Filipinising Colonial Gender Values: A History of Gender Formation in Philippine Higher Education PDF
Document Details
Uploaded by PureIolite4158
2022
A. M. Leal Rodriguez
Tags
Related
- Teaching Guide for Senior High School General Biology 1 PDF
- General Physics 1 Teaching Guide PDF (Philippine Normal University)
- Rizal's Higher Education in Spain PDF
- CHED Memorandum Order No. 01, Series of 2015 PDF
- Rizal's Higher Education at Ateneo (1872-1877)
- Teaching Philippine Indigenous Cultures Modules PDF
Summary
This article explores the complicated colonial history of the Philippines and its impact on gender in higher education, specifically on institutions with strong foreign roots like universities. It offers a historical analysis of the country's universities and their role in shaping gender relations, providing a nuanced view of the interplay between religion and education in the colonial periods. The author explores how harmful masculinity and gender-based practices evolved in Philippine society through these institutions.
Full Transcript
See discussions, stats, and author profiles for this publication at: https://www.researchgate.net/publication/364318364 Filipinising colonial gender values: A history of gender formation in Philippine higher education Article in Educational Philosophy and Theory · October 2022 DOI: 10.1080/0013185...
See discussions, stats, and author profiles for this publication at: https://www.researchgate.net/publication/364318364 Filipinising colonial gender values: A history of gender formation in Philippine higher education Article in Educational Philosophy and Theory · October 2022 DOI: 10.1080/00131857.2022.2128760 CITATIONS READS 0 4,214 1 author: A. M. Leal Rodriguez Dovetail Consulting Ltd 7 PUBLICATIONS 1 CITATION SEE PROFILE All content following this page was uploaded by A. M. Leal Rodriguez on 12 October 2022. The user has requested enhancement of the downloaded file. Educational Philosophy and Theory ISSN: (Print) (Online) Journal homepage: https://www.tandfonline.com/loi/rept20 Filipinising colonial gender values: A history of gender formation in Philippine higher education A. M. Leal R. Rodriguez To cite this article: A. M. Leal R. Rodriguez (2022): Filipinising colonial gender values: A history of gender formation in Philippine higher education, Educational Philosophy and Theory, DOI: 10.1080/00131857.2022.2128760 To link to this article: https://doi.org/10.1080/00131857.2022.2128760 Published online: 12 Oct 2022. Submit your article to this journal View related articles View Crossmark data Full Terms & Conditions of access and use can be found at https://www.tandfonline.com/action/journalInformation?journalCode=rept20 Educational Philosophy and Theory https://doi.org/10.1080/00131857.2022.2128760 Filipinising colonial gender values: A history of gender formation in Philippine higher education A. M. Leal R. Rodriguez Department of Sociology and School of Critical Studies in Education, University of Auckland, Auckland, New Zealand ABSTRACT ARTICLE HISTORY The complicated colonial history of the Philippines impacts notions of Received 15 March 2022 gender in the Islands. Specifically, institutions with strong foreign roots, Accepted 12 September such as universities, maintain and challenge gender relations. The 2022 Philippines sees multiple gender issues in universities despite KEYWORDS government-mandated gender mainstreaming policies for education Philippine philosophy; (CMO-1), yet the influence of colonial values remains overlooked. This Philippine education; article contributes to philosophising Philippine education by providing Philippines; post-colonial the history of the country’s universities and their role in shaping gender education; education; relations. A threefold model of gender structures, relations of power, gender culture production and cathexis (emotional attachment), frames historical liter- ature during the Philippines’ Spanish and American colonial periods and contextualises the country’s gender order. The interplay of religion and higher education during the Philippines’ Spanish colonial period reveals why sexuality remains policed by education institutions. The gendering of courses during the American Colonial period details the feminisation of certain disciplines and occupations. Harmful manhood practices adopted during this period continue to affect men in university systems through Philippine fraternities. Lastly, private education perpetuates and maintains power among the elite. The evolution of the Philippine uni- versity provides points for analysis for gender issues. These become building blocks to the discourse surrounding the Filipino philosophy of education, by understanding facets of Filipino identity construction, and proposing avenues to explore when decolonising the university. Introduction Centuries of colonial governance contribute to complicated narratives about Philippine identity. Despite the European and American domination of the Philippines’ culture, language and tra- dition, Filipinos are more ‘Asian in consciousness and aspiration’ (Cullinane et al., 2020) sharing values such as strong family ties with their South-East Asian neighbours and ‘Filipinising’ traits from the colonisers’ cultures (Abinales & Amoroso, 2005). The higher education system in the Philippines is modelled after the education system of its colonisers: the Spaniards (1565−1898), the Americans (1898−1946) and briefly the Japanese (1941−1945). The history of Philippine universities shows the values each coloniser prioritised and embedded in education structures, revealing the gender order they created. The survey of CONTACT A. M. Leal R. Rodriguez [email protected] Department of Sociology and School of Critical Studies in Education, University of Auckland, Level 3, 58 Symonds Street, Auckland, New Zealand © 2022 Philosophy of Education Society of Australasia 2 A. M. L. R. RODRIGUEZ higher education’s history in the Philippines reveals the process of the country’s forced adap- tation to colonisers’ needs, and later decolonisation and adaptation to its own needs. Education remains a tool to impose and normalise values from colonists’ cultures, as ‘indi- genised’ and adapted to Philippine culture. Foreign and colonial influences