Catholic schools oppose reframed general education curriculum

Catholic educational groups and stakeholders have voiced strong opposition to the Commission on Higher Education's proposed changes to the general education curriculum. They argue the revisions risk undermining holistic learning and turning higher education into mere job training. The groups called for broader consultations before any implementation.

In a joint statement, the Catholic Educational Association of the Philippines and the Catholic Bishops’ Conference of the Philippines Episcopal Commission on Catholic Education backed earlier concerns from higher education institutions. They stressed that general education forms the core of university experience and should not be narrowed by market-driven goals.

The groups quoted Pope Leo XIV to emphasize that authentic formation must integrate science with humanism and technology with conscience. They urged the Commission on Higher Education to conduct evidence-based reviews involving students, educators and academic leaders.

Over 1,500 stakeholders signed a separate position paper describing the draft as a patchwork of corporate terms lacking a coherent vision. The signatories warned the changes could displace up to 90,000 teaching staff and weaken moral and civic education. They plan to submit the petition to the Commission on Higher Education on May 12.

Related Articles

Swedish Education Minister Simona Mohamsson announces government rejection of national education curricula and tighter oversight at press conference.
Image generated by AI

Government tightens oversight of National Agency for Education's curriculum work

Reported by AI Image generated by AI

The Swedish government has rejected the National Agency for Education's work on new curricula and will impose tighter control. Education Minister Simona Mohamsson (L) criticized the agency for not fully aligning with government intentions. Experts will take a more central role in the process.

Educators, students, and advocacy groups filed petitions on May 12 seeking to halt CHED's plan to reduce general education units from 36 to 18. The move comes amid concerns over teacher displacement and a market-driven shift in higher education.

Reported by AI

The Commission on Higher Education has postponed the pilot testing of its proposed reframed general education curriculum from 2026 to 2028. The decision follows petitions from teachers, students, and advocacy groups opposing the reduction of GE units from 36 to 18. Officials cited the need for further review of stakeholder comments.

There will be no tuition increases in colleges and universities for academic year 2026-2027 amid the energy crisis caused by the war in the Middle East, Commission on Higher Education chairperson Shirley Agrupis said on Tuesday.

Reported by AI

The Ministry of Education presented a proposal on Wednesday to significantly reduce the maximum number of students per classroom across all educational stages, from the first cycle of early childhood education to Bachillerato.

Egypt is transforming its pre-university education system for 25 million students by shifting from enrollment metrics to skills-based learning and introducing a new Egyptian Baccalaureate, Education Minister Mohamed Abdellatif announced at the Education World Forum in London.

Reported by AI

The Chamber of Deputies' Education Committee approved the Executive's Protected Schools bill on Thursday and sent it to the floor after a tense debate lasting over six hours. Education Minister María Paz Arzola thanked lawmakers for the progress, emphasizing its urgency to combat school violence. Opponents filed constitutionality reservations and criticized the burden on educators.

This website uses cookies

We use cookies for analytics to improve our site. Read our privacy policy for more information.
Decline