CHED adopts flexible learning as standard system, no going back to face-to-face classes

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The Commission on Higher Education (CHED) has adopted a policy to continue flexible learning in the coming years. This means that Philippine universities and colleges will no longer go back to traditional face-to-face classes.

According to CHED chairperson Prospero de Vera, bringing back face-to-face classes will expose educational stakeholders to the “same risks if another pandemic comes in.”

It also “would have wasted all the investments in technology, in teacher training, in the retrofitting of our facilities,” he added.

“From now on, flexible learning will be the norm. There is no going back to the traditional, full-packed face-to-face classrooms. The commission has adopted a policy that flexible learning will continue in School Year 2021 and thereafter,” De Vera claimed.

The “old paradigm of face-to-face versus online will now disappear,” he added.

“What will happen is a flexible system where universities will mix and match flexible learning methods appropriate to their situation.”

“The more prepared universities will continue investing and moving ahead using online platforms. Others will be allowing some of their students to come back at specific periods and do more synchronous versus asynchronous learning,” said De Vera.

Innovations and adjustments are emerging as the digital divide “exacerbates difficulties in adjusting to flexible learning.”

He further noted that “both students and faculty members are able to adjust to flexible learning better now than before.”

Now, teachers must “realize that the old norms are gone and they must adjust to new standards,” he added.

“That means an openness to engage and spend time with students and use of new technology that we make conversations better and deeper.”

The chairperson said there will be “a transition from the exam-based system that depends on knowledge creation to group work and project or task-based systems, particularly in determining how to grade our students, and textbooks will no longer be the sole source of knowledge.”

House committees to hold hearings during break

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Spread the loveMANILA – The House of Representatives has authorized for its committees to conduct hearings during the five-week congressional break, extending until late April.

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