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Allow us to enumerate a few compelling reasons why Filipino should be used as medium of

instruction in college and why Filipino subjects must be included in the college curriculum.  
1. Filipino as medium of instruction at all levels is a mandatory provision of the Philippine
Constitution (Article XIV, Section 6): “The national language of the Philippines is Filipino....
The Government shall take steps to initiate and sustain the use of Filipino as a medium of official
communication and as language of instruction in the educational system.”
It is thus abominable that most government agencies use English as their main
language of official communication, and most universities are still reluctant to
progressively implement the Filipinization of the curriculum. 

2. Using Filipino as a medium of instruction in college will only be effective if Filipino is taught
as a subject/discipline too.
3. In the era of globalization and imminent Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN)
integration, Filipinos should further strengthen their own language, literature, and culture as part
of our contribution to the project of global and regional socio-cultural integration. For what can
we contribute to the global and regional projects of integration if we have no language nor
culture to share with the world and ASEAN?  
4. Expanding and further developing what students have learned in junior and senior high school
is necessary. Hence, there is a need for at least a Filipino subject in college, as a number of
subjects/disciplines in the senior high school curriculum – such as English, Arts Studies, Political
Science, Science and Math – have parallel or related subjects in the new General Education
Curriculum. Why obliterate Filipino in college when other subjects/disciplines are included in
both the secondary and tertiary level curricula?
5. Skills for Filipino language and Philippine literature are included in the College Readiness
Standards (CRS) contained in CHED’s Resolution No. 298-2011, hence including Filipino
language and literature subjects in college is a must, if the CRS is to be genuinely useful. Such
subjects will ensure that skills learned in high school will be further developed in college.
6. The National Achievement Test (NAT) results for Filipino in high school are still below the
Department of Education’s own standards for mastery, considering that the highest national
mean percentage score for Filipino has never breached 52% in recent years. Hence, retaining
Filipino as a college subject will ensure that the necessary task of improving students’ facility of
the Filipino language beyond the secondary level is accomplished.
7. The content of the Filipino senior high school curriculum cannot cover all content and skills
currently taught in college. 
8. Filipino is the national language and language of political democratization as it is spoken by
99% of the population. It is the most effective language of national public discourse. It is the soul
of our country’s identity and culture. Songs, poems, speeches, essays, stories in Filipino unite us
as a people. Giving our national cultural heritage some space in all levels of education is a must.
Obliterating it is obliterating ourselves and our collective identity.
9. In K to 12 countries such as the United States of America, Malaysia, and Indonesia, national
language and/or literature are part of the mandatory core courses in their college curriculum. 
10. Filipino subjects designed in a multi/interdisciplinary way are feasible, as proven by the
dozens of proposals submitted to CHED by various institutions and organizations. 
11. The inclusion of the national language in the college curriculum is a relatively new thing,
compared with the inclusion of the English language and literature in the college curriculum.
English was imposed as the sole medium of instruction in 1906 and it still enjoys over-all
supremacy in most tertiary level institutions. Meanwhile, Filipino in college has been effectively
institutionalized only in 1996.  It is about time this historical injustice is remedied.
12. Filipino is a global language taught in more than 80 schools, institutions, and universities
abroad (in some cases, full bachelor’s degree and/or master’s degree are also offered).
Obliterating the space for Filipino and Philippine Studies at the tertiary level in Philippine
colleges and universities will certainly negatively affect the status of Filipino as a global
language. 

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