Pre-colonial period (900 AD to 1565) As with most people of the world at this time period, learning by apprenticeship in tradeswork was the norm rather than education that heavily involved writing such as religious literature, scholarly work, and philosophy like those in
Medieval Europe or in
East Asia which was reserved for the elites, the ruling or priestly class. During the pre-colonial period, most children were provided solely vocational training, mainly supervised by parents, some tribal tutors or those assigned to specific, specialized roles within their communities (for example, the
babaylan). In most communities, stories, songs, poetry, dances, medicinal practices and advice regarding all sorts of community life issues were passed from generation to generation, primarily through oral tradition. Some communities utilized a writing system known as
baybayin, whose use was wide and varied, though other
syllabaries were used throughout the archipelago. The first book printed in the Philippines dates back to 1590. It was a
Chinese language version of
Doctrina Christiana.
Spanish and
Tagalog versions, in both
Latin script and the locally used
baybayin script, were later printed in 1593. In 1610,
Tomás Pinpin, a Filipino printer, writer and publisher, sometimes called the "Patriarch of Filipino Printing", wrote his famous "
Librong Pagaaralan nang manga Tagalog nang Uicang Castilla", which was meant to help Filipinos learn the Spanish language. The prologue read:
First Public Schools .The Spanish Educational Decree of 1863 provided a free public education system in the Philippines, managed by the government. The decree mandated the establishment of at least one primary school for boys and one for girls in each town under the municipal government's responsibility and the establishment of a
regular school for male teachers under the supervision of the
Jesuits. After implementing the decree, the number of schools and students increased steadily. In 1866, the total population of the Philippines was 4,411,261. The total number of public schools for boys was 841, and the number of public schools for girls was 833. The total number of children attending those schools was 135,098 for boys and 95,260 for girls. In 1892, the number of schools had increased to 2,137, of which 1,087 were for boys and 1,050 for girls. There was some opposition to universal education from Spanish priests; only 1.6% of the population gained more than primary school education. Among those who benefited from the accessible public education system were a burgeoning group of Filipino intellectuals: the
Ilustrados ('enlightened ones'), some of whom included
José Rizal,
Graciano López Jaena,
Marcelo H. del Pilar,
Mariano Ponce, and
Antonio Luna—all of whom played vital roles in the
Propaganda Movement that ultimately inspired the founding of the
Katipunan. Non-Spaniards founded some schools during this period that were not colonial creations.
Damián Domingo established in 1823 a fine arts school known as the
Academia de Dibujo y Pintura, now the Fine Arts College of the University of the Philippines. In 1868, Doña Margarita Roxas de Ayala established the girls' school
La Concordia, once regarded as the best girls' school in the colony. Asunción Ventura, a nun, founded in 1885 an orphanage the
Asilo de Looban in
Paco, an
arrabal of
Manila. It was the first orphanage founded by a Filipino and it would later offer academic and vocational instruction.
First Republic , rector of
Universidad Literaria y Cientifica de Filipinas of the
1st Philippine Republic|left The defeat of Spain following the
Spanish–American War led to the short-lived
Philippine Independence movement, which established the
First Philippine Republic. The schools maintained by Spain for over three centuries were closed briefly but reopened on August 29, 1898, by the
Minister of the Interior. The
Instituto Burgos (Burgos Institute), the
Academia Militar (the country's first
military academy), and the
Universidad Literaria de Filipinas (Literary University of the Philippines) were established. Article 23 of the
Malolos Constitution mandated that public education would be free and obligatory in all schools of the nation under the First Republic. However, the
Philippine–American War hindered its progress. Established in the American-occupied zone,
Colegio Filipino (now National University) is a Philippine college that dates from this period and has survived. There also existed for many decades the Rosa Sevilla Memorial School, originally founded on July 15, 1900, as the
Instituto de Mujeres, an all-girls private school. The most notable institute of higher learning of this period was the highly regarded and patriotic
Liceo de Manila on
Calle Dulumbayan, now known as Rizal Avenue. It was established in 1900, and was known to have existed until the 1920s.