masked under ‘global competitiveness’ (Adeyemo, 2015) still affect universities’ relevance in post-colonial societies such as the Philippines. Colonial values remain in universities and continue to shape norms and values, including gender identity in these institutions. Despite this, initiatives con- cerning gender in these institutions focus on gender mainstreaming, to address current issues deemed ‘gendered’ in universities (Commission on Higher Education (CHED), 2015). These overlook gender issues’ origins and serve as stop-gap measures. We must be able to reflect on gender in education beyond these concerns. This article answers the call for a retheorisation of Philippine philosophy of education by reflecting on the nature, aims and problems of edu- cation and recognising the power of education institutions as normative in one overlooked aspect of life—gender. The project maps the patterns that create universities’ gender regimes and slowly places them in the gender order of greater Philippine society. By locating the Filipino’s identity formation (Quito, 1978) specific to gender, we enhance our philosophising on Philippine education. Philosophising gender, the gender order and education in the Philippines The gender order of society describes the overall structural inventory of gender. Gender, short for gender relations, is a social structure that orders social practices constructed by social norms and co-constructed by persons in a gender order (Connell, 1987). The gender order (Connell, 1987) anchors the framework within institutions, unearthing the present and reproduced values as part of a shared symbolic system (p. 25). The gender order’s dimensions, specifically power, production/labour and cathexis or emotion, along with symbolic dimensions (Connell, 2002, 2005; Connell & Messerschmidt, 2005) frame our understanding of significant phenomena in the history of Philippine universities. Filipinos have a binary way of thinking about sex and gender, focussing on differences between men and women (Valledor-Lukey, 2012) reinforced by a colonial education system. We note that gender ‘is an identity tenuously constituted in time, instituted in an exterior space through a stylised repetition of acts’ (Butler, 1990). While Philippine LGBTQIA + advocates pro- gressed this thinking to include the LGBTQIA + community, a further troubling of the binary must take place. Gender’s troubling can come hand-in-hand with the re-theorising of the Philippine philosophy of education. The Philippine philosophy of education must remain context-specific (Opiniano et al., 2022) and consider Philippine universities’ colonial origins. Understanding the development of gender through a history of Philippine universities enhances our exploration of gender con- struction’s context. These, in turn, enrich our understanding of various possibilities for change for a philosophy of education that is truly Filipino. Pre-Philippine society and culture Knowledge of pre-colonial Philippine society shows the radical shifts in gender order and may inspire possibilities to challenge the existing gender order. The early communities who lived in the Philippine Islands shared their society’s characteristics with other South-East Asian societies of the time, under what Oliver Wolters (Wolters, 1999) calls the multicentric form of society in Southeast Asia. Kinship ties, or ties between blood-related family, were central to social organ- isation, though non-relatives could be claimed as kin through fictive kinship, or kinship creation through rituals, making alliances amorphous (Abinales & Amoroso, 2005). The kinship system Educational Philosophy and Theory 3 extended to education; through this system, tradition and knowledge passed from one gener- ation to the next. Women in pre-Philippine society held more power and sexual freedom. One traced their kinship through both the male and female lines (Eviota, 1992) with inheritance rights bestowed to both sons and daughters. Women freely chose their sexual partners. Female spiritual healers or babaylan remained integral to community life. Older women performed this role, though some reports include feminine men who dressed as women to perform important village ritual practices (McCoy, 1982). These babaylan bore the community’s culture, showing the value and power delegated to special women or women-like persons, making the Spanish colonisers’ enforcement of their patriarchal gender order even more violent. The Muslim settlers closely linked their education system to Islam. Their Imam (religious leader) or Uleman (Islam scholar) took the lead in passing down Islam’s values and teachings (Milligan, 2020). The arrival of Ferdinand Magellan in 1521 started the violence of Spain’s colonial presence in the archipelago overhauling the country’s political structure and economy and uniting numer- ous ethnolinguistic groups (Constantino, 1975). Pre-Philippine values were subordinated by Spain’s Eurocentric colonialism which involved the ‘direct, political, social and cultural domination’ of the conquered country (Quijano, 2007). Western imperialism led to the eventual consenting of dominant groups within the islands to the colonisers’ values, creating a new hegemonic ideal. Spain’s colonisation and the start of formal education in the Philippine Islands We credit three macro developments in contemporary Philippine education to the Spanish Colonial period: the church’s influence on education, the proliferation of single-sex schools, and the high value placed on private education. The Spanish missionaries’ influence with religion, specifically Catholicism (Brewer, 2004) caused this radical shift in the islands’ gender order and educational priorities in the Philippines. Power and religion: The Spanish hegemony through formal education The Catholic Church’s vision of evangelisation caused a violent upheaval in the lives of the Islands’ natives, whom the Spanish referred to as indios. The Tagalogs in Manila were converted by Spain, with others following suit after numerous bloody rebellions. The colonisation expanded to Luzon and Visayas residents, these new converts comprising a majority of the colony’s pop- ulation. This Christianisation excluded the Muslim group in the South of the Islands and