Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The Department of Education (abbreviated as DepEd; Filipino: Kagawaran ng Edukasyon) is the executive department of the Philippine government responsible for ensuring access to, promoting equity in, and improving the quality of basic education. [4] It is the main agency tasked to manage and govern the Philippine system of basic education. It is ...
The Muntinlupa National High School curriculum for Junior High School: STE (formerly ESEP) caters students with future professions in Science, Technology and Engineering.
The DepEd Computerization program has been implemented which deployed computer packages to 5409 public elementary and high schools to support the teaching and learning process. [ 7 ] Under the K-12 Program, ICT is a strand subsumed under the Technology and Livelihood Education (TLE) and Technical-Vocational-Livelihood (TVL), which is one of the ...
Science Development National High School (SDNHS), was converted to RSHS for NCR and Western Visayas, respectively by virtue of DECS Order No. 58, series 1999 in consonance with R.A. 8496 (An Act to Establish the Philippine Science High School System and Providing Funds Therefore).
The school has embarked into a Functional Literacy Program last June 9, 2012 and officially received its Certificate of Recognition last September 13, 2012 from the Department of Education (DepED) of Region IV – MIMAROPA Division of Occidental Mindoro, Mamburao, thereby becoming a part of the Alternative Learning System (ALS) and Projects.
This list of primary and secondary schools in Metro Manila is sorted by city and municipality. It includes both public and private primary and secondary schools that are currently in operation.
The learning management system concept emerged directly from e-Learning. Learning management systems make up the largest segment of the learning system market. The first introduction of the LMS was in the late 1990s. [2] LMSs have been adopted by almost all higher education institutions in the English-speaking world. [3]
The Jesuits followed in 1581, and the Dominicans, in 1587, set up a school in Bataan. [10] The church and the school cooperated to ensure that Christian villages had schools for students to attend. [11] Schools for boys and girls were then opened. Colegios were opened for boys, ostensibly the equivalent to present-day senior high schools. [9]