Algebra Plane Geometry ♦Review Arith- ♦Solid Geometry metic (optional) *Advanced A 1 - Latin (optional) g e b r a (op- tional) Literature Literature and Literature and Literature Composition Composition ♦Composition and Rhetoric ♦Business Eng- lish Composition *Physical Geog- Biology (double Physics (double raphy period daily) period daily) *Government General History *General H i s - ♦Colonial H i s - Economic Con- tory tory ditions in the *TTnited States ♦Commercial Philippines History Geography "Half-year subjects. 45 Text-Books and Publications Before the establishment of the American schools, whatever education the average boy or girl received was primarily as a preparation for attendance upon and participation in religious services. The books used were few, poorly made, and of the stereotyped question-and-answer variety. Most of the books used in the secondary schools followed this plan, and were mere compendiums giving brief treatments of many subjects. The military authorities which handled the schools were at once impressed with the need of textbooks and sent to the United States for them. Through the mistaken idea on the part of the officials in the Islands or in the United States as to conditions in the Islands, editions of a number of texts in the Spanish lan- guage were ordered. A better acquaintance with conditions then led to the introduction of textbooks in English, textbooks which were prepared for American children and entirely unsuited to the school needs of the Philippines. This condition was early recognized, and in the course of a few years considerable progress was made in the preparation of special texts for Philippine schools, by educators of long experience in the Islands who gave these matters special study. At the present time all of the primary and intermediate text- books, except music and some supplementary reading books, have been prepared especially for the Philippines. In the high schools especially prepared texts are not so necessary, but they are provided in a few subjects where the need is apparent, as in commercial geography, colonial history, and economic conditions of the Islands; in other texts, chapters dealing especially with the Philippines have been added. Most of the work in the revision of the textbook series has been done by the directors through advisory textbook committees. Several large book concerns in the United States interest them- selves in Philippine textbooks, and arrangements have been made for the adoption of books upon a five-year basis. Under this program, the matter of texts must have consideration only once in five years, when the book companies have their representatives on the ground in Manila and the advisory textbook committee 46 composed of directors, division superintendents and teachers has its sessions. At the present time approximately 9 1 per cent of the total quantity of textbooks used is of those written especially for the Philippines. While improvements are still possible in many of the books and v^^ill eventually be made, they are on the whole satisfactory, and will compare favorably with textbooks used in American schools. One of the particular aims in building up the textbook series was to give adequate weight to the fact that such books are to be used by boys and girls who come to school with no oral knowledge of the English language; that these texts must be designed to help pupils acquire the ability to use English naturally in oral speech — a difficulty which the average Ameri- can textbook does not contend with. Aside from the general problem of textbooks, the Philippine schools have engaged in a considerable amount of other publica- tion work to meet the usual needs of a big bureau and the special needs which are constantly arising. The publications of the Philippine Bureau of Education include the series of annual reports ; a bulletin series including school and home gardening, housekeeping and household arts, school buildings and grounds, athletic handbook, the service manual of the Bureau, school libraries, good manners and right conduct, an elementary course in plain sewing, and bulletins covering the special insular schools and many other phases of the industrial work; a series of civico- educational lectures for the general public ; and The Philippine Craftsman, a magazine published monthly during the school year in the interest of industrial education. These publications serve sometimes as texts, at others as handbooks for the use of teachers, and frequently for the general information of the teaching force and the student body. They have been a very potent factor in organizing promptly throughout the school system the activities which have been determined upon by the directors. Some School Activities A consideration of the activities of the Philippine public schools will cover generally the three main lines — academic educa- 47 tion, industrial instruction and physical training. Beyond these are the many other activities in which the schools are interested, among them the administration and organization, the campaigns for buildings and sites, for personal and community hygiene and sanitation, public welfare and social work, and economic research. Throughout the discussion of the Philippine school system in this pamphlet and throughout the exhibit in this Exposition, it is the purpose to emphasize more than anything else in the school system the idea that it is a system in the fullest sense. Such a A SCHOOL GARDEN IN THE PROVINCE OF TAYABAS, P. I. central organization is so effective in results as to advocate itself to school people generally. Through such central control all of the schools may, in the shortest possible time, profit from the educational advances made in widely separated sections, and the remotest and most backward districts may receive the same bene- fits as do the more central and progressive localities. Such an organization carries with it immense powers for good, not only in its own operations but also in cooperation with governmental and other agencies. 48 Here, as in many other countries, steps are being taken to extend the activities of the schools, this action due largely to the growing conviction that if the schools are to prepare for life, they should be brought into closer contact with the problems of the day, and should assist in their solution — in reality social economy work. It is rapidly becoming the belief that expensive school buildings and sites, forces of well trained teachers, and the numerous potentialities of school children themselves must be utilized to a greater extent, not only for the benefit of the chil- dren but for that of the community as a whole. The Philippine THE CKBU liASKl'.AI.U TKAM, MANY TIMP:S INTKR- SCHOlvASTIC CHAMPIONS OK THK IS1KRX RVRAL SCHOOL BUII.DIXG OF STAXPARD PLAN. RKINKORCKP CONCKKTK. 