From PHP4 Million To PHP400,000: Where Did The Money Go?

Questions over foundation funds, governance, and accountability place UP CMC Foundation leaders under growing scrutiny.

Tala Launches Grow With Tala To Provide Customers With Clear And Reliable Path To Credit Growth

Tala’s Grow With Tala helps make credit growth feel clearer, more visible, and less overwhelming for customers.

More Than A Group: Michelle Enriquez On Why DIY Travel Philippines Was Never Just About Facebook

DIY Travel Philippines proves that real communities are built not only on platforms, but on trust, shared experience, and people helping one another.

Students Showcase Skills And Creativity At STI Tagisan Ng Talino

STI Tagisan ng Talino brought students together to showcase skills, creativity, and academic excellence beyond the classroom.

Gatchalian On Long-Term Education Recovery: Close The Nationwide Digital Divide

Senator Gatchalian is mulling a bill that would provide a free laptop and internet allowance to every learner in the country.

Gatchalian On Long-Term Education Recovery: Close The Nationwide Digital Divide

48
48

How do you feel about this story?

Like
Love
Haha
Wow
Sad
Angry

Though the Philippines jumped from number 111 to the 86th spot in Ookla’s Speedtest Global Index, Senator Win Gatchalian emphasized the need for sustained efforts to bridge the nationwide digital divide to cover all barangays and reach every learner.

Since most barangays have a public school, Gatchalian has been proposing the construction of cell sites in these schools to ensure nationwide internet coverage.

In a Senate panel hearing last November, the Department of Education (DepEd) reported that out of the 22 million public school learners, only 3.6 million learners have access to the internet and only 1.9 million have their own laptops.

Project BASS-Bandwidth and Signal Statistics co-founder Wilson Chua, on the other hand, shared in the Medium Post that there are 36,607 out of 42,055 barangays or 87 percent that don’t have cell sites.

The Chairman of the Senate Committee on Basic Education, Arts and Culture reiterated that the country has an opportunity to bridge the digital divide, citing the the Bayanihan to Recover As One Act (Republic Act 11494) or Bayanihan 2’s three-year suspension of certain requirements for cell tower construction, except for the building permit.

Gatchalian is also mulling a bill that would provide a free laptop and internet allowance to every learner in the country.

According to the Center for Educational Measurement, around 60 percent of learners who participated in the 2018 Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA) did not have access to computers and the internet. The group added that among the proportion of learners without computers and internet connection at home is much higher in lower proficiency groups.

“Access to the internet and laptops now is as basic as having access to water or electricity. In the same way as no household can survive without electricity or water, no learner can survive now without access to the internet and gadgets,” said Gatchalian.

“The bill we are formulating is embracing the principle of shared responsibility. All of us will have to put in a share to bring the internet to the home of every learner. While this will be costly, the future returns will also be big because if our learners improve their outcomes, the whole country will benefit from it,” he concluded.