17 % Civil Service Exams passing
rate makahiubos – Cong Alexie

CONGW. TUTOR

DILI matago ang kahiubos ni 3rd district Congw. Alexie Tutor sa Civil Service passing rate nga 17% lamang; professional level ug sub-professional.

“I congratulate the roughly 17% or 1 of 6 who passed the civil service exams for professional level (college graduates) and sub-professional level (not college graduates), respectively. They have just attained the most important item among the qualification standards for regularization in government service,” pamahayag pa sa kongresista sa Tersiero distrito.

Si Congw. Tutor ang Chairperson sa House Committee on Civil Service and Professional Regulation.

Iyang giawhag usab ang mga ahensya sa gobyerno nga i-fill up ang mga bakanteng posisyon sa mga nagkadaiyang plantilla arun mahimong mas epektibo sa pagpangalagad.

“I hope that in the coming weeks, all the 17% will fully qualify for the plantilla items they seek.”

“However, I cannot avoid lamenting the dismally disappointing passing rate of 17% for both the professional and sub-professional exams because 17% passing means 83% or roughly 5 of 6 failed the exams.”

“That’s just too high a failure rate which confirms how all their learning before taking the exam—both academic and experiential—was far from adequate to meet the very basic competencies the exams were designed to measure.”

Pananglitan kon ang mga naapil sa wala nakapasar, magpabilin silang contractual, Job Order, Casual, volunteer o posibleng mang-apply sa mga pribadong kompanya.

“Compassion for all the contractuals unable to pass the CSC exam should be channeled through positive paths such as review classes, tutorials, TESDA training, and livelihood training. In these ways, they will have options. They can take the CSC exams again after the office-sponsored tutorials and review classes. My understanding is that those who fail have great difficulty with the items on Math, English grammar, and abstract reasoning,” dugang pa ni Congw. Alexie.

Data analysis sa 83% failure rate

Giawhag ni Congw. Alexie Tutor ang Commission on Higher Education  (CHED) nga mohimo og data analysis sa Alma Mater sa 83% nga nangahagbong sa Civil Service Exam.

Dugang pa sa kongresista, sa niining pamaagi nakigbatok usab kita sa mga ‘diploma mills’.

Namahayag siya nga angay maalarma ang CHED kon ngano ang mga gradwado sa kolehiyo naglisod sa ‘very basic’ nga CSC exam.

“This is most probably a chronic symptom of the low standards of diploma mills in both urban and rural areas,” suma pa sa iyang giluwatang pamahayag.

‘Diploma mills’ ang tawag sa mga ‘educational institutions’ nga nag-offer sa substandard programs nga kasagaran moresulta sa ‘subpar performances’ sa civil service ug licensure examinations.

“These diploma mills are opportunistic parasites feeding off hapless students and parents,” pagklaro pa ni Congw. Tutor.

“Once a student enters higher education, it becomes the responsibility of the colleges and universities to make up for or compensate for the inadequacies of basic education.”

“I believe the bare minimum measure of the quality of college graduates is that they pass the Civil Service exams,” dugang pa niya.

Ang taas nga failure rate sa CSC exams matud pa sa kongresista maoy resulta sa wala na-monitor nga ‘diploma mills’ sa nasud.

“That’s just too high a failure rate, which confirms how all their learning before taking the exam—both academic and experiential—was far from adequate to meet the very basic competencies the exams were designed to measure.”

“The majority of those who failed were found to have difficulty with the items on Math, English grammar, and abstract reasoning.”

“If they are in contractual, job order, casual, or volunteer positions, they will likely remain in those situations, look for jobs outside of government, or be entrepreneurs.”(Kahlil Lester O. Camba)