American period About a year after securing Manila, the Americans were keen to open up seven schools with army service members teaching with army command-selected books and supplies. In the same year, 1899, more schools were opened, this time with 24 English-language teachers and 4500 students. In that system, primary education consisted of 6 years of elementary and four years of secondary schooling. Until recently, it prepared students for tertiary-level instruction to earn a degree and secure a job later in life. The law exposed a severe shortage of qualified teachers by large enrollment numbers in schools. As a result, the Philippine Commission authorized the Secretary of Public Instruction to bring more than 1,000 teachers from the United States, called the
Thomasites, to the Philippines between 1901 and 1902. These teachers were scattered throughout the islands to establish
barangay schools. Several other laws were passed throughout the period. In 1902, Act No. 372 authorized the opening of provincial high schools. built in 1914 serving as University dormitory However, the emergence of high school education in the Philippines did not occur until 1910. It was borne out of rising numbers in enrollment, widespread economic depression, growing demand by big businesses and technological advances in factories, the emergence of electrification, and the growing need for skilled workers. In line with the
Filipinization policy of the government, the Reorganization Act of 1916 provided that all department secretaries except the Secretary of Public Instruction must be natural-born Filipinos. A series of revisions (in terms of content, length, and focus) to the curriculum began in 1925 when the Monroe Survey Commission released its findings. After failed attempts on implementing the curriculum, the K–12 curriculum implementation finally started on May 20, 2008 during the
administration of Gloria Macapagal Arroyo when Senator
Mar Roxas filed the Omnibus Education Reform Act of 2008 (Senate Bill 2294) and further emphasized with the signing of ASEAN Charter on December 15, 2008 aligning the country to other ASEAN countries which have K–12, and within both mandates in spirit and letter is the curriculum's effectivity on April 24, 2012 during the
administration of Arroyo's successor Benigno Aquino III. The K–12 implementation process and phaseout of the 1945 K–10 curriculum took nine years and three
Philippine presidents from
Gloria Macapagal Arroyo in May 2008 to
Rodrigo Duterte on
June 5, 2017. After convening from 1906 to 1918, what was simply an advisory committee on textbooks was officiated in 1921 as the Board on Textbooks through Act No. 2957. However, the Board faced difficulties even up to the 1940s because financial problems hindered the possibility of newer adaptations of books. Such registration was primarily made up of first- and second-year students, after which attendance decreased. This increase also disproportionately benefited Christian inhabitants of the province, and most staff were Christians from elsewhere in the Philippine Islands. Perhaps less than 10% of Muslim children attended public schools in 1920, The Japanese Military Administration's Order No. February 2, 17, 1942, had six basic points: the propagation of
Filipino culture; the dissemination of the principle of the
Greater East Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere; the spiritual rejuvenation of the Filipinos; the teaching and propagation of
Nippongo; the diffusion of vocational and elementary education; and "the promotion of the love of labour". Educational reforms required teachers to obtain licenses following rigorous examinations. All heads of educational institutions were also required to get support. Also, the teaching of
Tagalog, Philippine History, and character education was reserved for Filipinos. The Japanese created the following educational institutions: the Training Institute for former USAFFE soldiers; the Normal Institute; the Preparatory Institute of Government Scholars to Japan; the Government Employees Training Institute; the New Philippines Cultural Institute; the Central Constabulary Academy Branch No. 1 at the
Mapa High School Building in
Bagumpanahon; the Central Constabulary Academy Branch No. 2, at the former Araullo High School Building in
Bagumbayan; the Central Constabulary Academy Branch No. 3 at the
Torres High School Building in
Bagumbuhay; the Central Constabulary Academy Branch No. 4 at the
Legarda Elementary School in
Bagumpanahon; the Central Constabulary Academy Branch No. 5; the Baguio Constabulary Academy; the Southern Luzon Constabulary Academy in Legazpi, Albay; the Constabulary Academy, Iloilo Branch; the Bureau of Constabulary Academy on Mandaue (Carlock) Street in Cebu; and the Davao Constabulary Academy. During this period, the
Philippine Nautical School, which was renamed Seaman's Training Institute, remained in operation, and the Japanese authorities even increased its student population. A school established during the Japanese period which still exists is
St. Paul College of Makati.