the people of the Cordillera mountain range in northern Luzon, as these people remained uncon- quered until the start of the American colonial period in 1902 (Abinales & Amoroso, 2005). Spanish friars became primary agents of ‘conquista espiritual (spiritual conquest)’ (Abinales & Amoroso, 2005), preaching the values of the colonisers and controlling every aspect of edu- cation, from the curriculum, the medium of instruction, and the implementation of educational decrees. Schools were established alongside formal town settlements and churches (Bazaco, 1953) further linking education to religion. However, the friars themselves hindered the indio’s education. The friars did not implement numerous decrees from the Spanish crown (Hardacker, 2012) objecting language teaching for religion and enhancing education, an objection repeated for 1770, 1772, 1774 and 1778 decrees on establishing primary schools in the Philippines Islands (Cardozier, 1984). Instead, friars focused the curriculum on religious topics and morality (McHale, 1962). More decrees would be ignored, neglected, or rejected, including a 1714 decree on creating a secular university. Religion was marketed as a tool for spiritual liberation, but in reality, it became a means to instil subordination on the indio population. The Spanish friars’ hostility to indios learning Spanish 4 A. M. L. R. RODRIGUEZ lay in the fear of indios gaining knowledge (Abinales & Amoroso, 2005). Learning the coloniser’s language would allow access to knowledge, and therefore power, and would allow the indios to defend themselves from the abuses of their colonisers (Santiago, 1991). Preventing this maintained the friar’s image as the dominant force. Control of knowledge creation and produc- tion reinforced Eurocentered colonial domination (Quijano, 2007) seen in different colonised countries during this period. Race barred indios from accessing education, which started the coloniality of power under a Eurocentric, specifically Spanish, world power (Quijano, 2007). Despite decrees mandating access to education, indios were only admitted to secondary school in 1645, eight decades after the formalisation of the Philippines as a Spanish colony (Santiago, 1991). The students of primary and higher education were male Spaniards or male children with Spanish parents who grew up in the Philippines—‘secondary and tertiary levels of education were set up in the colony for the exclusive benefit of Spanish youths’ (Santiago, 1991, p. 136). At the beginning of the 17th century, only those with ‘purity of [Spanish] blood’ (limpieza de sangre), were awarded Baccalaureates from the only university in the Philippines at the time—the University of Sto. Tomas (Santiago, 1991, p. 139). The policies eventually relaxed in 1674, when students from other racial backgrounds were awarded baccalaureates. However, these still excluded indios and Chinese mestizos (Santiago, 1991). The supposed turning point for Philippine colonial education under Spain came with the 1863 decree of the Minister of War and Colonies. This document ‘laid down the legal basis for a system of universal primary education, encompassing every single pueblo in the Philippine Islands’ (Hunt & Mchale, 1965, p. 64). A shortage in the Spanish crown’s workforce made the 1863 decree include secular topics in the curriculum. However, the decree fell short of imple- mentation, as Philippine public schools remained focused on reading, writing and memorising devotional texts, with little to no attention to analytic thinking (Hunt & Mchale, 1965). Despite this, ‘the Philippines had proportionally, a larger number of schools than almost any country in the world excepting Europe and some Spanish dominions of South and Central America’ (Bazaco, 1953, p. 48). Only the sons of the principalia class could afford private tutors to learn Spanish and prepare for higher education in Manila. (Abinales & Amoroso, 2005, p. 93). Women did not continue to university, regardless of their race. Labour and Cathexis: The start of single-sex education The origin of single-sex schools in the Philippines has a hand in the distinct sex-role segregation in the colony. A 1582 law established two primary schools in each parish, one for boys and one for girls. The schools were supported by parents’ fees and encomenderos fees (Hardacker, 2012), allowing anyone to attend. In reality, most of the students were children of the Spanish or indio elites, with a few scholars in every class. Each gender received a different curriculum. Male instructors taught boys grammar, philosophy and natural science. A female instructress, often a religious sister, taught domestic sciences and arts to girls, with geography and algebra as their only science (Bazaco, 1953). This separation carried on to higher education, with women being sent to religious institutions after secondary education and men carrying on to university if they had the means. Elite Spanish women were sent to religious institutions called beaterios to learn domestic skills and religious values and protect their virtue, or chastity. Established in 1589, the Colegio de Santa Potenciana became the first beaterio in the colony where Spanish inhabitants ‘could leave the womenfolk when necessary and entrust their daughters’ education ‘en toda honestidad y Virtud’ (in all modesty and virtue)’ (Camacho, 2007, p. 59). These beaterios catered strictly to Spanish clientele during their initial establishment. Attendance was evidence of one’s high social standing, reinforcing racial, gender and class divides. ‘The ideal of womanhood was intimately Educational Philosophy and Theory 5 linked to the preservation of a social-racial hierarchy and was constructed based on a religious-spiritual core’ (Camacho, 2007, p. 60) further enforcing women’s subservient role to their husband, and women to the church. Understanding the links between the beaterios and their control of women’s emotional energy, sexuality and sexual desire (cathexis) reveals another dimension to the tapestry of colonial Spain’s gender order. Eventually, these beaterios would open to non-Spanish, and eventually non-elite women through scholarships (Camacho, 2007). These beaterios directly implemented the patriarchal church’s authority over women. Soon, the