*Dr. Rodolfo John Ortiz Teope, PhD, EdD, DM
I remember sitting across young people who were already tired before life had even truly begun. Not tired because they were lazy, but tired because school felt heavy in the wrong places—full of subjects they memorized but did not always understand, lessons they passed but could not carry with them into the real world. So when I first read that the House of Representatives is considering cutting the Senior High School core subjects down to five, my initial reaction was not outrage. It was pause. A long, uneasy pause.
On the surface, the proposal sounds merciful. Fewer subjects. Less congestion. A lighter load for students who are already navigating adolescence, poverty, family pressure, and uncertainty about their future. Many learners who joined the pilot program reportedly felt relief. And who wouldn’t? When a system overwhelms you, any form of simplification feels like rescue.
But education is not emergency medicine. It is long-term nourishment. And here lies my fear.
Are we truly fixing Senior High School—or are we quietly making it easier for our children to fail later, just not immediately?
Reducing the curriculum to five core subjects may help students breathe today, but what happens when they step into college classrooms, boardrooms, courtrooms, laboratories, or communities that demand depth, context, and critical thinking? What happens when the world asks more of them than what we chose to teach?
Education is not just about surviving school; it is about surviving life.
I worry that in our eagerness to unclog the curriculum, we may be treating symptoms while ignoring the disease. The problem was never simply the number of subjects. The problem was relevance, quality, execution, and support. A bloated curriculum poorly taught is harmful—but a narrowed curriculum poorly grounded can be equally dangerous. One overwhelms; the other underprepares.
There is also a quiet, painful truth we must confront: when we cut subjects, we do not just cut lessons. We cut teachers’ hours. We cut livelihoods. We cut the sense of purpose of educators who dedicated their lives to forming minds, not merely delivering modules. Reform that forgets teachers is reform that will eventually fail students.
And then there is the larger question no committee hearing can fully answer: what kind of Filipino are we trying to form?
If education is reduced to what is “useful” in the narrowest economic sense, we risk raising a generation trained to comply but not to question, to perform but not to reflect, to work but not to understand why their nation keeps struggling with the same wounds—corruption, inequality, historical amnesia, moral compromise.
Yes, students must be job-ready. But they must also be life-ready.
They must know how to communicate, yes—but also how to think ethically. They must know mathematics and science—but also how to read society, history, and human behavior. A nation does not collapse because its people cannot compute; it collapses because its people forget who they are, what they stand for, and what they are willing to tolerate.
True reform is not about subtraction alone. It is about coherence. It is about asking hard questions: Why are students disengaged? Why do employers still say graduates are unprepared? Why does learning feel heavy but hollow? These questions demand courage, not shortcuts.
If we truly want to fix Senior High School, then let us do the harder work—train teachers better, align subjects meaningfully, invest in learning environments, and ensure that every lesson connects to life beyond exams. Let us simplify where needed, yes—but never at the cost of depth, dignity, and direction.
Because the real failure of education is not when students struggle in school.
It is when they leave school thinking they are ready—only to discover too late that they were not prepared to stand.
And that, for me, is the danger we must not ignore.
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*About the author:


