DepEd reports fewer struggling readers in public schools

The number of struggling readers in public schools has declined since the start of the school year, the Department of Education reported yesterday. Officials credit the improvement to the Academic Recovery and Accessible Learning Program.

The Department of Education announced a drop in the number of struggling readers in public schools since the school year began. This progress stems from the Academic Recovery and Accessible Learning (ARAL) Program, with mid-year assessments showing a 96 percent submission rate as of January 5.

Reading readiness improved by an average of five points for students in Grades 3 to 6, while those in Grades 7 to 10 saw gains of six to nine points. These results mean that about 3.42 million learners in Grades 3-6 and 1.72 million in Grades 7-10 are now closer to grade-level proficiency in reading.

Education Secretary Sonny Angara credited the advances to structured remediation, focused tutorial sessions, and regular monitoring under the ARAL Program. He stated that these interventions will expand and standardize once the program receives full funding in 2026.

On Monday, the Marcos administration approved P8.93 billion for ARAL in the 2026 national budget, the first time it will be fully funded since becoming law. With this, DepEd aims to engage over 440,000 tutors nationwide, including volunteers and non-DepEd personnel.

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第2回教育議会委員会(EDCOM 2)は、全国の学習者の41.47%が読解に苦戦していると報告した。この数字は、2025-2026年度初めに実施された教育省の包括的迅速リテラシー評価によるもので、小学1年生から3年生までの計2,243,059人の学習者が対象となっている。

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The Southeast Asia Primary Learning Metrics (SEA-PLM) 2024 report reveals that 42% of grade 5 students in the Philippines share reading textbooks, indicating a significant decline in availability compared to 2019. Only 52% have their own textbook, while 7% lack access entirely. This lags behind other Southeast Asian countries like Myanmar and Vietnam, where 100% of students have their own copy.

To address a nationwide shortage of 165,000 classrooms, Education Secretary Sonny Angara has directed the Department of Education's infrastructure group to finalize steps to accelerate construction in 2026, as part of a broader goal to build at least 200,000 classrooms over the next five to ten years. Priorities include last-mile schools and temporary learning spaces for disaster-hit communities.

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In Metro Manila and other urban areas, building new classrooms is no longer feasible due to lack of space. An opinion piece argues that school congestion, rather than just the 165,000 classroom backlog as of 2025, needs addressing to improve learning environments.

 

 

 

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