Documenti di Didattica
Documenti di Professioni
Documenti di Cultura
DEVELOPMENT OF THE
PHILIPPINE EDUCATIONAL
SYSTEM
Prepared by:
MATEO D. DEDAL
BEED-IV
Pre-Spanish era
BRIEF HISTORY
• The early Filipinos were already civilized, before the Spanish came and
conquer our country.
• They had government, laws, education, writing, literature, religion, customs
and traditions, commerce and industries and arts and services.
EDUCATIONAL PROGRAM
• Rituals and ceremonies are consider as program that time
• For conformity
EDUCATIONAL PRACTICES
• Apprenticeship – at home
• Knowledge and skills
• Institutionalized – religious and imitation
• Attending religious rituals and ceremonies
LEGAL MANDATES
• Code of Kalantiaw
• Based on elderly rule of the chief in the barangay
PROPONENTS
• Parents
• Elders
• Babaylan andKatalona
Spanish era
BRIEF HISTORY
PROPONENTS
• Spanish missionaries
EDUCATION DURING THE AMERICAN ERA
BRIEF HISTORY
• Treaty of Paris – December 10, 1898 ,terminated the Spanish-
American raging in Cuba and the Philippines were ceded to the
United States by Spain for the paltry sum of US million.
EDUCATIONAL PROGRAMS
• Public School System
• Mass Education
• Elementary Education
• Secondary Education
• Higher Education
• Vocational Education
EDUCATIONAL PRACTICES
1935 Constitution
• moral character
• personal discipline
• civic conscience
• Vocational efficiency
• Citizenship training
Executive Order No. 17
• (Quezon Code of Ethics) – Foundation stone of emerging
philosophy of the Philippine Education system.
• During Commonwealth Period
• Jose P. Laurel
• required teachers to obtain licenses
after undergoing a rigid examination
• encouraged the propagation of Tagalog as the
national language
• require that majority of the governing board of
any school, college or university be Filipino
citizens
REPUBLIC ACT 4007
August 4, 1969
The goal of basic education was to provide the school age population
and young adults with skills, knowledge, and values to become caring,
self-reliant, productive, and patriotic citizens.
In 2005
the Philippines spent about US$138 per pupil
compared to US$3,728 in Japan, US$1,582 in Singapore
and US$852 in Thailand.
In January 2009