colonial standards for women from beaterios imposed a ‘peninsular feminine ideal’ not just for these institutions’ attendees, but for all the women on the islands (Camacho, 2007). Indios searching for power desired entry into these institutions, given the institutions’ ties to prestige. The formal restructuring of morality through these beaterios served as one way to colonise the indio mind, the population consenting to these foreign values for power and status, further inculcating the sexually repressive values of the church in the colony’s gender order. Cathexis and the Philippine elite Spanish colonial policy and European class structure formalised the Philippines’ social structures and created class and gender structures that still hold power today. The datus (village chiefs) who submitted to Spanish forces became local political elites or principalias (landed elites). The imposition of Western gender order became successful only with the consent of the Filipino elite (Eviota, 1992). The Spaniards and the new principalia class worked the newly formalised tax system (encomienda) and the private land ownership system (hacienda), to their advantage. The prin- cipalia utilised the concept of owned land and forced their fellow native indios to provide labour in their farmlands under the Spanish Crown (Constantino, 1975). The encomienda system gathered tithe and labour from unmarried Filipino adults and smaller family units (Eviota, 1992) and fuelled education (Bazaco, 1953). The creation of private education institutions resulted from the principalia’s ‘social frustration’ (Abinales & Amoroso, 2005) with low-quality government-sponsored education. The indio elites accessed education and knowledge through different means: trade schools to night schools, art schools to schools of commerce. ‘In the 1860s and 1870s, Philippine society essentially educated itself’ (Abinales & Amoroso, 2005, p. 94). While initially catering to the rich, both the elites and non-elites benefitted from private education. A foreign education became the indio elites’ method to maintain their wealth and rank, both within their own elite circles and in greater Philippine society. By the 19th century, it was en vogue for rich indios to send their male children to Europe for advanced degrees, professional training in medicine and the arts and law (Hunt & Mchale, 1965) mediating a more ‘filipinised Hispanic culture’ (Abinales & Amoroso, 2005, p. 99). By going to Spain and Europe for their education, young principalia men learned of life outside their colony and realised an alternative vision for their identity. They saw the numerous shortcomings of Spanish leadership, especially in comparison to other European nations (Abinales & Amoroso, 2005). One particular group of foreign-educated young men decided to push for social reform. These young principalia men called themselves the Ilustrados (the enlightened ones) and started the Propaganda Movement, which lobbied for reform against the Philippine islands’ poor conditions under Spanish oppression. Spanish colonisers systematically studied and utilised pre-Spanish Filipino languages to evangelise the colony. Instead of complete erasure, the colonists vilified some indigenous prac- tices while simultaneously adapting different animist rituals to Catholicism, creating a ‘conjunction of conquest and conversion’ (Rafael, 2018). Judeo-Christian values changed the gender order and promoted the father as the family’s head. The Catholic Church’s dominance created a patriarchal culture, especially in schools (Abinales & Amoroso, 2005), while racial barriers 6 A. M. L. R. RODRIGUEZ prevented the colony’s native inhabitants from entering education, including university education (Santiago, 1991). The popularity of religious institutions called beaterios reinforced women’s roles at home and further removed them from access to power and resources (Camacho, 2007). Sex-segregated school with special curriculum for men and women created distinct roles per gender. By the 19th century, the imminent change in ideology brought by the Spanish coloni- sation instilled patriarchy and machismo values in various aspects of Filipino life (Rafael, 2018). The Ilustrados and their new aspiration The knowledge brought by education, specifically university education abroad, became the foundation of the Philippine’s revolution. ‘Many Filipino intellectuals and revolutionary leaders of the late 19th century were, in the least at part, products of the existing education system’ (Hunt & Mchale, 1965, p. 64). Having broadened their mind from the strict teachings of the Catholic Church and colonial influence, the Ilustrados advocated for social reform and the removal of unjust practices against the indios through the propaganda movement. Alongside adminis- trative reform and the ‘assertion of the dignity of the Filipino’ (Abinales & Amoroso, 2005, p. 106), they also advocated for the ‘the secularisation of mass education, civil supervision of public schools, Spanish-language instruction, and vocational training’ (Hardacker, 2012, p. 22), all who had yet to manifest despite the 1863 education decree. The Ilustrados’ experience abroad showed the Spaniards’ less-than-ideal identity and helped the Ilustrados craft their vision of the Filipino identity. Most of the highly educated Filipino revolutionaries were men, ingraining the masculinity of the elites into the Philippine ‘national identity’, or ‘the societal self-image perpetuated by the ruling elite’ (Owen, 1999). This integration existed for several reasons—‘most Propagandists’ efforts to define Filipino identity, except for their political strategy and tactics carried well into the 20th century. This was due in part to the relative lack of alternative visions by other ‘heroes’ (Owen, 1999, p. 44). We see remnants of the Ilustrados’ vision of national identity in the current Philippine society, where their heroism became an aspiration. The propagandists, specifically the national hero Jose Rizal, were instru- mental in shifting the indio identity to the Filipino identity (Schumacher, 1975), which was synonymous to Filipino manhood (Owen, 1999). While the Ilustrados protested against the Spanish colonisers’, they also aspired for equal treatment under