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Saturday make-up classes opposed

Weekend classes would result in additional expenses for parents who take their children to school
Save those Saturdays. Some leaders opposed to the idea of holding Saturday make-up classes cite the added burden it could 
be to some parents, and perhaps indeed to many families who wish to spend quality time together without work or study in 
mind — a way to balance life.
Save those Saturdays. Some leaders opposed to the idea of holding Saturday make-up classes cite the added burden it could be to some parents, and perhaps indeed to many families who wish to spend quality time together without work or study in mind — a way to balance life.PHOTOGRAPH BY KING RODRIGUEZ FOR THE DAILY TRIBUNE
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Instead of holding Saturday classes, the Department of Education (DepEd) should do away with “unnecessary” holidays and activities that consume the academic hours of students, a House of Representatives leader said Tuesday.

At Monday’s hearing of the House Committee on Basic Education and Culture, DepEd Director Leila Areola said the department is considering holding classes on certain Saturdays to compensate for the learning loss once they revert to the old school calendar.

The DepEd has set the calendar for school year 2024-2025 from 29 July until 31 March next year. SY 2025-2026, meanwhile, will start in June 2025.

According to Areola, reverting to the traditional academic calendar would reduce the number of school days from the ideal 180 to 163.

House Deputy Majority Leader Janette Garin, however, did not buy the idea of holding make-up classes on Saturdays, claiming this would result in additional expenses for parents who take their children to school.

“I am not amenable to having Saturday classes in order to catch up. But I am proposing to the Department of Education to do away with unnecessary holidays, to do away with many other activities that actually take away academic hours from the students,” Garin said.

“A Saturday class will be a burden to the parents, especially parents who have weekend jobs,” she added.

Fewer extracurriculars

The Iloilo lawmaker proposed that DepEd instead consider lessening extracurricular activities, if not extending school hours.

“We also have a lot of festivals, and I’m very supportive of those festivals. It’s just that sometimes the school has a lot of extracurricular activities [to the point that] they suspend classes, resulting in a lack of school days,” she said.

“There should be a balance between academic and personality development. We cannot exclude such activities, sports. However, local activities should not be excessive,” she said.

In the same vein, Bataan Rep. Geraldine Roman said weekends should be better left to the students who “also need time with their families and also for their mental health.”

“It’s a balance of leisure, sports, and studies,” she said.

The DepEd is all set to gradually revert to the old school calendar, which was altered by the Covid-19 pandemic and subsequent lockdown in 2020.

Prior to the pandemic, there had been calls to synchronize the Philippines’ school year with that of other countries since June and July typically coincide with the typhoon season, leading to class suspensions.

However, Roman said there is also a need to consider the tropical and maritime climate in the Philippines, which, according to weather bureau Philippine Atmospheric, Geophysical and Astronomical Services Administration, is characterized by relatively high temperatures, high humidity, and abundant rainfall.

“We can manage floods and rains, and in fact, most of our schools are used as evacuation centers,” Roman said.

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