Tolentino welcomes pilot implementation of face-to-face classes


Senator Francis ‘Tol N. Tolentino has welcomed the decision of President Duterte to allow the pilot testing of limited face-to-face classes in areas with low cases of COVID-19 infection.

Tolentino said allowing the pilot testing for limited face-to-face classes “is a good step towards normalization and improving the country’s education system.”

“We have lots of grounds to recover,” he added.

A maximum of 100 public schools which have passed its “readiness assessment” will participate in the pilot test based on the Malacañang decision.

As early as July, Tolentino has been pushing for the gradual resumption of face-to-face classes in low-risk island provinces in the country for this school year.

Tolentino said island provinces such as Guimaras, Biliran, Batanes, and Camiguin which have low or zero COVID-19 infection rate should be allowed by the national government to resume its face-to-face classes for students while still abiding with existing minimum health protocol guidelines by the Inter-Agency Taskforce (IATF).

He stressed that the distance learning modality—a combination of online and modular learning—is not effective at all, considering the current connectivity problem of the country’s telecommunications companies (telcos).

The National Economic and Development Authority (NEDA) earlier recommended a limited resumption of face-to-face classes for academic year 2021-2022, noting that the current blending learning scheme has deeply affected the country’s quality of education.

Socioeconomic Planning Secretary Karl Kendrick Chua told members of the Senate Committee on Finance during the budget deliberations in the Upper House that a year without having face-to- face classes would result in a projected P11-trillion loss in productivity over the next 40 years.

Chua noted that a year without physical classes would have a permanent effect on the student’s abilities, especially when they enter the labor sector after graduation.