Spanish rule. Under further scrutiny, their demands could be seen as consenting to Spanish values, despite explicitly resisting the Spanish colonisers. These Ilustrados, much like those colonised by other European powers, were seduced by the dominance of their colonisers and aspired for Cultural Europeanisation (Quijano, 2007). Perhaps the Ilustrados origins from the principalia class, as consenting elite, explain their acquiescence to colonial values. This contradiction inspired the com- plete rejection of Spanish rule by other heroes such as Andres Bonifacio. This rejection led the 1989 Philippine revolution that pushed for the Philippines’ complete independence from Spain. The Propaganda Movements’ ideas fuelled the 1989 Philippine revolution, which led to the Filipinos’ first short-lived government. The Filipinos valued education so-much-so that there was a push towards creating a secular education system during the First Philippine Republic, dating from 1898 to 1900. The Philippine government had taken steps to create the Universidad Literaria de Filipinas in October 1898 as a state-supported institution of higher learning (Alcala, 1999, p. 118). However, the vision of Filipino nationhood was cut short when the Spanish ceded the Philippine Islands to the United States in the 1898 Treaty of Paris. Browning American education American’s form of colonial domination came with a more systematic effort to reform and incorporate American values in the Filipino way of life, shifting the Philippines’ gender order. Educational Philosophy and Theory 7 The ceding of the Philippines to America through the 1898 Treaty of Paris frustrated the revolutionary leaders’ efforts towards independence. The Americans saw the Filipinos as unfit for self-government (Hoganson, 1998), which justified the American’s policy of ‘benevolent assimilation’—a policy instigated by the then-American president, William McKinley. The Americans professed the Spanish regime’s incompetence and the supposed mental infancy of the colony they left behind. They took it upon themselves to lead the Filipinos, their newly acquired ‘little brown brothers’ (Kramer, 2006) about American life and imbibing American values. The Americans used education and military pursuits to mould men’s minds (Constantino, 1966). This technique rapidly expanded the reach of higher education during the early part of American colonial’s rule. Massed education, military kinship, the feminisation of specific indus- tries, and the colonial narrative espoused about Filipino men became the American’s legacy for Philippine university education. The ideal result was a Filipino people who would become subservient to the Americans, so the imperial agenda of capital expansion and wealth accumu- lation could continue unquestioned (Eviota, 1992). Power the state: Mass education or missed education American colonists saw literacy as the foundation for democracy, which they pushed through mass education. The focus of education turned from religious to industrial; Schools were made to create good citizens, industrious and in-line with the coloniser’s economic vision. Elementary and secondary education became free and compulsory, regardless of sex (Torres, 1993), through the 1901 Education Act (Sobritchea, 1990). In June of that year, more than a thousand volunteer teachers came to the colony. Dubbed the Thomasites after their maiden vessel, the USS Thomas (Musa & Ziatdinov, 2012), these volunteer teachers educated the Filipino to educate themselves and move towards self-rule. In 1902, the colonial government prioritised Normal Schools in Manila for teacher training, with Medical Schools and other professional and technical schools following in 1905. Students in these secondary level institutions would become the first-generation American-taught Filipino teachers through these Normal schools (Abinales & Amoroso, 2005), trained to continue America’s legacy in education (Sobritchea, 1990). Despite the growing number of Filipino teachers, Americans remained in control of the education system (Alcala, 1999, p. 120), including what values were taught and what was passed down. The massed primary and secondary education created a social demand for higher and private education. The University of the Philippines was created in 1908 to supplement America’s labour needs (Sobritchea, 1990), yet it ‘could not meet the increasing social demand for higher education’ (Alcala, 1999, p. 120) leading to an increase in private university insti- tutions. These private colleges were said to promote Filipino values so that the Filipinos were not completely Americanised (Alcala, 1999). In truth, the lack of regulation on and the high demand for higher education made some degree-granting institutions more commercial ven- tures. Other colleges and universities were religious institutions turned private, a far cry from their government-mandated nature during the Spanish colonial era. However, these religious higher education institutions were often single-sex and exclusive, catering to the upper class (Sobritchea, 1990). Numerous Protestant universities were created during this time, with Catholic universities resolving to preserve their faith and student clientele against these Protestant schools (Gonzalez, 1989). The Philippine legislature’s Act No. 2076, or the Private School Act, of 1917 would even- tually regulate private institutions, mandating that education be monitored by the Department of Public Instruction’s secretary (Alcala, 1999, p. 120). ‘[By] 1947, there were about 500 private colleges and 128 special and technical schools all over the country’ (Sobritchea, 1990, p. 80). Private education remains as popular as ever, both in primary and higher education. 