Third to Fifth Republic The country's education sector underwent several changes throughout the years after the relinquishment of the United States of its authority all over the Philippines in 1947. Then President
Manuel Roxas issued Executive Order No. 94, which renamed the Department of Instruction into the Department of Education with the regulation and supervision of public and private schools belonging to the Bureau of Public and Private Schools. After the war, the public school system was rebuilt by launching the Philippine Community School program, which received worldwide recognition. As early as 1953, the educational development in the Philippines drew attention from neighbouring Asian countries, with several Asian educators visiting the country to observe and study the vocational industrial schools. The American colonial government recommended a shift to the American system: six years (instead of seven) for elementary, three years of junior high school, and three more years of senior high school, for 12 years of basic education. The transition began with the removal of Grade 7 from elementary, but the addition of two years in high school was never completed. Following independence, Islamic schools began to spread in Mindanao, creating a parallel educational structure to
higher education. The Education Act of 1982 provided for an integrated system of education covering both formal and non-formal education at all levels. Section 29 of the act sought to upgrade educational institutions' standards to achieve "quality education" through voluntary accreditation for schools, colleges, and universities. Section 16 and Section 17 upgraded the obligations and qualifications required for teachers and administrators. Section 41 provided for government financial assistance to private schools. After the ratification of the
1987 Philippine Constitution, the fundamental aims of education in the Philippines were defined, and most importantly, elementary schooling was made compulsory for all children. Meanwhile, the Free Public Secondary Education Act of 1988 or Republic Act 6655 mandated free public secondary education commencing in the school year 1988–1989. In 1987, the Ministry of Education, Culture and Sports again became the Department of Education, Culture, and Sports under Executive Order No. 117 and remained practically unchanged until 1994. Republic Act 7796 or the Technical Education and Skills Development Act of 1994, created the Technical Education and Skills Development Authority (TESDA), which absorbed the Bureau of Technical-Vocational Education as well as the National Manpower and Youth Council, and began to supervise non-degree technical-vocational programs. Meanwhile, the Department of Education, Culture, and Sports retained all elementary and secondary education responsibilities. On June 4, 2010, during the
final days of the administration of Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo, the 2010 Secondary Education Curriculum (SEC, or
DepEd Order 76, Series of 2010) was implemented. The 2010 SEC, which focused on teaching and learning for understanding, was scheduled to be progressively mainstreamed from 2010 to 2014; however, it was only in effect until June 1, 2015, and was phased out due to the 9-year implementation process of the K–12 program that also started during the Arroyo administration upon its effectivity on Grade 10 (which changed from
Fourth Year to
Grade 10). in May 2013. After decades of surveys, consultations, and studies starting with the Monroe Survey in 1925 during the American period, the implementation of
K–12 curriculum finally began on May 20, 2008 when Senator
Mar Roxas filed the Omnibus Education Reform Act of 2008 (Senate Bill 2294) to strengthen the Philippine education system through timely interventions on the quality of teachers, the medium of instruction used and the evaluation of students' aptitude, among other aspects and through the ASEAN Charter signed on December 15, 2008. Both mandate the effectivity of K–12 four years later on April 24, 2012 which increase in the number of years in basic education, from 10 years to 12 years as consistent with global standards. Senator and presidential candidate
Benigno Aquino III then adopted the position of SB 2294 seven days after the start of the 2010s on January 7, 2010; he said this will "give everyone an equal chance to succeed" and "have quality education and profitable jobs." On June 6, 2011, Kindergarten became compulsory as a requirement for the effectivity of K–12 and start of phasing out K–10 on April 24 of the following year. The
K–12 educational system—one year of Kindergarten, six years of elementary education, four years of junior high school education, and two years of senior high school education—became effective on April 24, 2012; the K–12 also included a new curriculum for all schools nationwide. To guarantee continuity of the K–12 Program in the succeeding years, Kindergarten was formally made compulsory by the Kindergarten Education Act of 2012, while the further twelve years were institutionalized by the Enhanced Basic Education Act of 2013. The 1945 K–10 system was entirely phased out on June 5, 2017 upon K–12 became effective in Grade 6, ending the implementation process of the K–12 curriculum that spanned for 9 years from the administrations of
Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo to
Rodrigo Duterte. In 2017, the
Universal Access to Quality Tertiary Education Act was signed by Rodrigo Duterte, mandating the government through all state universities and colleges (SUCs) to provide free tertiary education for all Filipino citizens. The mandate does not include private schools; however, certain
subsidies for students enrolled in private higher education institutions are available. In January 2021, the
alternative learning system (ALS) was institutionalized by a law signed by President Duterte. On April 27, 2023, former president
Gloria Macapagal Arroyo's version of K–12 named K+10+2 was filed under House Bill (HB) 7893. It involves mandatory Kindergarten and Grades 1 to 10, and one have an option to take senior high school as a requirement for college education. A new "less congested" and "revised" version of K–12 for Elementary and Junior High School, called the " curriculum", was launched by the DepEd, headed by Vice President
Sara Duterte, in August 2023. This version of the K–12 reduced the learning areas for students from seven to five, and removed Mother Tongue as a separate subject; it also emphasized a "" learning area to instill Filipino identity and
nationalism among students. It is implemented in phases from 2024 to 2028 on Kindergarten to Grade 10. A revised version for Senior High School, called "Strengthened Senior High School Program" launched by the DepEd, Secretary
Sonny Angara in June 2025. This version of the Senior High School program has two main tracks, such as Academic and Technical-Professional (TechPro), replacing the previous four-track system. Reduced from 15 to 5 core subjects, such as Effective Communication or Mabisang Komunikasyon, General Mathematics, General Science, Life and Career Skills, and History and Philippine Society or Pag-aaral ng Kasaysayan at Lipunang Pilipino. Work Immersion will increased from 80–320 hours to 320–640 hours. It will implemented starts from 2026 to 2028. == Statistics ==