Bridging the Learning Gaps: The ARAL Program`s Role in Post-Pandemic Education Recovery

Authors

  • Ana Bacorro Department of Education, Division of Southern Leyte, Philippines Author
  • Stephen Naul Southern Leyte State University – Sogod Campus, Philippines Author
  • Erlinda D. Tibus Southern Leyte State University – Tomas Oppus Campus Author
  • Nikki Rose A. Maputol Department of Education, Division of Southern Leyte, Philippines Author
  • Anabhem Enriquez Department of Education, Division of Southern Leyte, Philippines Author
  • Aileen Hinaniban Department of Education, Division of Southern Leyte, Philippines Author

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.18751722

Keywords:

Learning Recovery; Literacy and Numeracy; Post-Pandemic Schooling; Teacher Capacity; Educational Equity; Philippine Basic Education

Abstract

When schools finally reopened after prolonged COVID‑19 closures, teachers across the Philippines were met with a sobering reality: many learners had returned to classrooms several grade levels behind, particularly in reading and numeracy. National and international studies confirm that the pandemic significantly widened pre‑existing learning gaps, with the most severe losses borne by learners from low‑income and resource‑constrained communities. In response, the Department of Education introduced the Academic Recovery and Accessible Learning (ARAL) Program as a nationwide intervention to restore foundational competencies through targeted remediation, reinforcement, and enrichment. This commentary critically examines the ARAL Program as a post‑pandemic recovery initiative, drawing on policy documents, empirical research, and field‑based insights from school implementation. While ARAL reflects a strong institutional commitment to equity and learning recovery, its early rollout reveals persistent challenges related to teacher preparedness, instructional resources, implementation pace, and sustainability. This paper argues that learning recovery cannot rely on short‑term remediation alone. Instead, ARAL must be strengthened through anticipatory planning, sustained teacher support, robust monitoring systems, and contextualized implementation. By grounding policy analysis in the lived experiences of teachers and learners, this commentary calls for a more deliberate and human‑centered approach to academic recovery—one that ensures no Filipino learner is left behind in the post‑pandemic education landscape.

 

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References

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Published

2026-02-24

How to Cite

Bacorro, A., Naul, S., Tibus, E., Maputol, N. R., Enriquez, A., & Hinaniban, A. (2026). Bridging the Learning Gaps: The ARAL Program`s Role in Post-Pandemic Education Recovery. International Journal of Education, Research, and Innovation Perspectives, 2(2), 983-988. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.18751722

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