Teacher Reycel: Tale of a multigrade educator

Teacher Reycel: Tale of a multigrade educator

FULFILLING FEAT. Multi-grade teacher Reycel R. Jugo poses with her students. Teacher Reycel strongly believes that a public school teacher can transform a whole nation by focusing more on what the Filipino learners can achieve, less on issues that hound the public education system. (Photo by DepEd Region 2)

Teacher Reycel: Tale of a multigrade educator

FULFILLING FEAT. Multi-grade teacher Reycel R. Jugo poses with her students. Teacher Reycel strongly believes that a public school teacher can transform a whole nation by focusing more on what the Filipino learners can achieve, less on issues that hound the public education system. (Photo by DepEd Region 2)

 

MANILA — A multigrade classroom, where learners of various ages and grade levels are combined, especially in geographically challenged areas and where enrollment rates are low, is not exactly the ideal nor familiar set-up for learning and teaching.

For 40-year-old Reycel R. Jugo, however, multigrade teaching is not only the greatest challenge in her career as a teacher; it is also her most fulfilling and significant accomplishment.

In 2011, Teacher Reycel started as a multigrade teacher in a far-flung area in the municipality of Tanay, Rizal. As a novice educator handling multi-level pupils combined in one class, she had to cope with the daunting challenges of teaching in a diverse classroom, and nurturing learners of different ages, behavior, and learning abilities.

Teacher Reycel did her homework and so much more. She read a lot of books for her to understand how multigrade teaching works. After voluminous readings and consultations with other teachers who handled multigrade classes, she was able to fine-tune her teaching style.

As she immersed herself in the community where transportation is not favorable, she became even more determined to master her craft so she can make a difference in the lives of her learners.

“Being a multigrade teacher is like having special powers,” Teacher Reycel shared. “You target several competencies in one execution.”

Because of her hard work and dedication, Teacher Reycel has been recommended for a scholarship program intended for multigrade teachers at the University of the Philippines Diliman, where she acquired various pedagogical approaches and strategies. After completing the program, she was transferred to a monograde school. Her heart remained in multigrade so she opted to be reassigned in Aguho Elementary School in Tanay.

She became a national curriculum writer and designer of teaching-learning materials for monograde, multigrade, and Indigenous People’s Education program (IPEd). She juggles teaching, facilitating, planning, evaluating, researching, networking with the community and other stakeholders, and even training 43 multigrade and IPEd teachers in Rizal.

Among her innovations are research-based localization and contextualization of educational materials, which integrate government thrusts, such as climate change, financial literacy, culture and the arts, and conservation of natural resources. Her Self-Learning Kit in Science was published by Prudence Foundation under Plan International, and is widely used in their province.

Being a full-time classroom teacher with several ancillary tasks, she still devotes time to integrate the latest technology in her multigrade classroom despite the remoteness of their school, which relies on solar panels.

Teacher Reycel is an educator who wears so many hats, wielding knowledge and skills with her big heart at the forefront of her battle against illiteracy. She is a fixed presence in demonstration teachings in the national, regional, division, and district levels, and known for her knowledge-oriented yet compassionate approach.

She reaped numerous distinctions with barely seven years in service. The year 2017 proved to be the peak of her success when she was recognized as the Most Outstanding Multigrade Teacher, the Gurunasyon Outstanding Elementary School Teacher in the Province of Rizal, and the Gawad Kampilan Most Outstanding Teacher (Elementary Level).

She also received the Gawad Pagkilala in Edukasyong Multigrade, and was a finalist in the Regional Search for Gawad Patnugot Most Outstanding Elementary Teacher in DepEd Region IV-A. This year, she was also a regional awardee in the 2018 Civil Service Commission (CSC) Pag-Asa Award Category.

“Teaching, for me, is a blessing because I can help so many souls, who hunger for knowledge and wisdom. It is an amazing and rewarding feeling to see my pupils learn and improve. It is priceless–knowing that I’ve made a positive difference in their lives,” she enthused.

She strongly believes that a public school teacher can transform a whole nation by focusing more on what the Filipino learners can achieve, and less on issues that hound the public education system. (DepEd Region 2/Romel B. Costales, Education Program Supervisor) PNA

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