8 A. M. L. R. RODRIGUEZ Labour in the latticework: Formalising women’s domestic role in the public sphere The democratisation of education gave women more opportunities, yet literacy and gender stereotyping plagued their experience. During primary education, girls were more literate than their male counterparts. However, less women entered secondary and higher education than men due to the belief that a woman’s life would be reflected by her husband’s educational attainment (Sobritchea, 1990). Schools strongly emphasised women’s role in the domestic sphere, reinforcing women’s role as good wives (Sobritchea, 1990, p. 79). Women included in the econ- omy had their spheres of influence limited to household management and vocational activities relating to care, weaving and crafts. Cathexis and Filipino masculinity: Marginalised or militarised? The American colonists justified the need for their benevolent assimilation through three images of Filipino men: Filipino men were savage and thus needed to be tamed, Filipino men as child-like and needing guidance, and Filipino men as feminine (Hoganson, 1998). Filipinos as savages justified the need to make Filipino men into soldiers: ‘If teaching Filipino men to govern their families was one step towards instilling the rudiments of self-government, then teaching them military discipline was another. Imperialists contended that American soldiers would turn the bloodthirsty Filipino warriors into disciplined soldiers’ (Hoganson, 1998, p. 135). The Filipino-as- children image reinforced the need for the public school system. The feminised Filipino male directly battled the machismo ingrained in the Filipinos by the Spanish colonial rule. American colonists often feminised men to their American public, associating them with what was deemed women’s roles in America – homemakers and child-carers. They also mentioned that Filipino men were unproductive, with women doing most of the work at home (Hoganson, 1998). Part of America’s strategy for colonisation was to purport the narrative of Filipino men as lower than them. Filipino men felt the constant need to prove otherwise. The perfect opportunity would come through military pursuits. The military links to education started during the American colonial period. An initial lack of American teachers in 1898 caused military officers to take on the roles of school chaplains, with enlisted soldiers becoming the first teachers. University became the vessel for American’s military interests, which intersected with Filipino’s quest for their manhood. The American colo- nials barred Filipinos from entering the military while removing Filipino military leaders from their position to remove the threat of insurgency. Americans capitalised on the emasculated Filipinos who were looking to prove themselves and their manhood. Young Filipino men who missed their chance to fight in the Philippine revolution could enrol in the American-run Philippine Military Academy and the Military Reserve Corps, which was attached to the University of the Philippines curriculum. These military initiatives co-opted the ‘near-universal folk ritual of male initiation to make military service synonymous with the passage to manhood’, (McCoy, 2000, p. 315), creating a new form of Filipino masculinity’ (p. 331). Western manhood was quickly adapted into the Philippine context. This culture of indoctrination and male initiation played into the kinship values of Filipinos, and ‘shaped gender roles in the whole of society’ (McCoy, 2000, p. 315) further complicating the Philippine gender order. The Filipino-created ritual of hazing in male student organisations became a transformative exercise that signalled the tran- sition of boyhood to manhood, fostering group solidarity and brotherhood (McCoy, 2000), all related to the issues we see in Philippine fraternities today (Gutierrez, 2019). Nearing the end of the American Colonial Period, the American education system’s pitfalls came into play. The education system initially designed for Americans caused Filipino learners to struggle, both with the language and the method of instruction. English became the language of instruction to unify the Filipinos under a common language, but the American education system in Philippine soil was created as ‘foreign-language handicap’, an achievement gap between Educational Philosophy and Theory 9 Americans and Filipino (Hardacker, 2012, p. 19). The American colonial period saw an increase in enrolled students and the overall number of teachers. Mass education meant that those in the peripheries, such as non-Manila cities and provinces, would finally have an educational opportunity, specifically higher education (Hardacker, 2012). However, the 1925 Monroe Survey on education promoted a more humanised approach to administration and materials adapted to Philippine life. By the end of this regime, new challenges arose for American-trained Filipino educators. They had a ‘sharply contrasting philosophy’, and needed to balance indigenous leadership endeavours with the colonisers’ competing pressures. These educators’ goal was to find a ‘value system most compatible with the dignity and aspirations of an independent coun- try’ (Hunt & Mchale, 1965, p. 63). The Japanese invasion during World War 2 delayed Philippine independence but added another point for reflection for the country. The Americans abandoned the Philippine islands in 1942, which formally started the Japanese occupation. These Japanese colonists brought the ‘Asia for Asian’ narrative (Abinales & Amoroso, 2005). The Japanese colonists’ reopened schools to instil discipline in the Filipinos, using education to achieve military order. Nippongo or the Japanese language became the priority language. Schools fostered of the love for work, and removed Western Values such as materialism. One major shift during the Japanese’s short occupation involved teaching Tagalog, Philippine History, and Philippine values in schools. While the Japanese colonial period only lasted five years, these five years had given the Filipinos time to reflect on their consciousness as ‘Orientals’, creating a Filipino for Asians policy (Musa & Ziatdinov, 2012). Their reign was short, and the Philippines regained its freedom when the United States military assisted in reclaiming Manila in 1945. In 1946, the Philippines was granted independence by the United States. The article identified how colonial patterns of restructuring the Philippine gender order through education, specifically university education, benefitted different colonial aims. Written record (Abinales & Amoroso, 2005; Eviota, 1992) shows pre-colonial gender relations and structures were egalitarian more prior to colonisation. Patterns of same-sex schools arranged gendered roles and courses during the