Values education has become an important focus in many societies due to crises rooted in materialism. Education aims to help people develop fully as individuals and citizens. Values development is seen as vital to true education, helping form standards of behavior and moral development. The Philippines has emphasized values education through its Constitution, education policies, and curriculum since the 1930s, with the goal of developing well-rounded citizens. Recent reforms strengthened its focus through subjects like Values Education and Edukasyon sa Pagpapakatao.
Values education has become an important focus in many societies due to crises rooted in materialism. Education aims to help people develop fully as individuals and citizens. Values development is seen as vital to true education, helping form standards of behavior and moral development. The Philippines has emphasized values education through its Constitution, education policies, and curriculum since the 1930s, with the goal of developing well-rounded citizens. Recent reforms strengthened its focus through subjects like Values Education and Edukasyon sa Pagpapakatao.
Values education has become an important focus in many societies due to crises rooted in materialism. Education aims to help people develop fully as individuals and citizens. Values development is seen as vital to true education, helping form standards of behavior and moral development. The Philippines has emphasized values education through its Constitution, education policies, and curriculum since the 1930s, with the goal of developing well-rounded citizens. Recent reforms strengthened its focus through subjects like Values Education and Edukasyon sa Pagpapakatao.
Values education has become an important focus in many societies due to crises rooted in materialism. Education aims to help people develop fully as individuals and citizens. Values development is seen as vital to true education, helping form standards of behavior and moral development. The Philippines has emphasized values education through its Constitution, education policies, and curriculum since the 1930s, with the goal of developing well-rounded citizens. Recent reforms strengthened its focus through subjects like Values Education and Edukasyon sa Pagpapakatao.
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INTRODUCTION TO GOOD MANNERS
AND RIGHT CONDUCT
VALUES EDUCATION Values education has become the burgeoning concern that has been strongly attracting attention and wide interest from many sectors all over the world including Philippine society. Faced with various crises that are rooted in materialism, many people realize that human development today is primarily hampered by a crisis of values. EDUCATION Education is a continuing process which goes on throughout life. It is not merely a preparation for life, but it is life itself. Hence, educating a person means helping him to develop all his potentials to the optimum. Moreover, at any point and at any level of education, the process aims to develop the person to become his best. As Kroll puts it, “The aim of education is an education for living. It gives meaning and direction to all we do – including not only what, but how and why we might learn any technical information.” VALUES DEVELOPMENT Values development is regarded as a vital component of true education. Values education is the development and formation of values which provide standards of behavior deemed desirable or even necessary by a group of people. The school, through its values education program, contributes to the moral development of the individual. The individual develops a rational and voluntarily accepted propulsive force within himself that results in a desired mode of behavior. Values help the individual realize himself as a person in the community, responsible for his own growth as well as for that of his fellow human beings and the development of society. (SEARRAG, 1978, as cited in Punsalan, 1997). HISTORY OF VALUES EDUCATION As a separate subject in the 1989 New Secondary Education Curriculum (NSEC), Values Education (VE) is a process every student goes through to identify, clarify, analyze, and choose values that will improve his cognitive and affective development and his relationship with others to prepare him to make choices and decisions today and in the future (DECS Values Education Framework, 1988). Rule of Urbanity, Good Manners and Right Conduct, and Character Education were once emphasized in elementary schools. In PRODED, they're called CBA. Religion or Christian Living reinforces VE in private sectarian schools. HISTORY OF VALUES EDUCATION Recently, secondary and tertiary values education has gained attention. Values education at all three levels and projects supporting what the home and school are doing to build desired values in young people have received much attention. Southeast Asian Research Review and Advisory Group (SEARRAG) Research Team found that values education in the Philippines emphasized content and inculcation In the 1980s, more explicit values education programs were provided in elementary and secondary schools as part of curriculum reforms. The Department of Education, Culture, and Sports (DECS) has traditionally stressed teaching values, however Values Education is only taught in basic and secondary schools. DECS has not legislated Values Education for the tertiary level, except in the New Bachelor of Secondary Education (BSE) curriculum (per MECS Order No. 37, s. 1986). (SEARRAG, 1988). HISTORY OF VALUES EDUCATION It can be recalled that official policy statements have been made for values education in the 1935 Constitution and in the 1973 Constitution, directing all institutions to inculcate values formation among their students. In addition, Presidential Decree 6-A (1972) articulated national development goals and national educational aims: The national development goals include “… achieving and maintaining an accelerating rate of economic development and social progress” and “strengthening of national consciousness and the promotion of desirable cultural values in a changing world.” The national educational aims state in part “… to assist the individual in the peculiar ecology of his own society to: a.attain his potential as a human being b.enhance the range and quality of individual and group participation in the basic functions of society; and c.acquire the essential educational foundation of his development into a productive and versatile citizen. HISTORY OF VALUES EDUCATION MECS Order No. 6, s. 1992 specifies the educational purpose for values education at the elementary level, and its Revised Secondary Education Program in 1973 at the secondary level. The 1987 Constitution mandates building a "just and humane society" and establishing "a Government that shall embody our ideals and aspirations, promote the common good, conserve and develop our patrimony, and secure to ourselves and our posterity the blessings of independence and democracy under the rule of law and a regime of truth, justice, freedom, love, equality, and peace.