Public school teachers back F2F classes by November
Public school teachers agree with the government’s push to fully implement face-to-face classes in public schools by November, but reiterated their position that schools and mentors should be properly prepared for in-person sessions.
Teachers’ Dignity Coalition (TDC) national chairman Benjo Basas said that they support the thrust of the Department of Education (DepEd) for full face-to-face classes in schools.
“As we mentioned earlier, we agree to return to in-person classes by next school year. Our children have already suffered terribly under a distance learning setup,” Basas said in a statement.
“But still, we need to prepare our schools if we project a 100-percent resumption. We need to ensure that our learners and teachers are safe and it would require several adjustments, especially in class size and physical facilities,” he added.
Basas pointed out that the education sector would be needing more classrooms and more teachers “to effectively handle the delivery of education service, post pandemic.”
The TDC, a federation of public school teachers’ associations nationwide, issued the statement in reaction to a statement by President Marcos that the DepEd was targeting to fully implement face-to-face classes by November.
Accelerated vax drive
Sen. Joel Villanueva yesterday backed the move to hold face-to-face classes starting November, but he said the government must accelerate its vaccination drive and find ways to help students and teachers as well as the transport sector cope with high commuting and fuel costs.
Villanueva said it is urgent for the country to recover from the “learning loss,” citing the findings of the National Economic and Development Authority (NEDA) that online or modular learning was only 37 percent effective compared with face-to-face classes.
He also referred to the NEDA’s warning that the country will sustain some P11 trillion in economic losses in the next 40 years due to the suspension of face-to-face classes.
For the senator, it is imperative that COVID-19 boosters be given to children aged 12 to 17 years before the start of physical classes, as public and private schools must implement protocols, like proper ventilation, to minimize the spread of the disease.
Aid to students
Meanwhile, Makabayan party-list groups Kabataan, ACT Teachers and Gabriela have proposed a law that will provide financial assistance and other forms of relief to students in times of national emergencies and crises.
A house bill co-authored by Representatives Raoul Danniel Manuel of Kabataan, France Castro of ACT Teachers and Arlene Brosas of Gabriela intends to institutionalize an “emergency student aid and relief system” to assist Filipino students and youth during this period.
Manuel, Castro and Brosas said the assistance shall support students “in their expenses related to alternative modes of learning, including tuition, other school fees, gadgets and internet connectivity.”
The aid aims to help “facilitate the return of students to face-to-face classes” and will also include a onetime distribution of P10,000.
In the explanatory note, the lawmakers cited Article XIV, Section 1 of the 1987 Constitution, which mandates the State to “protect and promote the right of all citizens to quality education at all levels.”