FILE PHOTO: Teacher Maribeth DS Diaz teaches Grade 2 pupils in a classroom about english lesson at San Francisco Elementary School in Quezon City on Tuesday, January 31, 2023. —GRIG C. MONTEGRANDE
ILOILO CITY – Nearly eight million learners across the country were affected by the four-day suspension of in-person classes brought about by Typhoon “Verbena” and the shear line, according to the Department of Education’s (DepEd) final report released on Saturday.
From Nov. 24 to 28, a total of 18,004 public schools in 103 divisions across 13 regions halted classes, disrupting 7,793,895 learners and 351,850 teaching and non-teaching personnel. The suspension—one of the most extensive for the year—was declared in anticipation of severe weather and flooding that later inundated campuses.
Initial assessments showed the class stoppages were accompanied by varying levels of physical damage to learning spaces. DepEd documented 149 classrooms with minor damage, 20 with major damage, and 37 completely destroyed, figures that remain subject to validation as more reports come in from the field.
The four-day halt also triggered immediate clean-up and recovery efforts as DepEd’s Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Service (DRRMS), together with local government units, mobilized clearing operations and safety inspections to prepare schools for reopening.