UPOU chancellor emphasizes inclusive education philosophy

During her investiture as chancellor of the University of the Philippines Open University on July 30, 2025, Dr. Joane Serrano declared that open and distance education is not merely a delivery method but a philosophy centered on quality, inclusion, equity, and access. This approach enables millions of Filipinos barred from traditional schooling by distance, work, or other barriers to pursue higher education. UPOU has quietly disrupted Philippine education for nearly three decades.

The University of the Philippines Open University (UPOU) has long served as a quiet disruptor in the Philippine education system, where inequalities often stem from geography, cost, and the need for physical presence. In her investiture speech, Dr. Serrano stated: “Open and distance education is not just a delivery mode, but a philosophy rooted in quality, inclusion, equity, and access.” This underscores that true educational excellence requires accessibility for all.

She highlighted UPOU's historic purpose as an institution for those overlooked by traditional universities, including remote residents, workers, and Overseas Filipino Workers (OFWs). “We were built for the underserved, the geographically distant, the working Filipinos, the OFWs… Those whose right to UP education remains just as valid, just as urgent,” she said.

A key example of UPOU's model is the UP Ventures for International and Transformative Academia (UP VINTA) program for OFWs in Taiwan, allowing them to study in dormitories while working. This ends the impossible choice between earning abroad and continuing education.

As a “Transformative University of the Future,” Chancellor Serrano outlined four pillars: a Learning University for lifelong curiosity, a Healthy University prioritizing well-being, a Sustainable and Resilient University based on systems thinking, and an Intrapreneurial University addressing real social needs.

She added: “Technology is a tool — never the goal itself. The heart of open and distance e-learning is in the lives we touch and transform.” This is particularly relevant for sectors like agriculture, where UPOU can offer microcredentials to farmers on soil health, agroforestry, and climate adaptation without leaving their fields.

Finally, she declared: “Opening the doors of UP is not a gesture of generosity, it is a commitment to justice.” In an era of growing inequality and climate challenges, such commitment is essential for every Filipino aspiring to education.

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