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DepEd WinS Program (PowerPoint PPT)

In 2016, the Department of Education issued DepED Order No. 10, “Policy and Guidelines on the Comprehensive Water, Sanitation, and Hygiene in Schools (WinS) Program.” This is to improve access to adequate water supply, functional toilets and effective hygiene promotion. This is in recognition of the importance of WASH in schools in achieving the learning outcomes for our children. The goal is to ensure a safe and conducive learning environment in school and enable children to be in best condition to participate and learn in school.

Table of Contents

What is DepEd WASH in Schools??

A school-based program that promotes correct hygiene and sanitation practices through hygiene and sanitation education and the provision of standards for safe water supply and appropriate sanitation facilities.

Key Components and Goals of WASH in Schools

Wash in schools focuses on the standards for the promotion of a clean and safe school environment & correct hygiene and sanitation practices among learners.

  • Reduces morbidity and mortality among schoolchildren that stem from poor hygiene and sanitation practices and the lack of safe water and sanitation facilities.
  • Promotes positive behaviour change among the young
  • Improves their health, quality of life, and prospects for a productive future
  • Promotes gender equality, and
  • Affirms children’s right to health and education

DepEd Order No. 10, s. 2016

DEPED WATER, SANITATION AND HYGIENE IN SCHOOLS (WINS) PROGRAM

To:

Undersecretaries
Assistant Secretaries
Bureau and Service Directors
Regional Directors
Schools Division Superintendents
Public and Private Elementary and Secondary Schools Heads All Others Concerned

For the information and guidance of all concerned, the Department of Education (DepEd) issues the enclosed Policy and Guidelines for the Comprehensive Water, Sanitation, and Hygiene in Schools (WinS) Program for the promotion of correct hygiene and sanitation practices among school children and a clean environment in and around schools to keep learners safe and healthy.

This Policy aims to:

a. ensure correct knowledge and understanding among learners of effective hygiene and sanitation projects;

b. improve equitable access to safe water, adequate toilets, and hand washing facilities;

c. improve hygiene and sanitation practices among the learners to enable them to develop life-long positive hygiene and sanitation behaviors;

d. ensure that schools are kept clean and safe through school-based solid waste management, proper drainage, the elimination of breeding grounds for mosquitoes to prevent vector-borne diseases, and food sanitation; and

e. engage public and private partners for program implementation and sustainability.

All Orders, Memoranda, and other issuances inconsistent with this policy are deemed repealed, rescinded, or amended accordingly upon its effectivity.

This Order shall take effect 15 days after its publication in the Official Gazette or a newspaper of general circulation.

Immediate dissemination of and strict compliance with this Order is directed.

BR. ARMIN A. LUISTRO FSC
Secretary


POLICY AND GUIDELINES FOR THE COMPREHENSIVE WATER, SANITATION AND HYGIENE IN SCHOOLS (WINS) PROGRAM

I. Rationale

Hygiene and sanitation are essential to good health. Adequate water supply and adequate toilet and proper handwashing facilities are required to achieve good hygiene and sanitation. The lack of access to these facilities poses risk to people’s health. However, the mere presence of these facilities is not enough to achieve better hygiene and sanitation among the community members. Proper and correct practices in the use of these facilities must be practiced to maximize the benefits and achieve the impact to the well-being of the community.

Hygiene and sanitation challenges have caused many children in developing countries to fall ill and even die from infection with intestinal parasites, abdominal pain, and diarrhea. This situation also leads to anemia, stunted growth, and higher incidence of absenteeism which consequently impede a child’s learning and ability to stay in school.

