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Wednesday, January 21, 2026

More classrooms for learners, career milestones for teachers as Angara leads Cavite event


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GENERAL TRIAS CITY, CAVITE, 20 January 2026 — Education Secretary Sonny Angara on Tuesday led the turnover and blessing of a four-storey, 16-classroom school building at Santiago Elementary School, as the Department of Education (DepEd) stepped up efforts to address classroom shortages in fast-growing urban areas and advance teacher career reforms.



Angara said the project reflects the administration’s focus on delivering concrete improvements at the school level, easing long-standing pressure on time and space for learners and teachers in SDO General Trias City, where rapid enrollment growth has led to overcrowded classrooms and strained daily school operations.





“Proven naman po yan, kapag siksikan ang mga silid, hindi makapagturo nang maigi ang teachers. Ayaw na po natin ng shifting as much as possible,” he said, linking classroom construction to President Ferdinand Marcos Jr.’s broader reform agenda.


The new building, equipped with smart televisions, armchairs, and safety features such as fire alarms and emergency lights, adds to the capacity of Santiago Elementary School, which serves more than 2,400 learners.


The project was made possible through close coordination between DepEd and the city government, which has used its Special Education Fund (SEF) to accelerate school infrastructure development. More than 100 classrooms have been built or are underway across the division in less than three years, easing congestion in several schools.


Angara said DepEd is also rolling out flexibility measures nationwide to speed up classroom delivery, including allowing local government units to construct parallel school buildings, expanding public-private partnerships for large-scale classroom projects, and strengthening the Adopt-A-School Program to tap private sector support. These approaches, he noted, are meant to complement national funding and prevent delays in areas with urgent needs.


“First time in history na gagawin, ibaba na ang pera sa mga LGUs, through decentralization of power, through decentralization of resources,” Angara stressed.


More promoted teachers sworn in under ECP



After the turnover ceremony, Angara presided over the mass oathtaking of 542 teachers from the Cavite cluster promoted under the Expanded Career Progression (ECP) System, with more than half of the promotions coming from SDO General Trias City. For many teachers, the promotions ended years—and in some cases decades—of stalled career movement that had dampened morale and retention.

Among them was Carmen R. Zorilla, now a Teacher IV of Tropical Village Elementary School, whose journey resonated with many in the crowd.

“Sa loob ng 28 taon, Teacher I po ako. Kontento na sana ako, dahil ang sukatan ng tagumpay ko ay ang bawat batang natutong bumasa, umunawa, at mangarap,” Zorilla said. “Hindi ko po inakalang darating ang panahong ito, na mapo-promote ako.”

She thanked President Marcos and Angara for pushing reforms that made career advancement possible. “Sa ilalim ng Expanded Career Progression, napatunayan naming ang pag-angat ng guro ay posible. Hindi po kami pinabayaan ng DepEd. Dahil dito, wala nang gurong kailangang magretiro bilang Teacher I,” she said.


Angara said the scale of promotions marks a historic shift for the department. “Ang estimate po natin, before 2026 ends, basta na-release po 'yong pera, makakapag-promote tayo ng 100,000 teaching positions. First time sa kasaysayan po ng DepEd na ganyang karami ang na-promote, ang nabigyan ng pagkilala," he said.


Nationwide, DepEd has already hired 27,080 teachers, reclassified 16,025 educators, and processed new teaching, school leadership, guidance counseling, and administrative positions to clear promotion backlogs and stabilize the public school workforce.


The twin events—classroom turnover and teacher oathtaking—highlight the agency’s strategy of pairing infrastructure investments with human resource reforms, as it works to improve learning conditions and outcomes across the public school system.

The Chemist’s Vigil: From Synthesis to the Grave


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In the quiet hum of a laboratory, a single molecule can represent the pinnacle of human achievement or the seed of a global catastrophe. This is the dual nature of chemistry: a science that fuels economic growth and saves lives through healthcare and agriculture, yet possesses a dark mirror capable of creating the world’s most "nefarious" weapons.


During the fifth Innovation Impact Stories webinar hosted by the University of the Philippines – Diliman College of Science (UPD-CS), Dr. Emily Castriciones revealed the high-stakes reality of this discipline. As an Analytical Chemist Inspector for the Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW), Dr. Castriciones views her profession not just as a job, but as a lifelong guardianship of matter itself.


Guardians of the "Cradle to Grave"

For a chemist, the responsibility for a substance never truly ends. Dr. Castriciones describes this journey as a "cradle to grave" surveillance.



The Cradle: It begins with synthesis and testing, whether creating a life-saving drug or a raw industrial material.



The Life: It continues through manufacturing and plant management, where rigorous recordkeeping and documentation are essential.



The Grave: Even after a chemical is used, chemists monitor its presence in waste streams and the environment to ensure proper disposal.


