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Sunday, June 14, 2020 Vol. 15 No. 248
P25.00 nationwide | 2 sections 12 pages | 7 DAYS A WEEK
‘REVOLUTION’
STUDENTS wearing protective masks join a school activity in Manila, January 31, 2020. AP/AARON FAVILA
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By Claudeth Mocon-Ciriaco
In a nationally televised briefing at Malacañang nearly a fortnight ago, she impressed President Duterte with her clear presentation of how this can be done.
HE learned how to read and write through banana leaves, which have lines, and sharpened bamboo sticks as pencils at the age of 3, during the war years.
Surviving the war period, as well as the martial-law years, perhaps prepared, in large part, Education Secretary Leonor Magtolis Briones for the unique but daunting role that 2020, the Covid-19 pandemic year, would present her. A challenge, as it were, to fasttrack, by force of circumstance, the march to the future of the Philippine education system that has been criticized for its ancient methods and infrastructure. With the deadly virus clamping schools under strict physical distancing rules, the school system now has to quickly transform itself into a flexible, creative, nimble system that allows children to continue their education from homes. The problem is: the Philippines, despite being tagged social-media capital of the world, remains in the digital dark ages, with a divide as yawning as the income inequalities haunting the nation of 100 million plus. As fate would have it, it fell into the lap of Briones, all of 79 years, to lead the “revolution.” Despite criticism from all sides— those who think the Department of Education should have simply forfeited the school year, those who say it should push back school opening to January, and those who
find so many things wrong in the “blended learning” that DepEd is championing—the strong-willed and visionary secretary made a stand. Children, she said, cannot be deprived of their basic right to education, not even by a deadly virus. With the help of both young and veteran staff at DepEd, she declared August 24 as school opening day, asserting that the government’s attempt to establish alternative modalities of education come August 24, 2020, the opening of School Year (SY) 2020-2021, “can be done” as Covid-19 is changing the educational landscape.
PESO EXCHANGE RATES n US 49.9540
The war years
EDUCATION Secretary Leonor Magtolis Briones
DEPED
A veteran teacher with vivid memories of the war years is thrust to the forefront of a new battle—forcing an antiquated education system to keep schooling children in a pandemic.
SHE recalled, in a speech just before the pandemic broke, that her mother, a teacher, had to think of ways of distracting the children around the mountain areas from where they were from the sound of aerial dogfights; and on the ground, from the stories of arrests, women eviscerated, children bayoneted. “We had to be distracted and in the mean time, we learned how to read and to write. I am the child of teachers, we have never been rich. And as a teacher now, I am not rich. So when I went to school, I was immediately accelerated after the war because the district supervisor was surprised that a four-year-old could already read and write from banana leaves,” Briones said in one of her speeches prior to the health crisis. “This time, you have all the gadgets. You have computers, papers, pencils, televisions, etc., and if all learners still don’t know how to read and write, if all learners still do not know values of citizenship, then perhaps we have to go back to banana leaves,” she stressed. Briones certainly did not expect, during her stint, that another “war” will happen, although the enemy is unseen, as it brought disruption to the education system. But she is obviously up to the challenge. “So, we are not saying that the department will be 100 percent ready by August 24, but Continued on A2
n JAPAN 0.4665 n UK 63.6864 n HK 6.4458 n CHINA 7.0733 n SINGAPORE 36.1279 n AUSTRALIA 34.9378 n EU 56.8377 n SAUDI ARABIA 13.3157
Source: BSP (June 11, 2020)