52 is authorized by the central office is that a school ate be provided, adequate ^ the building, the garden, and the playgroond. The t m i i iw m nn set is P 4 acres for rural schools, and 2' 7 acres (or central municipal schools. It may not have occurred to the reader that the poUic schools are amceming themsdres greatly with moral instmctioa. Yet it is true that in the primary and intomediate grades the ptqnls recdve regular instruction in gpod mannas and ri^ conduct, and the things they learn in books are put to practical test on the playground, in their societies, and Mihereret ihisy meet. While the Bureau has had to practice many economies in recoit years, it is able to continue with the syston as it stands today with but little increase in the amount of vocnej allotted for school purposes. Additional sums of money could be used to advantage, particularly in opening new rural primary schotJs, in extending certain industrial brandies, and in providing for classes in higher educatimi. There is an in»stent demand fm- higher classes in all parts of the Islands; munidpal and provincial gov- emtnents are requesting the furdier extension of intermediate and secondary education; at the present time the bureau is hardly able to provide for all dig2>les who desire to enter die secondary classes. The growth of the public school system under American siqjervision in the Philippines during the past ten years has been a very substantial CMie, yet the oppo r t uni ty presented for future devdopment is enormous. Odier countries. %vith edncatiooal systems long estaUtdied on orthodox lines, encoimla^ almost insar- mountable difficulties m the reorganizatimi of those systons upon a practical basis. In the I^ulippines, the administration of the schools has been hampered by no end^arrasnng precedents; tq> to the present it has had reasonaUy ample funds %iath which to execute its plans; and. best of all. it has in a most gratifying measure the moral support of both Americans and FHqmios in its attempt to build up m the Philippines a system of instruction which wfll promote the industrial efficiency, and the material and intellectual well-bdng of the population. Such another oppor- ATuty probably never existed anywhere. 53 FACTS AND FIGURES THE OLD CATHEDRAL, MANII.A. The Philippine Islands lie southeast of the continent of Asia, about 600 miles from the mainland. They be- came known to Europe through their discovery by Magellan in 1521. Before this time they were known to Ori- ental trade, and certain centers enjoyed a small measure of Oriental civilization. At the time of the discovery, the inhabitants of the archipelago numbered perhaps half a million. The first real attempt at Spanish government in the Islands was made by Legaspi in 1571. The old walls of the City of Manila were commenced in 1 590 and are still standing. They enclose the "Walled City" of Manila and are about two and a half miles long. In 1 634, the first steps towards popular education were taken. The University of St. Thomas was founded in 1610. It is the oldest university under the American flag. The Philippines enjoyed a European civilization after Spanish ideals before there was any permanent settlement in continental United States. The first governor of the Philippine Islands was Legaspi in 1571. Other prominent governors since his time were de Morga, 1595; Bustamante, 1717; de Anda, 1762; Claveria, 1844; Urbistondo, 1850; de la Torre, 1869; de Rivera, 1897. Polavieja was Governor at the time of the Philippine insur- rection of 1 896. With the American occupation, Jaudenes, the last Spanish Governor-General, surrendered to General Merritt. Under the American Civil Government, the Honorable William H. Taft, of the Second Philippine Commission, became the first Civil Governor in 1901. The American Governor- 54 Generals since have been the Honorable Luke E. Wright, the Honorable Henry C. Ide, General James F. Smith, the Hon- orable W. Cameron Forbes, and the Honorable Francis Burton Harrison, the present Governor-General. The Archipelago embraces approximately 3000 islands, large and small. The distance from north to south is 1152 miles. The greatest distance from east to west is 682 miles. In land area, the Islands cover 127,853 square miles; this is approxi- mately the same area as that of Japan, or Italy, or the New England States with New York and New Jersey combined. California has about 156,000 square miles of land area. The Philippines have more than twice the land area of the island of Java. Java supports a population of 30 millions; at this rate, the Philippines can maintain a population of 70 or 80 millions. The census of 1 903 places the population of the Phil- ippine Islands at 7,635,426. The people belong to the Malay race; this stock has in some localities been somewhat modified by Chinese and European admixture. About one-tenth of the population is found among the mountain peoples of Luzon and Mindanao and the Mohammedans of the southern islands. As a rule the mountain people do not profess other than pagan religions. The primitive inhabitants were a race of dwarf negroes known as Negritos. Remnants of this people are to be found in the hills and mountains of some localities. In the social scale, they are among the lowest of mankind. The first Malay invasion brought several tribes of what are now the mountain people, such as the Igorots. Later Malay invasions from Borneo and the Malay Peninsula brought the Tagalogs, Ilocanos, Visayans and other people who comprise the present-day Filipino population. With the later invasions, the earlier inhabitants retired farther into the hills and mountains. The present population includes about 40,000 Chinese, 4,000 Spaniards, 8,000 American civilians and several thousand other foreigners. Until 1819, the Philippine Islands were governed as a dependency of Mexico, which was itself a vice-royalty of the 55 A COUNTRY ROAD. crown of Spain. Nearly all of their commerce with the west- ern world was conducted by the Galleon trade through Acapulco, Mexico and the Isthmus of Panama. The principal exports of the Islands are hemp, coco- nut products, sugar, tobacco and forest products. The principal imports are rice and manufactures. The total foreign trade amounts to about $110,000,000 per year, equally divided between exports and imports. Nearly one-half of this trade is with the United States. The favorable legislation of the past few years has increased the commerce between the Islands and the United States to three times the figures of a few years ago. The taxable internal busi- ness of the Islands In 1913 amounted to $333,0000,000. an increase of lb'/' over the figures of a few years before. The total annual government revenues, insular, provincial and municipal, amount to approxi- mately $16,000,000. The total per capita tax for all government purposes is, in round numbers, $2 per annum. The annual per capita cost of education is less than $0.50. The entire cost of the public schools of the Philippine Islands is paid by the people of the Philippine Islands. The same statement holds true for all branches of the Philippine government. In other words, the Philippine government is THE ESCOIvTA. MANILLAS CHIEF ir selr-supporting. BUSINESS THOROUGHFARE. A vn,i