In the Philippines, some 24 million Filipinos lack improved sanitation even as the Department of Health (DOH) has made significant strides in this regard over the last two decades. Poor sanitation practices among the almost 20 million poorest Filipinos have been linked directly to poverty, thus bringing to the fore the vital role of government in breaking the cycle of poverty and ensuring access to improved drinking water and sanitation. The lack of access to safe and clean water and poor sanitation and hygiene practices among the nation’s poorest families have led to an estimated 43.7 percent and 44.7 percent of pre-school age and school-age Filipino children, respectively, having soil-transmitted helminth infections

To help address this challenge, the Department of Education (DepEd) has been conducting semi-annual deworming of kindergarten and elementary school children in all public schools nationwide under its Integrated Helminth Control Program (IHCP). In the last six years, it has combined deworming with daily tooth-brushing and proper handwashing under one program. Department Order (D O.) No. 56, s. 2009 titled “Immediate Construction of Water and Hand Washing Facilities in All Schools for the Prevention of Influenza A (H1NI)” and D O. No. 65, s. 2009 titled “Implementation of the Essential Health Care Program (EHCP) for the School Children’’ were issued in an effort to institutionalize good health and hygiene practices among students.

Under the EHCP, pupils have been taught simple, basic, and doable health interventions to promote cleanliness and prevent sickness. As of 2014, the program was able to cover 16 of the country’s 17 regions in partnership with a number of government organizations (GOs) and non-government organizations (NGOs) that have continuously sponsored health kits/packages for more than three (3) million pupils nationwide. This meant coverage of 68 out of 220 Schools Divisions, with 9,366 EHCP-implementing schools out of a total of 38,689 public schools. In consonance with the EHCP, the Department has endeavored to bridge the gap in the pupil-to-bowl ratio in the country’s public elementary and secondary schools which, as of 2015, was 1:36 in the elementary level and 1:53 in high school. The Department also partnered with stakeholders to vigorously promote correct handwashing practices among schoolchildren.

Best practices around the world have shown that improving access to and use of water and sanitation facilities within schools and enhancing hygiene and sanitation practices can effectively halt water and sanitation-related diseases. This will also help bring the Philippines closer to realizing its 2015 MDG commitment on the reduction of infectious diseases and improving sanitation coverage.

To expand the EHCP’s reach and transform it into a more comprehensive program, the Department has crafted this holistic program for personal health care and environmental sanitation through a set of standards for proper and correct health practices in schools. It goes beyond handwashing, tooth brushing, and deworming – which are the key programs of the EHCP – to cover water, sanitation including food handling and preparation, hygiene including menstrual hygiene management, deworming, health education, and capacity building. In crafting this set of guidelines, thus, the Department, in partnership with agencies and stakeholders, hopes to address the gaps in the areas of hygiene and sanitation and keep more children healthy and in school.

II. Scope

This Policy and Guidelines shall apply to all private and public elementary and secondary schools nationwide including Learning Centers.

III. Statement of Policy and Objectives

This Policy is designed to achieve learning and health outcomes and improve school attendance of students through a comprehensive, sustainable, and scalable school-based water, hygiene, sanitation, and deworming program pursuant to the State’s mandate, under the 1987 Constitution, to defend the right of children to assistance including proper care and nutrition and special protection from conditions prejudicial to their development as well as to protect and promote the people’s right to health and instill health consciousness among them. This policy intends to achieve the following targets:

  1. Water: All schools shall have an organized system to make adequate and safe drinking water as well as clean water for handwashing, toilet use, menstrual hygiene management, and cleaning purposes available to all students during school hours;
  2. Sanitation: All schools shall have adequate, clean, functional, safe, and accessible toilet facilities that meet the pupil-to-bowl ratio as stipulated in the Philippine Sanitation Code; maintain cleanliness and safety in and the immediate vicinity of school premises through school-based solid waste management, proper drainage, and the elimination of all possible breeding grounds for mosquitoes to prevent vector-borne diseases; and ensure safety in food handling and preparation;
  3. Hygiene: All students in school shall perform supervised daily group handwashing with soap and toothbrushing with fluoride, while a system and support mechanisms for effective menstrual hygiene management shall be ensured in all schools;
  4. Health Education: All teachers, heads of schools, facilities coordinators, and health personnel shall be oriented on the DepED WinS program. Trained teachers can conduct Health Education in coordination with community leaders during Parent-Teacher Assosication (PTA) meetings. All pupils/students shall have a higher awareness of correct hygiene and sanitation practices and develop positive health behaviors;
  5. Deworming: At least 85 percent of all students shall be dewormed semi-annually; and
  6. Capacity Building: All DepED WinS program implementers shall undergo orientation on the program as needed.

