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CHED TO TRAIN FILIPINO TEACHERS IN CAMBODIA

The Commission on Higher Education (CHED) and the Philippine Embassy in Phnom Penh launched the “Developing Global Filipino Teachers” program to equip, capacitate and enhance competencies of the 1,152 Filipinos teachers in Cambodia to qualify them teaching positions and ensure higher salaries.

CHED Chairman Prospero de Vera III and Chargé d’Affaires Myca Magnolia Fischer launched the program through a Memorandum of Cooperation recently as part of the government’s initiative to capacitate and qualify OFWs for meaningful and gainful work as teachers in Cambodia.

“The Philippine Embassy in 2019 alerted CHED on the plight of some 1,152 Filipinos working as teachers in Cambodia. The majority of these teachers are not licensed to teach because they lack the proper credentials,” De Vera said.

Responding to this, the Commission came up with a Memorandum of Cooperation for the realization of professionalization of the 1,006 teachers who are not licensed professional teachers in order for them to compete and receive a higher salary.

The Developing Global Filipino Teachers program is a collaboration between the Commission on Higher Education, the Philippine Embassy in Phnom Penh and Philippine universities that are centers of excellence in teacher education namely: Saint Paul University, Cebu Normal University and the Philippine Normal University.

Under the developing global Filipino teachers program, the following OFWs in Cambodia will be assisted:

1.    professionals who are not graduates of the teacher education program who intend to take the Philippine licensure examination for teachers (LET);

2.    in-service teachers who want to enhance their competencies and their impact in the classroom and beyond to understand global issues;

3.    graduates of education program but have not passed the Philippine LET;

4.    and those Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages (TESOL).

“We cannot emphasize the importance of higher education in playing a critical role in the development of our citizens here and abroad.”

“We cannot emphasize the importance of higher education in playing a critical role in the development of our citizens here and abroad. This Memorandum of Cooperation produces better collaboration and easier grasp of the problem at hand. The solution is now within our reach, thanks to the Developing Global Filipino Teachers program,” the higher education chief said.Meanwhile, Foreign Affairs Secretary Teodoro Locsin Jr. lauded the program and said that despite the pandemic, CHED as well as the Philippine Embassy in Phnom Penh have come out with a program that will ensure not only the employability of the teachers but develop their skills further. Locsin added that he wants to see the same program being implemented in other parts of the globe.

“This program is one of the manifestations of the Filipino bayanihan spirit driving Philippine higher education during this COVID-19 (coronavirus disease) crisis. We grappled with the pandemic individually but we will conquer it together as one — a one unified higher education sector and government,” the higher education head said.

“This program is one of the manifestations of the Filipino bayanihan spirit driving Philippine higher education during this COVID-19 crisis.”

The virtual launch of the said program was attended by Locsin, Philippine Embassy in Phnom Penh Chargé d’Affaires Myca Magnolia Fischer, Cebu Normal University President Filomena Dayagbil, St. Paul University of the Philippines President Merceditas  Ang, SPC, Dr. Lordinio Vergara, Philippine Normal University Vice President for University Relations and Advancement and Representatives from the Teachers Learning Action Guild of Cambodia (organization of Overseas Filipino Teachers in Cambodia).

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