Curriculum flexibility, teacher training, enhanced connectivity are keys to improving Philippine education听 听

By Patricia Mirasol 听
According to educators at a July 14 education forum by the National Academy of Science and Technology (NAST), the keys to improving the quality of education in the country are: allowing schools to choose between a disciplinal or spiral curriculum, elevating the quality of training for teachers, and improving access to learning resources through enhanced internet connectivity.听
CURRICULUM FLEXIBILITY听
With a spiral curriculum, schools are only able to cover 40-75% of the curriculum, according to NAST academician, physicist, and Central Visayan Institute Foundation co-founder Christopher C.听Bernido.听
鈥淎mend Republic 10533 to delete the provision of Section 5g that states, 鈥楾he Curriculum shall use the spiral progression approach,鈥欌 he said. 鈥淎 spiral curriculum is like watching the first 30 minutes of a movie in grade 7, the next 30 minutes in grade 8, [and so on]. Students have forgotten the foundations of the subject when continued after a year.鈥听
A spiral curriculum is an approach to education that introduces key concepts to students at a young age and covers these concepts repeatedly, with increasing degrees of complexity.听
鈥淭his could mean teachers being tempted to rush through subjects, or听[give]听superficial coverage that makes deep learning impossible for many,鈥 Mr.听Bernido听said. 鈥淓ssential and non-essential topics end up being given equal weight.鈥听
In view of the pandemic, he recommended the emergency measure of allowing schools to choose between spiral and disciplinal curricula. In a disciplinal curriculum, a subject is tackled extensively per school year (e.g., general science in grade 7, biology in grade 8, chemistry in grade 9, and physics in grade 10).听
鈥淎llow schools to choose between disciplinal or spiral,鈥 said Fr. Bienvenido F.听Niebres, SJ, a mathematician and former president of Ateneo de Manila University (AdMU).听AdMU听has shifted to a disciplinal curriculum, he added.听
鈥淎llow schools to focus on those topics that are most essential,鈥 Fr.听Niebres听told the forum audience. 鈥淢any physics and mathematics teachers know what to focus on. If they can only cover 60%, which 60% can they cover? Give teachers and schools the allowance to prioritize.鈥听
According to Nepomuceno A. Malaluan, undersecretary and chief of staff of the Department of Education鈥檚听(DepEd) Office of the Secretary, Sulong听Edukalidad听is the department鈥檚 response to reforms in the immediate term. One of the four pillars of the reforms is a review and update of the K to 12听curriculums.听
鈥淲e found that there is a space to differentiate between essential and desirable learning competencies, and to focus on the essential,鈥 said Mr. Malaluan, as he shared updates on the curriculum review. 鈥淭he review also revealed the need to improve sequencing, placement, and 鈥 in certain instances 鈥 the presence of prerequisites.鈥听
TEACHER TRAINING听
Another integral aspect of education is teacher training, said Sherwin T. Gatchalian, a senator and chairman of the Senate Committee on Basic Education, Arts and Culture.听
According to the United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization, research has shown that teachers, more than any other constituent group in education, determine educational quality and student achievement.听
鈥淲e are pushing for revival for congressional oversight for education, or听EdCon听for short,鈥 he said. 鈥Unang听dapat听solusyonan听ang听teacher training [We need to first address] teacher training.鈥听
Senate Bill 2152, or the Teacher Education Excellence Act, aims to improve education by improving the quality of teachers and teacher education in the Philippines.听
鈥淭his is already in the plenary,鈥澨Mr.听Gatchalian said, adding that the bill also aims to empower the Teacher Education Council. 鈥淭he training needs of teachers has to be a continuing deliberate endeavor.鈥听
An education forum series that will tackle ongoing major reform initiatives for quality is in the works by the DepEd and its partners, said Mr. Nepomuceno. 鈥淚nitial topics include best practices in blended learning, upskilling and reskilling of teachers, as well as contentious topics such as the language of instruction.鈥听
INTERNET CONNECTIVITY听
Section 1 of the 1987 constitution鈥檚 Article 14 is the guiding principle, said NAST academician and University of Santo Tomas vice–rector for research and innovation Maribel G. Nonato.听
In light of the realities caused by this pandemic, she said, 鈥渜uality education鈥听now refers to 鈥渜uality online education.鈥 鈥淓ducation accessible to all,鈥 meanwhile, now also refers to technological capacity and internet connectivity.听
An October 2020听大象传媒听article reported that a majority of parents, or 8.8 million, preferred modular learning for their children last year, as this option was not reliant on gadgets or internet access.听
The same article also noted a huge听gap in听internet speed between highly urbanized cities and rural areas 鈥 as much as 5.54 megabits per second (Mbps) versus 1 Mbps in Mindanao.听
The Department of Information and Communications Technology should be put back under Department of Science and Technology, said Dr. Ester A. Garcia, president and chief academic officer of University of the East. 鈥淲e have a good learning management system, but our students complain that it doesn鈥檛 reach them. Connectivity is very important. We can鈥檛 just blame the private sector for this.鈥听
鈥淚 hope that the circumstances of COVID-19 would result in the planning of connectivity enhancement by the government,鈥 Ms. Nonato told the forum audience. 鈥淲e鈥檙e low at ICT (information and communication technologies) adoption. If we really intend to move towards hybrid learning, we have to act on this.鈥


