Edcom 2 reports 24 million Filipinos functionally illiterate

The Second Congressional Commission on Education (Edcom 2) released its top 10 findings for 2025, highlighting widespread functional illiteracy affecting 24 million Filipinos and the ongoing exclusion of millions of children with disabilities from basic services.

On January 1, 2026, the Second Congressional Commission on Education (Edcom 2) unveiled its top 10 findings for the previous year. The first finding drew from the Philippine Statistics Authority's 2024 Functional Literacy, Education and Mass Media Survey, released on April 30, 2025. It revealed that over 24 million Filipinos aged 10 to 64 are functionally illiterate, with another 5.8 million basically illiterate.

The second finding, from the policy brief 'Accelerating Support for Learners with Disabilities' issued on November 21, 2025, exposed significant gaps in inclusive education. Although the Inclusive Education Act aligns with international best practices, local resource and capacity shortages hinder its implementation. Only 391,089 learners with disabilities are enrolled in public schools, accounting for just 8 percent of the estimated 5.1 million children with disabilities nationwide.

Third, merely 43 percent of malnourished children aged two to four are covered by the Department of Social Welfare and Development's supplementary feeding program. Edcom 2 points to structural issues and facility-based interventions as key factors, urging a 'system reset' to define governance roles and ensure programs reach vulnerable groups. Additionally, funding misunderstandings have blocked national programs from the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao, with some agencies reducing health and education support under the misconception that the region's block grant suffices.

Meanwhile, Congress plans to extend the Edcom 2 model to agriculture via Senate Bill 1624, establishing the Congressional Commission on Agriculture, Fisheries and Food Security.

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President Marcos signs P6.793-trillion 2026 national budget, highlighting education and infrastructure allocations amid vetoes for prudent spending.
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Marcos signs P6.793-trillion budget for 2026

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President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. signed the P6.793-trillion national budget for 2026 on January 5, allocating a record P1.015 trillion to the Department of Education and P530.9 billion to the DPWH. He vetoed P92.5 billion in unprogrammed appropriations, leaving P150.9 billion, while vowing prudent spending to curb corruption. The budget bars political involvement in aid distribution, though critics question the remaining funds.

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.

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A comprehensive evaluation of the Department of Education's Matatag curriculum delivered mixed results: significant learning gains for second graders in 70 pilot schools, but teachers bore the brunt of insufficient support. Released in December by the Philippine Institute for Development Studies, the study highlights implementation challenges in the country's major education reform.

In 2025, mass protests erupted nationwide against a sprawling corruption scandal involving flood control and infrastructure funds. Dozens of political and business figures, including high-level legislators, faced criminal charges. The scandal has raised doubts about governance and the country's economic trajectory.

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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.

As South Africa's 2026 school year begins, provincial education departments face significant hurdles in implementing compulsory Grade R, including unplaced learners and budget constraints from the Bela Act of 2024.

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Colombia's Senate Seventh Commission archived the health reform bill with eight votes in favor and five against, on the last day of the ordinary legislative session. This marks the second sinking of the initiative pushed by President Gustavo Petro's government. Reactions highlight concerns over the system's financial sustainability.

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