DepEd: Hold your horses on Sept. school opening

Moving the school opening to September would need a thorough study and consultations with education stakeholders and disaster management agencies, the Department of Education (DepEd) said Thursday.

DepEd Communications Director Tina Ganzon made the statement following renewed calls toreset the school opening to September from June to avoid the onset of the rainy season.

Ganzon, however, cited a survey that said more people favored retaining the opening of the school year in June, the traditional start of classes in the country.

“A survey conducted among parents, students and teachers in 2009 showed that the majority still preferred a June opening,” Ganzon told the Inquirer Thursday.

“But we are not saying no to the proposal to move it to September. This would need further study and consultations as we need to take into consideration a lot of factors including climate change,” she said.

A perennial proposal that never got anywhere, calls to move the class opening to September cropped up again following severe flooding in many parts of Metro Manila and other parts of Luzon that caused the suspension of classes earlier this week.

But strong storms and typhoons also hit the country in September, like “Ondoy,” which flooded Metro Manila in 2009 and “Sendong,” which devastated Cagayan de Oro and Iligan cities in 2011.

In the 1960s, the school opening was moved to September in a three-year process but this was quickly returned to June in the fourth year after students complained that they could notconcentrate on their school work due to the hot summer weather in April and May, and the fact that farmers in the provinces could not enlist their children’s help in bringing in the harvestsbecause they were in school.

Source:
Inquirer.net

K – To – 12 Kicks Off

MANILA, Philippines — For the parents of the close to 2 million children who will start kindergarten classes on Monday, the key phrase is ”K-to-12.”

K-to-12 is the government’s bold new education program it is launching this school year. It re-structures the curriculum, incorporating kindergarten, six years of elementary, four years of junior high school, and two years of senior high school (SHS).

The goal of the program, which will be implemented in phases, is to provide the student enough time to master concepts and skills and prepare graduates for tertiary education, middle-level skills development, employment, and entrepreneurship.

The kindergartners belong to the army of almost 28 million students attending elementary, high school and college classes this year. The Department of Education (DepEd) projects enrollment in the more than 45,000 public elementary and high schools at 21.49 million, with 1.73 million in kindergarten; 14 million in elementary and 5.76 million in high school.

DepEd has yet to come up with an estimate on enrollment for private schools, but going by previous trends, it could be 3 million for kinder, elementary and high school.

In the college level, the Commission on Higher Education (CHEd) expects more than three million students to enrol in 2,247 public and private Higher Education Institutions (HEIs).
CHEd predicts a total of 3,052,153 students enrolled in 1,604 private HEIs and 110 State, Universities, and Colleges (SUCs) main campuses, 424 satellite campuses, 93 Local Universities and Colleges (LUCs,) 16 others including 1 CHEd Supervised Institution (CHED-ARMM), 10 other Government Schools and 5 Special HEIs.
Attention, however, will be riveted on K to 12, how DepEd can get it off to a good start. After all, the K-to-12 budget for 2012 is a staggering Php 238.8 billion, including Php 2.4 billion for kinder.
For 2016, when Grade 11 (the equivalent high school year 5) the program needs an estimated Php 38 billion.
Jayson Tarnate, of Fajardo Interior, Sampaloc, Manila, is grappling with another problem, one that directly involves his son, John Andrew.

By all indications, John Andrew is ready for kindergarten. He can write his name, identify the basic colors, recite the ABC, and count from one to 10. But there is a hitch: The boy isonly four.

”I was hoping that he’d enter kindergarten this year but he was turned away since he’s only four years old,” said Tarnate, a 29-year-old former hardware store worker whose family owns a sidewalk snack foods business.

Under K-to-12, the age limit for kinder is five.

”Nowadays, you can’t force children into studying if they don’t want to,” Tarnate said.
But John Andrew is different. He wants to go school. Now, Tarnate realized this last year, when John Andrew saw a group of pupils walking to school. ”Pa, let me study, ”Let me study,” the boy nagged his father.
Still, Tarnate acknowledges that K-to-12 is ”okay if it means sharpening children’s knowledge.
To have no education is difficult.”Ishi Amerie Caliwan, of Bambang, Taguig City, also can’t wait to go to school.
”I want to go to school because that’s my favorite place and because I am already four,” said the girl, who turned four last April 7.

Ishi said she wants to be taught how to write her name and her parents’ names. ”I will also read. I want to be a doctor, with an injection.”

Christy Caliwan, 28, a corporate services assistant at the British Embassy in Taguig, said she fully supports her daughter’s dream.
”We would like her to finish school, earn a degree and get her dream job. We want her to be successful and at the same time happy with the things that she might be doing in the future,” Caliwan said.
Although they fully support K+12, they said that additional financial support to students’ families, particularly to the lesser-fortunate, should be the next logical step for the government. K+12 ”will be very beneficial to the students. However, by adding more years, it will also become a burden to most of the parents.
We think that they should also offer scholarship to students who lack financial means, and add more classrooms and hire more teachers,” said Ishi’s dad, Lloyd, 28.
Lloyd said their daughter is now being assessed as to what pre-school institution would be best suited for her level.
As for Andoy, it’s back to the barangay day-care center, the same one that he attended with no absences last year.
”That would be better than playing Counterstrike the whole day,” Jayson said.
Education Secretary Armin Luistro has predicted a ”smooth” school opening.
”There are no major problems in terms of shortages in public schools,” Luistro said. He said that textbooks and chairs will not be a problem for students who took advantage of early registration in January. ”However, this may not be the same to late enrollees since preference will be given to those who have been listed already,” Luistro said.
DepEd puts shortages of teachers this schoolyear at 47,584, classrooms at 19,579 and sanitation facilities or comfort rooms at 80,937.

The Alliance of Concerned Teachers (ACT) disagreed, saying DepEd has ”lowered the figures” of shortages. ACT Party-List Representative Antonio Tinio ”disputed” the lower figures claimed by DepEd.
The shortages ”will get worse this schoolyear because the Aquino administration has failed to provide sufficient funding in the 2012 national budget for the additional requirements of our public school system in School Year 2012-2013, including the needs of 1.6 million incoming kindergarten students,” Tinio said.

– Article from Manila Bulletin , June 3, 2012

2012 Nutrition Month Celebration

Every year, in the month of July, the National Nutrition Council lead the whole nation in the celebration of Nutrition Month,purposely to disseminate nutrition messages to all Filipino through a focal theme. For 2012, the them is Pagkain ng gulay ugaliin, araw-araw itong ihain to focus on the promotion of vegetables and its nutritional benefits.

The INC launching event for the Nutrition Month Celebration will feature vegetable gardening in schools on July 2, 2012 to emphasize the importance of eating vegetabls as part o fa healty diat. All pulic elem and secondary scholls are encouraged to conduce simultatneous vegatble gardening on July 2 as well.

School administrators, teachers and non-teaching personnel are enjoined to participate in the month long celebration oby undertaking activities which will promote vegetable consumption and production in the schools. The actiities should also highlight the National greening program focused on poverty reduction, food security, biodiversity conservation, climate change mitigation and adaptation and Gulayan sa Paaralan project by participating in tree planting and growing activities and establishing vegetable gardens.

Nutrition Month Conference

It s expected the narrative and pictorial reports on the Nutrition Month Celebration be incorporated in the 3rd quarter report on the Integrated School health and Nutrition Program and submitted to the office of the Secretary, Attention: The Direcor, health and Nutrition Center, Deped Central office, Meralco Avenue, Pasig City.

DepEd Memo 101 S 2012