IV. Procedures

A. Basic Requirements and Standards

To achieve the foregoing objectives, the following basic requirements must be in place and followed in all schools. School Heads and all school personnel in collaboration with partners must endeavor to meet and realize these basic requirements, indicated below.

Elements of WINSBasic Requirements and Standards
WaterRegular supply of safe drinking water in school;

Regular supply of clean water for handwashing, menstrual hygiene management, toilet flushing, and other cleaning purposes within the school setting.

Rainwater catchment systems shall be installed in schools to ensure water supply for proper hygiene and sanitation during emergencies, pursuant to Sections 902-904 of the National Building Code, and in areas that have no access to regular water supply;

Daily cleaning and regular maintenance activities as well as repair of water supply facilities in their respective schools, pursuant to the school-based management principle mandated in Republic Act No. 9155, the Governance of Basic Education Act of 2001; and

Regular monitoring of water quality in accordance with the latest National Standards for Drinking Water, to protect the water supply from all types of contamination within the school premises.
SanitationAccess to functional toilets with individual handwashing facilities for boy s and girls in schools;

Adequate and proper septage and waste water disposal and/or treatment systems in school;

Daily cleaning and proper and regular operation and maintenance of toilet and individual handwashing facilities for sustainable use;

Proper segregation and disposal of biodegradable and non-biodegradable waste material is practiced by providing separate garbage bins for dry waste, wet waste, and hazardous/toxic waste, as well as proper solid waste disposal through the existing municipal or city7 solid waste management and disposal system or, in the absence of the same, through a compost pit within school premises.

Elimination of breeding grounds for mosquitos in and around the vicinity of schools to prevent vector-bome diseases;

Regular supply of soap and water in individual handwashing stations near toilets;

Correct and concise information on proper handwashing and use of toilet facilities, as well as pertinent posters for said purpose, posted prominently on strategic locations in toilet and handwashing areas;

Proper septage and w aste water disposal are strictly followed;

The prohibition on the burning of garbage shall be strictly implemented in compliance with Republic Act No. 9003, the Ecological Solid Waste Management Act of 2000;

Food preparation and handling in all schools meet the standards of the Food Safety Manual;

School personnel in charge of food handling and preparations are properly-trained and certified based on the standards of the Code on Sanitation of the Philippines

All school canteens must secure a Sanitary’ Permit from the Local Health Office;

Handwashing facilities shall be made available within the premises of school canteens;

Safe water shall be supplied in school canteens;

School personnel tasked with food handling and preparation shall strictly observe the seven (7) key concepts of cleanliness with regard to food handling and preparation, namely: (a) Be clean; (b) Observe personnel health and personal hygiene; (c) Buy good quality foods; (d) Store foods properly; (e) Cook food thoroughly at safe temperatures; (f) Use safe water; and (g) Observe proper servicing of food.

School personnel tasked with food preparation shall practice proper handwashing at all times to avoid contaminating food with bacteria, viruses, parasites, or any contaminants that can cause illness among high-risk or vulnerable children;

Proper solid yvaste management shall be practiced in school kitchens and canteens; and

Food handlers shall have an updated health certificate issued by the local health authority as required by the Sanitation Code of the Philippines.
HygieneProgram on supervised group daily handwashing with soap and daily tooth brushing with fluoride toothpaste;

Student practicing individual handwashing during critical times;

Provision of adequate group handwashing and tooth brushing facilities including regular maintenance in coordination with partners;

Adequate supply of toothpaste, toothbrushes, and soap available to all students -specifically in strategic areas like toilets, hand washing facilities, and eating areas;

