DepEd cites need to bolster science, technology education in K to 12


DepEd / MANILA BULLETIN

For the Department of Education (DepEd), there is a need to improve teaching science and technology in basic education to prepare Filipino learners for future challenges.

“With or without the pandemic, we will be faced with the challenge of catching up with technology, science, and many more innovations that will change our lives,” Education Secretary Leonor Magtolis Briones said.

“It is a challenge to us in basic education to prepare our learners and ensure that they master the basics of science and technology,” she added.

During the EDUtech 2022 in February, Briones also made the call to capacitate learners on skills required for future jobs while still incorporating Filipino values and culture.

“Every learner must have a thorough grounding in science and technology to survive,” Briones said. “Every learner must be prepared for a future that is evolving,” she added.

With the theme "Building back better and quality education in the Philippines," the two-day EDUTech forum also featured several DepEd officials, who served as panelists of different sessions and shared their insights and best practices in education.

Digital transformation in schools

Meanwhile, Undersecretary for Administration Alain Del B. Pascua also highlighted DepEd Commons as a step of the agency towards digitization and teacher upskilling during the panel discussion for digital transformation in schools.

“Even before the pandemic, we have already started the digital transformation in the Department of Education,” Pascua said.

“This pandemic made us realize that there are still other technologies that we need to use, and it also made us hasten the digitization of education in the public sector,” he added.

In 2021, DepEd Commons recorded more than 10.5 million unique users nationwide with 4,762 uploaded learning resources and had become one of the most efficient complementary tools for blended learning.

Hybrid learning to stay

Moreover, Undersecretary for Curriculum and Instruction Diosdado San Antonio recognized that “hybrid learning is here to stay” post-Covid.

Given this, he cited steps DepEd is taking to adopt innovations for learning, including the establishment of the Education Futures Programme (Educ Futures).

“This pandemic imposed a great challenge for all of us, to embrace change,” San Antonio said.

“We have gone from traditional to digital in a short time and we must recognize how far we have come,” he added.

(Courtesy of DepEd)