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Changes in Philippine education

which is currently in the pro­cess of drafting curriculum to extend the current cycle by two years instead of the origi­nal 10-year cycle.The proposal of DepEd will surely benefit all aspiring stu­dents, especially those who are dreaming of making it big once they graduate from high school. Having this privilege in the coming years would make all the future graduates produc­tive and employable even if they opt not to pursue college studies.

Not only will secondary graduates now have an op­tion to work in the Philippines. They will also be employable in some foreign countries. Individuals who are armed with extensive years in school­ing would have a golden op­portunity to land a job in for­eign lands, since countries in Europe and North America have a 12-year education cy­cle. This move would aid future secondary graduates to secure a job without the financial bur­den of going to college. The proposal would also eliminate jobless professionals in the future.

In case they chose to go abroad, they can compete with the home-grown talents and stand a greater chance of landing a job of their choice. Education Secretary Ar­min Luistro said that a draft curriculum extending the cur­rent cycle by two years would be unveiled on Teachers’ Day, October 5.

Luistro said that this would mark the beginning of consul­tations by DepEd with stake­holders and would include timelines on the launching of the program and budget sup­port.

The DepEd boss dismissed fears that the expanded el­ementary and high school pe­riod in the only country with a 10-year basic education cycle would be a financial burden to parents.

“What we should be think­ing about is not plus two but, really, minus two. What we want are high school gradu­ates who are really prepared to be productive citizens, can be employed and really prepare for it,” Luistro said.

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