Constant reminders that students know and practice handwashing especially at critical times such as after using the toilet and before eating or handling food;

Access to water for group activities shall be ensured;

Mechanisms for effective menstrual hygiene management in school are in place and functional;

Availability of sanitary pads in school facilities such as school canteens, clinics, or guidance counsellor’s office as well as covered garbage bins for proper disposal is ensured in coordination with partners;

Information on the proper disposal of sanitary’ pads and the cleaning of reusable pads is available to girl students;

Toilets are secured and private yvith proper door locks and partitions for optimal privacy and located yvithin safe distance and vieyv of school buildings and people traffic;

Toilets have adequate space for girls to manage menstruation, including space to rest and recover from menstrual pain;

School rules and regulations to maintain and monitor the privacy and security’ of facilities used for menstrual hygiene management are formulated and strictly followed; and

Information advocacy materials on reproductive health and hygiene education for boys and girls that integrate essential menstruation-related components shall be provided to teachers.
Health EducationBuild the capacity’ of school personnel and other stakeholders for effective management of WinS;

Access of students to correct knowledge and understanding of the importance of proper hygiene and sanitation practices is ensured;

Key concepts of the WinS program arc integrated into the K to 12 curriculum; and

Information/education materials on the WinS program are provided to program implementers, teachers, and students.
DewormingDeworm all students semi-annually subject to DOH recommendations based on the results of the current prevalence index survey;

Parental or guardian’s consent for semi-annual deworming is obtained during enrolment or the first few days of school prior to the first deworming sessions;

Mass deworming is done by health personnel or by teachers in the presence of a health personnel;

Deworming is done on a full stomach to help reduce adverse events;

Any adverse events shall be handled based on the Guidelines on Deworming, Drug Administration, and Management of Adverse Events Following Deworming in compliance with DOH directive; and

Coordination with other partners shall be encouraged in the implementation of the program.

The school head plays a crucial role in ensuring that the basic requirements and standards of this policy are met. Every requirement and standard in each WinS element must be satisfied either through policy and procedures or the provision of required items.

B. Roles and Responsibilities

The DepEd and its key stakeholders are pivotal to the effective implementation of this Policy. As such, the following shall be the roles and responsibilities of the different DepEd Offices as well as DepEd partners:

The Central Office, through the School Health Division of the Bureau of Learner Support Services (BLSS-SHD), shall:

1. Develop strategies and action plans including the setting up of a WinS Technical Working Group (TWG), issue related policies, and take charge of the overall execution of the WinS Program;

2. Allocate hinds and prepare logistical plans for the WinS Program;

3. Undertake capacity development of and technical assistance to program implementers in all schools;

4. Undertake program oversight as well as monitoring and evaluation, analyze data from the field, and issue recommendations for improving program implementation;

5. Network and coordinate with partner agencies, organizations, and local government units (LGUs) for program advocacy, mobilization for public awareness campaigns, treatment referral, legislation, monitoring, and overall policy compliance;

6. Coordinate with the Physical Facilities and Schools Engineering Division (PFSED) in the determination of the following:

a. Standards and specifications for WinS facilities;

b. proper septage and waste water disposal;

c. correct specifications for the handwashing facilities as well as build common handwashing facilities inside the classroom for individual use and/or outside the classroom for daily group activity; and

d. adequacy of toilet and handwashing facilities for boys and girls to achieve pupil-to-toilet ratio of 50:1 for boys and girls;

7. Establish a set of standards for incentives and awards to recognize outstanding program implementers;

8. Coordinate with the Bureau of Curriculum Development (BCD) for the inclusion of the following into the K to 12 curriculum:

a. benefits of proper handwashing for food safety;

b. key concepts on menstrual hygiene management that are age-appropriate, culture- and gender-sensitive, and interactive; and

9. Close coordination with the Department of Health (DOH) to ensure regular supply of deworming medicines to DepEd regional offices or schools division offices;

Regional Offices shall:

