MANILA – The Second Congressional Commission on Education (EDCOM 2) and the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) have formalized a collaborative partnership aimed at driving data-driven reforms in the Philippine education sector.
The partnership will focus on findings from UNFPA’s Longitudinal Cohort Study on the Filipino Child (LCSFC), a 15-year research initiative launched in 2016.
The study tracks the lives of Filipino children, monitoring them from age 10 until they reach 24, or in 2030 and is designed to collect data capturing significant milestones from childhood to young adulthood.
It also seeks to inform national policy making and program planning, particularly on how development goals are contributing to maximizing the potentials of the Filipino youth.
“What we need to do so that your education system is reformed, is to diagnose, and prescribe the right solutions,” Dr. Leila Saiji Joudane, UNFPA Philippines’ Country Representative, said during the signing of partnership with EDCOM 2 on November 5.
UNFPA provides an opportunity to explore the complex relationship between adolescent health and education for the Filipino youth.
Joudane emphasized that addressing issues that affect education can help policy-makers to implement solutions that will enable adolescents to stay in school and have quality education.
For his part, EDCOM 2 Executive Director Karol Mark Yee said the congressional commission is looking forward to utilizing the data from the landmark LCSFC to further inform its policy recommendations, especially given the rich opportunities for data.
“This is a humongous contribution to the work we do for Philippine education,” Yee said.
“As we enter our final year, we are counting on this partnership, on this study to help inform our policy recommendations in reforming our education system. We need partners like you that will sustain data-driven initiatives even when EDCOM is done,” he added
Also present at the signing was Dr. Moya Collett, Deputy Head of Mission from the Australian Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade, who expressed strong support for the collaboration.
“The Australian government has been supporting Philippine education for about 30 years now. I hope this Longitudinal Cohort Study will really help EDCOM 2 in pushing for data-driven policies,” she said. (PNA)