Ten Points Agenda
Ten Points Agenda
Ten Points Agenda
EDUCATIONAL
THEORIES AND POLICIES
(EDUC 206)
Submitted
by:
Raymart
N.Naag
Submitted
to:
Dr. Jay Commission
Republic of the Philippines
on Higher Education
OliquinoREPUBLIC COLLEGES
Region V (Bicol
OF GUINOBATAN, INC.
GRADUATE SCHOOL
G. Alban Street Iraya, Guinobatan, Albay
NAME: RAYMART N. NAAG
DATE OF SUBMISSION: July 25,2021
PROFESSOR: JAY S. OLIQUINO, PhD
1. The first supply of K-12 graduates numbering more than 1.2 million did
not make the full cut.
Despite the K-12 Law and the other educational reforms such as the
Unified Student Financial Assistance System for Tertiary Education
(UniFAST) Law and the Free Higher Education Law, the Philippines continues
to get poor marks in international education performance indices.
Our educational system did even worse on the 2017 Global Innovation
Index where it ranked poorly at 113th place out of 127 countries.
POLICY
(Teacher’s Salary)
(Corruption allegations on Department of Education (DepEd)
Noting it was “high time” the review was done, Education Secretary
Leonor Briones said the DepEd wanted to strengthen “basic skills” in early
grade levels, focusing particularly on the first three levels of basic
education: kindergarten and Grades 1 and 2.
“In the first three years, there are not so many subjects, [but there
should be lessons in] good manners and right conduct,” Briones said in a
press briefing at the DepEd central office in Pasig City last week.
Demands of society’
Briones said the proposed changes were also a response to the “demands
of society,” where children were often more exposed to different
environments and technologies that could influence their behavior.
“I’m not saying that the youth’s values are failing, but the world is
changing. The values of our society and of the grown-ups are also
changing,” Briones said.
Focusing on basic numeracy and reading skills are also important even
at a young age, as these are the basis for “lifelong learning,” she said.
Briones cited how education had focused on the demand for students to be
taught good English following the boom of call centers, which was believed
to give employment to many graduates.
Call centers are now replaced by robots in other countries,” she said.
“So, if you are preparing our children to speak beautiful English for call
centers then perhaps we will truly be left behind. We have to teach our
children to be the ones to make the robots and this is why we are teaching
robotics in the high schools.”
She said that students now should be taught how to respond and adapt to
change, stressing the importance of learning skills that students could
apply after graduation.
“We teach them how to analyze, how to solve problems, how to respond to
change and to accept change because by the time they graduate, whatever we
have taught them, not all of them, will be applicable – because change is
happening so fast,” she said.
“It is in dealing with the change that we want our children to gain
more, ‘yung tawag natin life skills,” Briones added. The government’s
K-12 program will push through after the Supreme Court declared as
constitutional Republic Act 10533 or the Enhanced Basic Education Act of
2013.
The High Court dismissed all the petitions filed against the said laws
for their failure to prove that the laws were in violation of the 1987
Constitution and that the laws were enacted with grave abuse of discretion.
“For having failed to show any of the above in the passage of the
assailed law and the department issuances, the petitioners’ remedy thus
lies not with the Court but with the executive and legislative branches of
the government,” the High Court said in the 94-page decision penned by
Associate Justice Alfredo Benjamin Caguioa.
The high court even lauded Congress for enacting the K-12 law.
“It is indeed laudable that Congress went beyond the minimum standards
and provided mechanism so that its citizens are able to obtain not just
elementary education but also kindergarten and high school.”