The Quality of Education continues in the midst of the Pandemic
The Quality of Education continues in the midst of the Pandemic
The CoVid-19 Crisis has significantly affected both social and economic sectors in the Philippines, one of them being the education sector. It has brought upon us many challenges and difficulties that are likely to have long-term effects on the potential of children.
As Sec. Briones had said, “Education is not going to be the same as education during my time or during your time. It’s going to change, and the change has already started. We already recognize the signals; we see the increased role of technology and science. We see the need to encourage not only our teachers but our learners to not only specialize and memorize; but to know many things, to know how to analyze, to know how to be objective, to know how to come to break a problem apart, and come up with a solution. And so, despite the too many challenges and problems during the educational era of the pandemic, education continues. Whatever obstacles may come, together our teachers, parents, and learners will rise. Hand in hand schools, parents, and the community stakeholders will work together for the implementation of quality education that would benefit our students.” Face-to-face classes may not be resumed for now, but we still have distance learning as our means of getting quality education. The Covid-19 pandemic shall not stop us from gaining quality education and learning new things.
With the
advent of Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) which originated in a wet market
in Wuhan, China, this severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2
(SARS-CoV-2) has become the fifth documented pandemic since the 1918 flu
pandemic. Every continent in the world has been affected by this highly
contagious disease, with nearly a million cases diagnosed and rapidly spreads
and continuously evolves in the human population worldwide. The current
COVID-19 pandemic has brought us so many circumstances that we have not, in
living memory, experienced before. The impact of the outbreak is so widespread
and in some places, very catastrophic. No doubt, the pandemic has grounded and
strained us all. This health crisis has forced countries including ours to
adapt to new ways of teaching students. The delivery of education has greatly
changed because of this Covid-19 pandemic. Schools were closed and teaching had
to be performed remotely with the use of modular and digital platforms. The
Department of Education under Sec. Leonor Briones had crafted the Basic
Education - Learning Continuity Plan (BE-LCP) which is the Department of
Education's major response and commitment in protecting the health, safety, and
well-being of learners, teachers, and personnel in order for education to
continue under the health protocols set by the Department of Health and the
World Health Organization. The BE-LCP aims to provide quality distance learning
with the use of self-learning modules in digital and printed form, radio, television,
and the internet. The DepEd has selected teachers who were trained to be
teacher-broadcasters by the country's top journalists to deliver lessons
through the DepEd TV since not all areas in the country have an internet
connection. To assist more learners and teachers in distance learning amid the
pandemic, the DepEd also upgraded its DepEd Commons which is an online learning
platform for both public and private schools. Learners and teachers can access
it free of data charges with the help of some mobile companies.
With the
continuity of education amid this pandemic, too many challenges came across in
the delivery and quality of education. Problems on means to buy devices/gadgets
for online learning, poor internet connectivity, adding with it is the way of
connecting to the net due to financial constraints and of course not all
parents are technologically educated. Children would learn on their own if this
is the scenario. Parents would need to seek the assistance of relatives to meet
this issue. Another problem that faces learners’ parents is their inability to
teach their children since not all of them are college graduates. They foresee
this as a huge task to hurdle, how could their children learn from them if they
themselves are not educated? Working parents had also a dilemma of their own,
how would they divide their time between working for a living and at the same
time teaching their kids in their modules? Too many parent problems to face.
Not only do we consider the device to use, but the way of connecting with the
net and parental guidance in support of our student’s education is also at
stake. Take into consideration our students who are the end product of the
remote learning. Students are greatly affected; they need motivation to
continue striving for excellence without a teacher in a modular class. They
have to work independently at their own pace. It is but a trying time for them,
coping, adjusting to the new normal way of teaching-learning. But through it
all, this kind of teaching-learning process is the only way not to stop them
from gaining knowledge. It is for their own good and benefit, securing their
safety while learning within the four walls of their own homes.
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ReplyDeleteI must agree, it is indeed the best to continue learning despite the struggle in going through the New Normal in the Educational System. Looking forward to your next blogs!
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