Asking teachers with no election duties to continue reporting 'beyond ridiculous', group says
A group of education workers on Monday, April 18, slammed the Department of Education (DepEd) for asking teachers without election duties to report to schools even when classes were declared suspended.

“It is beyond ridiculous to force teachers without election duties to report on-site while schools are being prepared to serve as voting centers for the May 9 polls,” said ACT as a reaction to the announcement of DepEd that classes will be suspended in public schools from May 2 to 13 due to election-related activities.
READ:
https://mb.com.ph/2022/04/18/walangpasok-deped-suspends-classes-in-public-schools-from-may-2-to-13/
ACT said that even the own school calendar of DepEd marked the period from May 2 to 13 as non-school days, “therefore should also not be considered as workdays for teachers.”
The group added that should DepEd proceed to mandate non-BEIs to report to school for the exigency of service, DepEd “must guarantee them 1.25 service credits and include a provision for such in the official memorandum for said extra days of work.”
“We can't forget how teachers were made to render services months before classes were allowed to resume in 2020, then denied up to this day due compensation for the extended 77 work days for that particular school year,” the group said.
ACT also criticized DepEd for “losing its grip” on teachers' job description which is to “teach students.”
The group noted that DepEd’s latest public order that teachers must continue reporting on-site from May 2 to 13 despite class suspensions “adds to the string of senseless and unnecessarily burdensome work orders issued by DepEd in the last two years of pandemic.”
ACT also called out DepEd for directing the mandatory on-site reporting of teachers effective April 18.
“Just today, most NCR teachers were required to report on-site despite only a few number of schools being allowed to participate in DepEd's program for limited face-to-face classes--which effectively made online teaching even more difficult due to the lack of school infrastructure for such,” ACT said.
Given this, ACT urged DepEd to “review the nature of teachers' jobs and heed the many issues being raised before them, instead of hashing out senseless orders that serve no clear and justifiable purpose.”
READ:
https://mb.com.ph/2022/04/18/suspend-mandatory-physical-reporting-of-all-teachers-deped-told/