Sun.Star Davao

Another fiction in our education

- DANNY ABRIGO abrigodann@gmail.com /For full story visit sunstar.com.ph/davao

SENDING our children to schools while the nation is on a state of a national health emergency is tantamount to feeding our young ones to the lion’s mouth. It is serious wrongdoing orchestrat­ed by no less than the department where we all ought to trust our children for virtuous learning.

Why DepEd cannot wait until a covid-19 vaccine is available to safeguard the innocent children from this fatal disease? Will this administra­tion permit a massive death among the most vulnerable minors?

The heartless executives of the education department prospered in their presentati­on of the Learning Continuity Plan (LCP) to the National InterAgenc­y Task Force (NIATF).

Without rigor, the plan was approved. And so for this school year, classes will start on August 24, 2020 with or without vaccine; and will end on April 30, 2021.

DepEd is deafened from the shared uproar of the ever-loving parents who are willing to wait in abeyance of class opening until the prescribed protection of their children is available.

In the LCP, DepEd assured that a system for distant or blended learning modules is readied. But the astute officials failed to come up with a sciencebas­ed study on three crucial factors for effective learning under the new norm.

First is the preparedne­ss of the learning facilitato­rs or teachers. To determine how prepared the teachers are, a survey was conducted on April 16 to 30, 2020. Out of 689,329 teacher-respondent­s, DepEd said only 77,631 or 11% of them do not have a computer at home.

The survey could not be a strong determinan­t of being ready because those computers are being used for whatever business by all family members of a teacher-respondent and not dedicated for the distant teaching-learning.

It is a responsibi­lity of the state to provide a government-issued computer for that purpose.

To effectivel­y carry out what is written in the LCP the department needs of at least P27 billion to provide one laptop per teacher. And these laptops must be distribute­d to about 800,000 public school teachers before August.

Second is the readiness of the learners with their gadgets. DepEd did not conduct a study on what percentage of enrollees in public schools owned pc/ laptop, tablet, or smartphone. Most of them enrolled in public schools in confidence that education is free; and buying those gadgets is only secondary to food and other necessitie­s.

And third is the capability of the infrastruc­ture to convey the informatio­n from the facilitato­rs to the learners and the response. DepEd failed to understand that internet signals are even lagging in the urban, how much more to those in the rural and hinterland­s?

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