Four hundred (400) educational tablets containing digital learning materials in select mother tongues of Eastern Visayas were turned over by the Government of Japan and UNICEF Philippines to support at least 800 students classified as non-readers and struggling readers from Samar and Nothern Samar.

As young children learn most effectively in their mother tongue, the tablets will be provided to Grades 1 to 3 learners of 30 schools to support the development of their foundational skills in early literacy. The donation is part of the UNICEF-supported Learning Recovery Programme being rolled out by the Department of Education (DepEd) Region VIII, which aims to mitigate learning loss caused by school closures during the lockdowns in the first two years of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Aside from the digital learning materials, Japan and UNICEF are also supporting the development of the Comprehensive Rapid Literacy Assessment in Mother Tongue and the training needed to effectively utilize the tool. This is a crucial intervention, as results from the administered assessments will determine learner profiles and necessary interventions needed for each student.

“Today’s event is a testament to our commitment to helping every child learn despite the most difficult circumstances. We have always believed in meeting children where they are. Providing them with resources in the language they know best, through digital learning, will give them the confidence and skills needed to become lifelong learners,” according to UNICEF Philippines Chief of Education Isy Faingold.

To further make instruction more conducive for learners, UNICEF will also roll out a professional development program to capacitate teachers and school heads on effective early literacy strategies.

The Government of Japan’s support is part of its US$ 2.5M donation to UNICEF Philippines through its Humanitarian Assistance for the Asia Pacific. Since the start of the pandemic, Japan has donated $5.87M (approximately PHP331M) of COVID-19 assistance to the Philippines through UNICEF.

“I am hopeful that this intervention will be effective in mitigating learning loss on children that is aggravated by the pandemic. As a long-standing partner of the UNICEF, the Government of Japan is grateful to add this program to our roster of development cooperation with the UNICEF Philippines,” said First Secretary Kanno Chihiro from the Embassy of Japan in the Philippines.

All schools in the Philippines were closed between March 2020 and October 2021 due to the pandemic and Filipino children mostly experienced distance learning as a way to continue education. This has aggravated a serious learning crisis in the country, leaving the most marginalized children further behind. However, with DepEd expressing plans to re-open in-person classes in all schools in late 2022, efforts are now focused on learning recovery. The Government of Japan and UNICEF Philippines remain committed to working with DepEd in ensuring that every Filipino child regains all learning lost during the pandemic.

A few of the four hundred donated tablets on display at the handover ceremony
of digital devices by UNICEF Philippines and the Embassy of Japan to DepEd Region
VIII and Multi Stakeholders in Tacloban City on Thursday, 28 July 2022. (Photo: UNICEF Philippines/2022/Cecilia Forbes)

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Robert “Bob” Reyes is a technologist, an ICT Consultant and Tech Speaker, a certified Google IT Support Specialist, and an Open Source advocate representing the global non-profit Mozilla (makers of Firefox) in the Philippines. Bob is a Technology Columnist for the Manila Bulletin Publishing Corporation and an aviation subject matter expert contributor for Spot.PH.

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