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School attendance back to normal after the storms

By Edson C. Tandoc Jr.
Philippine Daily Inquirer
First Posted 21:12:00 11/06/2009

Filed Under: Schools, Weather, Flood, Education

MANILA, Philippines—Attendance rates in most schools in Metro Manila have gone back to normal nearly two months after Tropical Storm “Ondoy” unleashed the worst floods in Metro Manila in decades, the Department of Education’s National Capital Region office said Friday.

NCR Director Teresita Domalanta said that attendance rates reached 96 percent in most schools, while a few reported 100 percent.

Domalanta said that when classes finally resumed after Ondoy, attendance rates were between 20 percent and 30 percent only.

She also allayed fears that the destruction wrought by Ondoy would result in higher dropout rates among public school children this school year.

Some schools are still havens for a few families who lost their homes to the floods.

In Muntinlupa City, for instance, nine schools are still being used as evacuation centers. However, classes were not disrupted because only a few rooms are being used by evacuees, Domalanta said.

Education Undersecretary Ramon Bacani admitted that using schools as evacuation centers had affected class schedules.

In a press conference last week, Bacani said they were considering distributing tents to schools often used as evacuation centers so evacuees could stay in the tents during the day. That way, students could still use the classrooms.



Copyright 2009 Philippine Daily Inquirer. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.



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