DepEd Secretary Sonny Angara Photo from PNA
NATION

DepEd launches Inclusive Employment Policy

Neil Alcober

The Department of Education (DepEd) has rolled out its Inclusive Employment Policy, describing it as a turning point for the agency’s internal systems after years of fragmented approaches to diversity and non-discrimination across its offices.

The policy (DepEd Order No. 30, s. 2025), unveiled in a gathering of government agencies, foreign partners, civil society groups, teachers, and employees, is aligned with the education agenda of the Marcos administration to modernize the teaching force and strengthen institutional culture.

Education Secretary Sonny Angara said the policy is designed to affirm the agency’s responsibility to provide a safe, impartial, and dignified environment for more than a million teaching and non-teaching personnel nationwide.

Before the new framework, inclusion practices within DepEd varied widely by region and division, with many employees reporting uneven access to opportunities and inconsistent implementation of workplace protections.

The IE Policy consolidates these efforts into a single governance system, mandating equal opportunity standards in hiring, promotion, and daily office operations. It also introduces clear accountability mechanisms, including annual inclusion reports from every governance level.

Stakeholders from the Australian Embassy, The Asia Foundation, the DSWD Diversity and Inclusion Committee, and women’s and labor organizations voiced support, noting that the shift brings DepEd’s HR culture closer to global inclusive standards.

Civil society leaders welcomed the move as a long-overdue reform, particularly for employees who previously faced limited accommodations, stalled career progression, or bias due to disability, identity, religion, gender, age, or familial status.

Angara underscored that the new policy is not just symbolic but also operational, targeting a more consistent, accountable, and transparent workplace culture.