Alternative Learning System
Alternative Learning System
System Set-up
Presented to:
Dr. Robert Salvador
Professor
Overview
BNFE renamed to Bureau of
Alternative Learning System
ALS TA RGE TS
DepEd CY 2003-2004
(12-15 yrs.old)
Population 7,296,824
In-school 3,356,539
Out-of-school 3,940,285
ALS TARGETS
Priority 1
16-77 yrs. old 10.5 M
Priority 2
6-11 yrs. old 1,842,058
12-15 yrs. old 3, 940,285
5, 182,343
TOTAL 16,282,343
20% of the 82 M Total Philippine Population
(2004)
DEPED BUDGET = 112 Billion
Personal Services = 90%
MOOE and Capital Outlay =10%
(school Buildings, textbooks, school
furniture’s and equipment)
.068% of DepEd budget is for ALS or 76M
ALIVE in ALS
• Designed for the Muslim migrants to
be able to positively contribute to
peace efforts of our government to
improve Muslim quality of life.
Alternative Learning System for
Differently- Abled Persons
Aims to deliver Basic Literacy
Program to the special, differently-
abled persons.
Instructional Manager
Key person in the A&E program
and also responsible for facilitating
the learning session for groups of
learners.
Non-DepED
Private groups, LGUs and
organizations that deliver the BLP
and A&E program using their own
funds.
Mobile Teachers and Poverty
Alleviation
DepED-BALS' Mobile
Teacher Program
seeks to improve the quality of life in
communities by raising the level of
literacy in target areas. Target areas
for this program are those with high
illiteracy rate, a huge population of
out-of-school youth, and Strong
Republic Schools (SRS) where
learners are displaced due to
insurgency.
Unlike regular education where
students go to school, mobile teachers
seek out the learners. Learning
sessions, with the aid of learning
materials that are user-friendly and
indigenous, are held in Community
Learning Centers (CLCs) which may
be a barangay hall, church, factory,
reading center, or a house.
There are 1,381 mobile teachers to
date. These mobile teachers are
deployed to deprived, depressed,
and underserved (DDU) communities
all over the country where literacy is
most wanting. DDU communities are
determined by the mobile teachers
themselves who go from house to
house to determine the number of
non-readers in each household.
“Our public school teachers are doing
an outstanding job in providing
education for our children despite the
difficulty of accessibility to schools in
some areas. They are virtually
heroes, crossing mountains and
rivers just to provide basic education
to out-of-school youth and adults
who still want to learn.“
THANK YOU!!