Schools are once again going to have Good Manners and Right Conduct classes, as Republic Act 11476, or the GMRC and Values Education Act, was signed into law recently.
“The signing of the GMRC and Values Education Act is really timely, and I want to thank the President for his swift action on this important measure,” said Senate Majority Leader Migz Zubiri, principal author of the senate bill.
“With many schools set on implementing distance learning, it’s going to be even more vital that we give our students formative guidance.”
“I hope the Department of Education can work on the IRR in time for the opening of classes come August,” the veteran legislator stressed. “With many schools set on implementing distance learning, it’s going to be even more vital that we give our students formative guidance through GMRC and Values Education.”
“Kids are going to be at home all day, learning in isolation from their peers. They’re not going to have the natural avenues for empathetic learning that springs from face-to-face interaction with their peers and with their teachers. Hopefully, a strengthened GMRC and Values Education program will make up for that,” the seasoned lawmaker added.
The law institutionalizes a comprehensive GMRC and Values Education program in the K-12 curriculum of the Department of the Education, replacing the current Edukasyon sa Pagpapakatao curriculum.
GMRC will be integrated into daily activities in the kindergarten level, and then it will be taught as a separate subject from Grades 1 to 6. Grades 7 to 10 will be taught a Values Education subject, into which GMRC shall be integrated. For Grades 11 and 12, Values Education shall be integrated in all subjects under the K12 Basic Education Curriculum.
GMRC was previously dissolved as a subject under the K-12 program in 2013.
“We didn’t anticipate that the world would basically grind to a halt.”
“When we drafted this law, we thought it would be important to bring back GMRC because it would arm our kids with stronger moral codes that they would need in order to navigate this increasingly technological world. We didn’t anticipate that the world would basically grind to a halt, and all our interactions would move online. So, the passage of this act is quite timely, and I hope it serves our students well,” the senator concluded.