Spanish colonial period, reinforcing the assumption of Spanish men as the golden standard for rationality (Paechter, 2018) making this identity aspirational. Conceptions of the nation and national identity (Azada-Palacios, 2021), put forward by propagandists such as the national hero Jose Rizal, resulted from colonial University education, creating a Filipino identity (Schumacher, 1975) synonymous with Filipino manhood (Owen, 1999). Tracing this progression, the American Colonial education feminised labour insofar as they reinforced a woman-specific curriculum for women in universities who entered the work force (Sobritchea, 1990). The evolution of the Philippine education system has led to lingering gender issues and structures we see today. A heavily gendered education system remains harmful to identity construction of Filipinos. This becomes the context from which we theorise the Philippine Philosophy of education. Implications for Philippine philosophy of education Education was used as a tool by the colonisers to maintain the values that served colonial interests or interests of the elite, but eventually, these institutions became avenues of resistance or change. As much as colonial powers created institutions of education, as much as they maintained and softened colonial practices of masculine domination, ‘the colonial universities were the seedbeds of the downfall of colonialism and the emergence of independent nations’ (Altbach, 1989, p. 170). We see this in the Ilustrados and the Philippine revolutionaries who become models for the Filipino identity. The Philippines becomes distinct through its organic drive towards education. Filipinos see education as a path to upward social mobility (Hunt & Mchale, 1965), showing its continued cultural importance. Educational institutions, as dictated by the Philippine state, must ‘teach the rights and duties of citizenship, strengthen ethical and spiritual values, develop moral character and personal discipline, encourage critical and creative thinking, broaden scientific 10 A. M. L. R. RODRIGUEZ and technological knowledge and promote efficiency’ (Philippine Const. 1987. art. XIV, section 3). They must also ‘inculcate patriotism and nationalism, foster love of humanity, respect for human rights…’ (Philippine Const. 1987. art. XIV, section 3) while teaching history and proper citizenship. The country’s education system pushes for globalisation (Adeyemo, 2015) and ‘eco- nomic development and social progress’ as foreign interests continue to influence the topics tackled in higher education. Foreign values have been indigenised by Filipinos (Opiniano et al., 2022) such that a return to a pre-Philippine value system remains uncertain. We contribute to the Philosophy of Philippine education by providing points for reflection, specifically in terms of one’s gender. Current questions in the Philosophy of Education involve the makings of a good life (Tesar et al., 2022). This points us to questions of gender. By locating the Filipino’s identity formation (Quito, 1978) specific to gender, we ask, how are we gendered? In what ways are we gendered? And who are we gendered for (Paechter, 2018)? Successful educational reform cannot be achieved without linking gender-related issues within higher education to broader social issues plaguing the Philippine nation. The push towards formal education, specifically formal higher education results from outward values that aim to re-absorb the Philippine labour force in a global market that does not benefit the country (Adeyemo, 2015). Gender issues affect access to education, quality of education, and an institution’s vision for its ideal graduate. Philosophising about education involves a removal of assumptions regard- ing particular bodies as masculine and feminine, removing sex-role stereotypes whose colonial origins have a long-standing impact on learning and the economy. We must explore avenues to decolonise the universities through reframing the Filipino phi- losophy of education to fit our current gender order. Notions of how the Philippine gender order was constructed by universities furthers discussions of decolonisation. Without grounding education’s gender issues in the history of colonisation, reform remains incomplete. Interrogations must be made on how we conceptualise reason and rationality in the Philippine context. Avenues for educational reform include rethinking understandings of gender that impact teaching and learning philosophy. Knowledge of the gender order’s radical shifts inspire possibilities for change. With this, we can create an ‘education for freedom’ for Filipinos, with gender in mind. And without troubling the notions of gender institutions put forward, we cannot explore a Philosophy of Education that is truly Filipino. Disclosure statement No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author. Notes on contributor A. M. Leal R. Rodriguez is a PhD student currently affiliated with the University of Auckland as a Faculty of Arts Doctoral Scholar. A product of the Department of Sociology and the School of Critical Studies in Education, her PhD project focuses on masculinities in the global south, gender, and higher education (universities). Her work as a feminist activist with almost ten years of experience in the development and education sector led her to decolonial and post-structuralist theory. ORCID A. M. Leal R. Rodriguez http://orcid.org/0000-0003-1671-0384 References Abinales, P. N., & Amoroso, D. J. (2005). State and society in the Philippines. