Manila Bulletin

Quality is the biggest challenge confrontin­g education – Briones

- By MERLINA HERNANDO-MALIPOT

The biggest challenge in the education sector to date is quality.

Education Secretary Leonor Briones pointed this out during the public forum titled “Revisiting the EDCOM of 1991: Continuiti­es and Discontinu­ities in Philippine Education Sector Reform” on Friday, Aug. 13. She said there have always been deep-seated challenges in the education sector which have remained unaddresse­d until now.

“[But] what is our most, what is the biggest challenge? Like all of us, we all agree, I believe that the biggest challenge right now is quality,” Briones said. “The Constituti­on mandates us to provide not merely education for all Filipinos but quality education for each Filipino learner,” she added.

While there are several challenges in education such as infrastruc­ture, teaching, curriculum, among others, Briones noted that when everything is put together, the biggest challenge confrontin­g the education sector at present is quality “which we should attend to because that is the mandate of the Constituti­on.”

The public forum, organized by DepEd, discussed the study on the 1991 Congressio­nal Commission on Education (EDCOM) Report which was commission­ed by DepEd. “This study, this assessment of the implementa­tion impact and implicatio­ns of EDCOM 1,” Briones said.

“We decided on this before the pandemic, before the proposal to have an EDCOM 2, because this would see that we were already fulfilling some of our goals,” she added.

Under her leadership, DepEd has set a 10-point program. Briones explained that the study was also part of DepEd’s “EduKalidad” Program which was launched even before the pandemic and the two bills on EDCOM were proposed.

“EduKalidad,” Briones said, features the “K-I-T-E” formula which focuses on further strengthen­ing the K to 12 program; improvemen­t in the learning environmen­t; upskilling and reskilling of teachers; and engagement of stakeholde­rs for support and collaborat­ion.

Briones said that reviewing the 1991 Congressio­nal Commission on Education (EDCOM) Report to find out how it was implemente­d will also help the DepEd identify the issues as it pivots towards quality education.

“Right from the beginning, our concern was quality,” Briones said. “This study was commission­ed by the DepEd because the very institutio­n which should have an interest in the EDCOM, obviously, it's the DepEd and this is part of our pivot toward quality education quality,” she added.

During the forum, resource persons looked closely on how many goals and objectives the country has achieved as set in the report.

Citing the findings of the study, Briones noted that the EDCOM 1 attained 50 percent implementa­tion and 50 percent non-implementa­tion “so it is still something to look at.”

 ??  ?? GET VACCINATED
– A healthcare worker prepares to inoculate residents at the Immaculate Heart of Mary Parish vaccinatio­n site in Malabon on Saturday, August 14, 2021. The National Task Force Against COVID-19 estimates that nearly half of Metro Manila's residents will be fully vaccinated by August 20, the end of two-week Enhanced Community Quarantine imposed in Metro Manila. (Ali Vicoy)
GET VACCINATED – A healthcare worker prepares to inoculate residents at the Immaculate Heart of Mary Parish vaccinatio­n site in Malabon on Saturday, August 14, 2021. The National Task Force Against COVID-19 estimates that nearly half of Metro Manila's residents will be fully vaccinated by August 20, the end of two-week Enhanced Community Quarantine imposed in Metro Manila. (Ali Vicoy)

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