"From the cradle to the grave of a chemical, there is always a chemist involved," Dr. Castriciones emphasizes.


A New Shield for the Philippines

While the Philippines has long ratified the Chemical Weapons Convention (CWC), it lacked the "legal framework" to fully enforce its protections—until now. In a landmark move for national security, President Ferdinand Marcos, Jr. signed Republic Act 12174, also known as the Chemical Weapons Act of the Philippines, in April 2025.


Dr. Castriciones was a vital architect of this shield, serving as a technical consultant and resource person for the Senate Committee and the Anti-Terrorism Council. This law bridges the gap between international treaties, like the 1925 Geneva Protocol, and local enforcement, ensuring that dangerous chemical, biological, radiological, and nuclear (CBRN) materials are regulated without stifling economic development.


An All-of-Society Defense

The battle to keep chemistry "good" requires more than just laws; it requires a massive, collaborative network. This defense includes:



Law Enforcement: Forensic labs within the PNP and the Philippine Drug Enforcement Agency are on the front lines.



Collaborative Projects: Innovations like the DOST-funded project involve the Bureau of Fire Protection and academic-government cooperatives.



Total Engagement: Dr. Castriciones is calling for a "truly all-of-society engagement," weaving together government, industry, academia, and private research institutions.


Bridging Theory and Application

The Innovation Impact Stories series serves as a reminder that science does not exist in a vacuum. By highlighting stories like that of Dr. Castriciones, the UPD-CS aims to inspire a culture where academic theory is purposefully bridged with practical, real-world applications that protect a nation.


In the world of chemistry, the difference between a miracle and a menace is often the watchful eye of a scientist dedicated to the journey from cradle to grave.

Tuesday, January 20, 2026

Public schools to receive bamboo-made desks as Angara puts 15-year old industry policy into practice

 



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MAKATI CITY, 19 January 2026 — Under the leadership of Education Secretary Sonny Angara, the Department of Education (DepEd) will begin rolling out bamboo-made school furniture to public school learners and teachers in selected schools starting February, putting into practice Executive Order (EO) No. 879, s. 2010, which mandates a 20 percent bamboo allocation for school furniture.  


From February to March 2026, DepEd will distribute 144,081 sets of learners’ tables and chairs and 3,235 sets for teachers, focusing on the replacement of worn, shared, or unusable furniture that affects daily classroom activities.


In carrying out this distribution, DepEd is also applying a long-standing government requirement that at least 20 percent of school furniture be made from bamboo, a policy issued in 2010 and now reflected in actual procurement and delivery through climate-resilient, engineered bamboo under the leadership of Education Secretary Sonny Angara, consistent with President Ferdinand Marcos Jr.’s agenda on sustainability and local industries.




 "Matagal na ang itong polisiya. Pero, ngayon ay binibigyang-buhay natin ito. For the first-time in history, maipapatupad natin itong mandatory 20% bamboo allocation sa school furniture," said Secretary Angara.  


"Sa DepEd, gusto nating ipakita na puwedeng maging matibay, sustainable, at kalidad ang school furniture para sa kapakanan ng ating mga learners at teachers. Magandang paraan din ito para ma-promote natin ang Tatak Pinoy na isinulong natin sa Senado noon para kilalanin ang creativity ng kapwa natin Pilipino,” he added.


Apart from that, the Department also noted that the construction of around 5,766 classrooms is currently underway, amounting to Php 16.19 billion, under the For Issuance of Special Allotment Release Order (FISARO) Batch 1.  


Out of the said funding, DepEd underscored that the agency targets the construction of 2,333 Learning Continuity Spaces (LCS) worth Php 3.5 billion under the new construction funding, along with another 1,333 LCS amounting to Php 2 billion under the Disaster Preparedness and Response Program (DPRP).


Secretary Angara also said that the agency is aiming to construct 800 Last Mile Schools classrooms, amounting to Php 3 billion, as well as another 1,300 classrooms with approved Program of Works amounting to Php 3 billion. Under FISARO Batch 1, the agency also allotted Php 3.69 billion for 24,424 teachers’ tables and chairs and 1,099,111 learners’ tables and chairs, ensuring better learning environments nationwide.


Meanwhile, under FISARO Batch 2, DepEd has allotted Php 11.35 billion for the completion of 2,067 classrooms, the repair of 11,886 classrooms, and the restoration of 258 Gabaldon facilities. The Department has also funded the construction and improvement of School Health Facilities, amounting to Php 500 million.


“Muli, malinaw ang ating vision ngayong taon. Patuloy nating sosolusyonan ang kakulangan sa pasilidad natin sa buong bansa. We will continue to provide efficient and faster solutions by maximizing the funding that we got this year—for the sake of our teachers and learners,” Sec. Angara said.

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