“ TheArticle XIV Sec. 3 mandates all educational institutions to inculcate patriotism and nationalism, foster love of humanity, respect for human rights, appreciation for the role of national heroes in the country's historical development, teach the rights and duties of citizenship, strengthen ethical and spiritual values, develop moral character and personal discipline, encourage critical and creative thinking, and broaden scientific knowledge. HISTORY OF VALUES EDUCATION Based on the mandate of the 1987 Constitution, the DECS Values Education Framework has been developed to serve as a guideline for the implementation of values education programs in the three levels of education – elementary, secondary, and tertiary. The Framework provides the values education aims of developing a Filipino who will be: 1. a self-integrating human person imbued with a sense of human dignity, 2. a social being possessing a sense of responsibility toward his community and environment 3. a productive person who contributes to the economic sufficiency and security of his family and the nation, 4. a citizen with a deep sense of nationalism committed to the progress and well-being of the nation as well as all humanity, and 5. a spiritual human being with an abiding faith in Almighty God. HISTORY OF VALUES EDUCATION
In the K-12 program, Character Education is renamed
Edukasyon sa Pagpapakatao, which aims to hone an individual’s capacity to make moral and ethical decisions. It is evident therefore that the need for values education cannot be underestimated. The aforementioned legal bases put man as the most basic unit in the society. What he becomes in this society necessarily makes him the center of the curriculum and of the entire educational program. THE LEGAL FOUNDATION OF VALUES EDUCATION IN THE PHILIPPINES DO 41, S. 2003 – VALUES EDUCATION IN THE BASIC EDUCATION CURRICULUM May 22, 2003 DO 41, s. 2003 Values Education in the Basic Education Curriculum 1. To ensure effective implementation of Values Education which is one of the emphases of the restructured Basic Education Curriculum, values education teachers should be utilized fully to help the other subject area teachers integrate values development in the subject area they teach. 2. This Order is being issued for the following reasons: 1. to effectively reinforce the role of every teacher as a values education teacher thus strengthening the Department’s collective efforts in developing desirable values among the students; 2. to be able to meaningfully integrate values development in the lessons of every teacher in each discipline; 3. to be able to assist teachers in the valuing processes while at the same time developing the competencies in the subject area they teach; 4. to ensure that values education is purposefully planned as regular lessons in the subject and not taken as incidental lessons in the process; 5. to ensure that trained values education teachers or those who majored in values education are duly recognized to perform functions relevant to their expertise and competence; and 6. to properly evaluate the result of interventions conducted both inside and outside the classroom. THE LEGAL FOUNDATION OF VALUES EDUCATION IN THE PHILIPPINES 3. The following provisions should be observed: 1. Values education teachers should provide assistance to the subject area teachers in integrating values development in their lessons. This does not mean forcing values integration if it is not relevant to the lesson. 2. Values education teachers should conduct training or lesson demonstrations if necessary. 3. The value focus may sometimes arise out of the teacher’s observation of the daily behavior of students in their class which may not necessarily be related to the lesson on hand. The subject area teacher should address this. 4. The revised Values Education Framework is still the basic material source for the core values that need to be developed. This will be made available in the division offices by June this year. The approved textbooks in the secondary level can still be used as references. 5. The Values Education Department at the secondary level belongs to the MAKABAYAN learning area and should sit in the collaborative planning of the teachers in this group. 6. As any other area teacher, proportionate teacher loading should be taken into consideration. 4. For immediate dissemination and compliance. INTENDED LEARNING OUTCOMES OF EDUKASYON SA PAGPAPAKATAO IN THE K-12 CURRICULUM
The learning outcome of Edukasyon sa Pagpapakatao is the student’s
overall development and manifestation of the 21st century skills. This means bearing the cognitive, affective, and psychomotor skills in order to: 1. live and work, 2. cultivate potentials, 3. decide critically, 4. progress effectively in one’s society. INTENDED LEARNING OUTCOMES OF EDUKASYON SA PAGPAPAKATAO IN THE K-12 CURRICULUM In Edukasyon sa Pagpapakatao, the guiding principle of functional literacy is decision- making and progressing responsibly for the goodness of all. Meaning, ESP aims to cultivate and improve the ethics of the student. It also aims to guide the student in searching for his life’s meaning and his purpose in the Filipino society to partake in building a community of truth, freedom, justice, and love. To manifest such, the student should embody the five (5) macro skills: 1. Understanding 2. Reflecting 3. Consulting 4. Decision-making 5. Acting INTENDED LEARNING OUTCOMES OF EDUKASYON SA PAGPAPAKATAO IN THE K-12 CURRICULUM
The macro skills develop the four (4) themes of Edukasyon sa
Pagpapakatao through spiral progression from Kindergarten to Grade 12, namely: 1. Responsibility on Self and Family, 2. Fellowship and Stability of Family, 3. Action and Involvement in Global Development and Unity 4. Love for God and Presence of Good