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. Adeyemo, K. S. (2015). Regulatory and skills requirements for higher education in the Philippines. Industry and Higher Education, 29(2), 89–92. https://doi.org/10.5367/ihe.2015.0249 Educational Philosophy and Theory 11 Alcala, A. C. (1999). Higher education in the Philippines. Philippine Studies, 47(1), 114–128. Altbach, P. G. (1989). Twisted roots: The western impact on Asian higher education. Higher Education, 18(1), 9–29. https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00138959 Azada-Palacios, R. A. (2021). Hybridity and national identity in post-colonial schools. Educational Philosophy and Theory, 54(9), 1431–1441. https://doi.org/10.1080/00131857.2021.1920393 Bazaco, E. (1953). History of education in the Philippines: Spanish period 1565–1898 (2nd rev. ed.). University of Santo Tomas Press. Brewer, C. (2004). Shamanism, Catholicism and gender relations in colonial Philippines 1521–1685. Ashgate. Butler, J. (1990). Gender trouble: Feminism and the subversion of identity. Routledge. Camacho, M. S. T. (2007). Woman’s worth: The concept of virtue in the education of women in Spanish colonial Philippines. Philippine Studies, 55(1), 53–87. Cardozier, V. R. (1984). Public higher education in the Philippines. International Review of Education, 30(2), 193–198. https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00597919 Commission on Higher Education (CHED) (2015). Memorandum Order No. 1. Connell, R. (1987). Gender and power: Society, the person, and sexual politics. Polity Press in Association with B. Blackwell. Connell, R. (2002). Gender. Polity; Blackwell Publishers. Connell, R. (2005). Masculinities (2nd ed.). University of California Press. Connell, R. W., & Messerschmidt, J. W. (2005). Hegemonic masculinity: Rethinking the concept. Gender & Society, 19(6), 829–859. https://doi.org/10.1177/0891243205278639 Constantino, R. (1966). The Filipinos in the Philippines and other essays (pp. 39–65). Malaya Books. Constantino, R. (1975). The Philippines: The past revisited. Tala Publishing Services. Cullinane, M., Hernandez, C., & Borlaza, G. C. (2020). Philippines. Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved from https:// www.britannica.com/place/Philippines Eviota, E. U. (1992). The political economy of gender women and the sexual division of labour in the Philippines. Zed Books. Gutierrez, F. C. (2019). “Nothing unites men like war”: Fraternity rumbles, masculinity, and the routes to leader- ship. Social Science Diliman, 15(1), 25–55. Hardacker, E. P. (2012). The Impact of Spain’s 1863 educational decree on the spread of Philippine public schools and language acquisition. European Education, 44(4), 8–30. https://doi.org/10.2753/EUE1056-4934440401 Hoganson, K. L. (1998). Fighting for American manhood. Yale University Press; JSTOR. www.jstor.org/stable/j. ctt32bht5 Hunt, C. L., & Mchale, T. R. (1965). Education and Philippine economic development. Comparative Education Review, 9(1), 63–73. https://doi.org/10.1086/445110 Kramer, P. A. (2006). The blood of government: Race, empire, the United States, & the Philippines. University of North Carolina Press. McCoy, A. W. (1982). Baylan: Animist religion and Philippine peasant ideology. Philippine Quarterly of Culture and Society, 10(3), 141–194. McCoy, A. W. (2000). Philippine commonwealth and cult of masculinity. Philippine Studies, 48(3), 315–346. McHale, T. R. (1962). American colonial policy towards the Philippines. Journal of Southeast Asian History, 3(1), 24–43. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0217781100000533 Milligan, J. A. (2020). Islamic identity, postcoloniality, and educational policy: Schooling and ethno-religious conflict in the Southern Philippines (2nd ed. 2020). Springer. Musa, S., & Ziatdinov, R. (2012). Features and historical aspects of the Philippines educational system. European Journal of Contemporary Education, 2(2), 155–176. https://doi.org/10.13187/ejced.2012.2.155 Opiniano, G. A., Jackson, L., Cortez, F. G. F., de los Reyes, E. J., Mancenido-Bolaños, M. A. V., Altez-Albela, F. R., Abenes, R., Monje, J., Basal, T. J. B., Elicor, P. P. E., Suazo, R. S., & Azada-Palacios, R. (2022). Philosophy of edu- cation in a new key: A collective writing project on the state of Filipino philosophy of education. Educational Philosophy and Theory, 54(8), 1256–1270. https://doi.org/10.1080/00131857.2021.2008357 Owen, N. (1999). Masculinity and National Identity in the 19th century Philippines. Illes I Imperis Estudios De Historia De Las Sociedades En El Mundo Colonial Y Post Colonial. https://www.academia.edu/27033736/Masculinity_and_ National_Identity_in_the_19th_century_Philippines Paechter, C. (2018). Gender and the philosophy of education. In International handbook of philosophy of education, (pp. 981–994). Philippine Const. 1987. art. XIV, section 3. Quijano, A. (2007). Coloniality and modernity/rationality. Cultural Studies, 21(2–3), 168–178. https://doi. org/10.1080/09502380601164353 Quito, E. (1978). The role of the university in changing women’s consciousness. DLSU dialogue. An Interdisciplinary Journal for Cultural Studies, 14(1), 1–1. Rafael, V. L. (2018). Colonial contractions: The making of the modern Philippines, 1565–1946. In V. L. Rafael, Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Asian History. Oxford University Press. https://doi.org/10.1093/acre - fore/9780190277727.013.268 12 A. M. L. R. RODRIGUEZ Santiago, L. P. R. (1991). The beginnings of higher education in the Philippines (1601–1772). Philippine Quarterly of Culture and Society, 19(2), 135–145. Schumacher, J. N. (1975). Philippine higher education and the origins of nationalism. Philippine Studies, 23(1/2), 53–65. Sobritchea, C. (1990). Philippine history and society: American colonial period. Asian Studies Journal, 28, 70–91. Tesar, M., Hytten, K., Hoskins, T. K., Rosiek, J., Jackson, A. Y., Hand, M., Roberts, P., Opiniano, G. A., Matapo, J., St. Pierre, E. A., Azada-Palacios, R., Kuby, C. R., Jones, A., Mazzei, L. A., Maruyama, Y., O'Donnell, A., Dixon-Román, E., Chengbing, W., Huang, Z., … Jackson, L. (2022). Philosophy of education in a new key: Future of philosophy of education. Educational Philosophy and Theory, 54(8), 1234–1255. https://doi.org/10.1080/00131857.2021.194 6792 Torres, A. (1993). Women’s education as an instrument for change: The case of the Philippines. In The Politics of women’s education: Perspectives from Asia, Africa, and Latin America (pp. 105–119). University of Michigan Press. https://archive.org/details/politicsofwomens0000unse Valledor-Lukey, V. V. (2012). Pagkababae at Pagkalalake (Femininity and Masculinity): Developing a Filipino Gender Trait Inventory and predicting self-esteem and sexism [Child and Family Studies—Dissertations]. Syracuse University. Wolters, O. W. (1999). History, culture, and region in Southeast Asian perspectives (Rev. ed.). Southeast Asia Program Publications, Southeast Asia Program, Cornell University. View publication stats