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Marcos backs revert to old acad calendar in 2025

MANILA, Philippines — Extreme heat driven by climate change has forced the government to speed up its return to the old school calendar, with President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. himself asking Vice President and Education Secretary Sara Duterte to provide a "concerted plan" for schools to go back to the June-March schedule by "next year."

"Mukha naman hindi na tayo kailangan maghintay pa at mukha namang kailangan na (There seems to be no need for us to wait anymore and it looks like we need it now)," Marcos said in an interview with reporters on Monday.

"I don’t see any objections really from anyone, especially with the El Niño," the president added.

The Department of Education initially planned to return to the old June-March calendar in phases every year up to school year 2027-2028 to avoid shortening students' and teachers' vacation days. 

However, amid calls to ease students' and teachers' discomfort in the sweltering heat, DepEd Assistant Secretary Francis Bringas told a Senate panel last week that they have proposed an "aggressive" timeline to the president that ends SY 2024-2025 by March 31, 2025, two months earlier than scheduled.

This "aggressive" timeline, if approved, will reduce the total number of school days in SY 2024-2025 to 165 days, lower than the 200-220 days required by the law.

Bringas said that the more compressed school year may also require classes to be held on weekends and holidays through alternative delivery mode (ADM) to make up for lost time.

Without elaborating, Marcos said that the government's plan is to "bring (back) already the old schedule... hopefully by next year." 

Record-breaking temperatures in the past week have already forced over 7,000 public schools to suspend class instruction, reverting to the same remote learning setup that made students' learning uneven during the COVID-19 pandemic lockdowns.  

Latest DepEd data sent to reporters on May 6 show that 15% or 7,372 out of 47,678 schools have suspended face-to-face classes and are implementing ADM. 

In response to the announced calendar shift, the Alliance of Concerned Teachers (ACT), the country's largest network of teacher unions, challenged Marcos to go beyond school

Read more on philstar.com