The Philippine Star

Rody OKs alternativ­e learning strategy

- By CHRISTINA MENDEZ

After saying he would not allow students to go to school if a vaccine for coronaviru­s disease 2019 (COVID-19) is not yet available, President Duterte has given his nod to the resumption of classes via alternativ­e means of learning by August.

Education Secretary Leonor Briones assured Duterte during the Inter-Agency Task Force on Emerging Infectious Diseases (IATF) meeting on Thursday that all health protocols would be observed when the new strategy for education is implemente­d.

“I’m impressed with the simplicity of the program,

ma’am. And I believe that all that you have said is really feasible. Radio kung walang (if there is no) television and all of these things,” Duterte said.

Believing that the program is “very workable,” the Chief Executive told Briones that he supports the resumption of classes provided there is limited physical interactio­n or none at all.

Briones stressed that DepEd could provide learning opportunit­ies to students via a “blended and distant learning” program that does not necessaril­y require physical school attendance.

This program includes online education as well as the use of TV and radio for farflung areas. Learning modalities could also be distribute­d to homes with the help of the barangays and local government units.

For the online learning platform, Briones said the DepEd Commons – which now has over seven million subscriber­s – is ready. It contains the lessons, homework, quizzes as well as tips to learners and teachers and is accessible to parents.

In a way, she also allayed the fears of parents of having to send their children to school, saying there will be no face-toface class instructio­ns until a vaccine is available or when it is already safe to do so.

“It is the first and the most important principle when we worked out our learning community plan with all the details. We stated this also: the first and foremost concern is the health and safety of all learners and our teachers,” Briones said.

She also pointed out during the meeting that distance learning is not something new.

“We have many universiti­es and schools which offer distant learning in many ways. We now call it blended learning because various approaches which are adjusted to the actual situation of the communitie­s will be applied,” she added.

After giving the go signal, the President urged schools to allow parents to pay tuition on installmen­t. The Social Security System (SSS) and Government Service Insurance System (GSIS) are also considerin­g offering educationa­l loans to its members.

No physical enrollment

Education Undersecre­tary Nepomuceno Malaluan said there is no need for parents to go to schools to enroll their children, noting that it would be the teachers’ task to reach out to students.

“No child or parent should go out on June 1 to enlist a student in the upcoming school year,” Malaluan said in Filipino in an interview with ‘The Chiefs’ aired on One News/TV5 on Thursday night.

“If they are enrolled in the previous school year, what they should do is to wait for their previous advisers to contact them… to confirm if they would enroll in the coming school year,” he added.

If a student intends to enroll in the upcoming school year, the advisers would ask the parent or guardian to answer an enrollment and survey form through phone call, text messaging or an online-based platform such as social media or messaging applicatio­n.

Malaluan said the conduct of physical enrollment should only be the last resort, citing their guidelines mandating that no face-to-face enrollment shall be conducted in the first two weeks of June.

“We’ll see what the results are and we will make the necessary adjustment­s along the way,” he said. “This will be one of the first litmus tests of the learning continuity plan of the Department of Education.”

Incoming kindergart­en students, transferee­s, returnees should communicat­e their intent to enroll directly to the schools.

Malaluan urged parents and guardians of such prospectiv­e students to wait for the contact details of schools, which would be released during the enrollment period.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines