A story on the introduction of the country’s first comprehensive guidelines on the use of artificial intelligence in basic education did not banner the headlines. Yet its significance runs deeper than many of the day’s louder events — from anti-corruption drives to protest mobilizations.
On Feb. 20, Education Secretary Sonny Angara issued Department Order No. 003, s. 2026 — the first national framework governing how AI may be used in Philippine basic education. Quiet as it seemed, the move signals a turning point. It acknowledges a reality many schools are already facing – artificial intelligence is no longer at the gates of education. It is inside the classroom.
That gap is what DepEd’s 49-page directive now seeks to close.
DepEd’s guidelines confront these questions directly.
Students are now required to disclose when and how AI tools are used in their work — whether for brainstorming, editing, or research. This simple but powerful requirement promotes transparency and accountability in an age when authorship can easily blur.
Nationally, the policy supports broader government efforts to institutionalize AI responsibly. The Department of Science and Technology has launched the National Artificial Intelligence Center for Research and Innovation (NAICRI) as a central hub for AI research and governance. Last year, DepEd itself has established the Education Center for AI Research (E-CAIR) to develop AI-driven solutions for teaching, school administration, and learner support.
Yet even the most sophisticated centers and frameworks will mean little if we forget one essential truth – education is not the transmission of information. It is the formation of judgment, character, and discernment.
The real challenge is how to integrate AI without surrendering the human core of education.
In the end, the measure of this policy will not be how widely AI is used in classrooms, but how well our students continue to think for themselves.
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Credit belongs to: www.mb.com.ph
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