Education is a ‘key element’ in breaking gender barriers, DepEd says


Photo was taken at Signal Village National High School, Taguig City in June 2019. (DepEd Public Affairs Service)

As the country honors women and their contribution in many fields this month, the Department of Education (DepEd) highlighted how education becomes a key element in breaking gender barriers and providing equal opportunities for them.

“Education will teach us to remember what women have always been, an equal member of our society,” Education Secretary Leonor Magtolis Briones said.

“Education will always teach us that gender barriers, gender gaps, and gender biases should not have a place in our society,” she added.

Meanwhile, DepEd Bureau of Human Resources and Organizational Development Director Anne Rachel C. Miguel echoed Briones as she discussed the role of women during the pandemic and in a post-pandemic world.

“Women have been serving in the frontlines during the onslaught of Covid-19, and what happens next would not be more different than that,” Miguel said.

“Education is key in ensuring that women will thrive in a post-pandemic world,” she added.

During the DepEd’s International Women’s Day (IWD) 2022 celebration program spearheaded by the International Cooperation Office in collaboration with the United Nations Association of the Philippines (UNAP) and the Philippine Commission on Women (PCW), women at the forefront of advancing women’s rights worldwide were also featured.

The Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) Chief Executive for the Ministry for Women, New Zealand Renee Graham, tackled providing adequate and equal opportunities to girls and women.

“Gender education starting from schools can help society break free from gender biases, close gender pay gaps, avoid workplace segregation, promote inclusion, and provide economic empowerment to women,” Graham said.

UN Women Regional Office for Asia-Pacific OIC Sarah Knibbs also underscored the role of empowering women through education as one of the keys to solving the climate crisis.

“This year’s theme for the International Women’s Day puts a spotlight on the importance of ensuring women and girls are centered in all our efforts to promote positive change for a sustainable future for all,” Knibbs said.

Knibbs also noted that adopting a more comprehensive curriculum that includes gender equality, climate impacts, and resilience can shift the entire perspective on numerous pressing issues.

Likewise, UNESCO Assistant Director-General Stefania Giannini also urged governments to build bridges with the education sector --- especially learners, to advance their rights and empowerment in the classroom and beyond.

“We have been working hand-in-hand with governments, civil societies, the international community, to galvanize action in support of the creation of a resilient gender-responsive education system that leaves no girl or no boy behind,” Giannini said.