Ilocos Norte state university to hold in-person classes after CHEd OK
LAOAG CITY—State-run Mariano Marcos State University (MMSU) in Batac City, Ilocos Norte province is the lone academic institution in the Ilocos region which was given the go-signal to resume in-person classes, university officials said on Friday (March 26).
MMSU, together with 23 other universities and colleges nationwide, was allowed by the Commission on Higher Education (CHEd) to “hold limited face-to-face hands-on training and laboratory classes.”
The order would cover third year and fourth year university students who were enrolled in allied health-related degree programs during the second semester that began last January, according to university officials.
On March 10, MMSU’s capability to hold in-person classes was assessed based on the guidelines of “stringent retrofitting and health standards” imposed by education and health authorities from the national government.
Aside from the order issued by CHEd on Friday, the university was also allowed earlier to send its medical students to hospitals and medical facilities to undergo hands-on training, said university officials.
Article continues after this advertisementThe university had been a top performing institution for health-related courses, such as Medicine, Nursing, Physical Therapy and Pharmacy.
Article continues after this advertisementLast week, MMSU had posted a 100-percent passing rate in the physician licensure exams held in March, with one of its graduates landing on the top 10 list of passers.
Last February, Ilocos Norte Gov. Matthew Marcos-Manotoc had been calling on the national COVID-19 task force to consider a “localized approach” in handling classes in areas with low risk of infection transmission.
The provincial government said that it had asked the national government in January to allow 32 schools in 10 towns to resume in-person classes.