1. Provide technical assistance to division offices on the conduct of training and orientation, funding sources, and link up with partners and the Central Office, among others;

2. Provide support for WinS logistical plans;

3. Conduct training and capacity development for implementers;

4. Undertake program advocacy with LGUs;

5. Implement incentives and awards for Best Division Implementor;

6. Conduct monitoring and evaluation (M&E) of the WinS Program using the national M&E tool;

7. Submit an annual report consolidating the yearly reports from Schools Division Offices within their respective jurisdictions no later than the first week of December each year to the Central Office-BLSS; and

8. Conduct an annual Performance Implementation Review of the WinS Program and submit findings and recommendations to the Central Office.

Schools Division Offices shall:

1. Provide technical assistance to districts and schools in coordination with partners;

2. Conduct training and capacity development for implementers;

3. Undertake program advocacy with LGUs;

4. Conduct monitoring and evaluation of the WinS Program;

5. Submit an annual report consolidating yearly reports from schools within its jurisdiction no later than the first week of December each year to the Regional Office.

6. Create a WinS TWG for better implementation of the program;

7. Implement incentives and awards for Best School Implementor; and

8. Conduct an annual Performance Implementation Review of the WinS Program.

Schools shall:

1. Ensure effective implementation of the WinS policy and its program activities in the school setting;

2. Secure the support and participation of the community, including the Parent-Teacher Associations (PTAs) and other stakeholders, for the program;

3. Collaborate with key partners for the following:

a. put in place systems and mechanisms that will allow all stakeholders to take part in the implementation of this policy,

b. craft specific roles and responsibilities of each member of school personnel in making sure that all requirements and standards are met,

c. ensure the inclusion of the WinS Program in the School Improvement Plan (SIP) and Annual Implementation Plan (AIP);

4. Gather information necessary for effective monitoring and evaluation of the Program,

5. Conduct an annual Performance Implementation Review of the WinS Program; and

6. Submit an annual report no later than the first week of December each year to the Schools Division Office.

DepEd Partners for WinS shall:

1. Provide technical assistance to WinS implementing schools;

2. Extend support for WinS implementation in identified DepEd areas;

3. Strengthen monitoring and evaluation (M&E) systems for the WinS Program; and

4. Document and share best practices, approaches, strategies, funding and knowledge sources to support the WinS program.

C. Partnerships and Linkages

The involvement of partners and key stakeholders in the implementation of this program has significantly contributed to the strides the Department has made in this area.

Nevertheless, school authorities shall strictly observe the prohibition on accepting donations or sponsorships from or having any financial or material involvement with tobacco companies in advancing the WinS program. Violation of this prohibition is punishable under existing law and DepEd Order No. 6, s. 2012.

Likewise, school authorities shall strictly observe prohibitions stipulated in Executive Order No. 51 or the Milk Code of the Philippines, particularly those on the acceptance of funding, sponsorships, logistical, training, financial or material incentives, or gifts of any sort from companies that manufacture or market infant formula and other breastmilk substitutes.

V. Funding

Funding for the effective and sustainable implementation of the WinS Program shall be sourced from the budget for school maintenance and other operating expenses (MOOE), in accordance with the school-based management system mandated in Republic Act No. 9155. Specifically, the MOOE budget shall finance the proper maintenance and repair of school handwashing, toilet, water supply, waste disposal facilities, and the provision of a regular supply of drinking water as well as clean running water for hygiene and sanitation purposes.

VI. Monitoring and Evaluation

The Schools Division Office, through the School Management Monitoring and Evaluation Section (SMMES), shall periodically monitor overall implementation of this policy and guidelines to determine its efficiency and effectiveness as well as problem areas. Civil Society Organizations that are actively involved in the monitoring of school-level programs and projects may also provide assistance in this task and provide feedback to DepEd.

Periodic reports, once every six months, on the status of the program to be submitted by all school heads to the Schools Division Offices (SDOs) shall form part of the M&E effort. The SDO shall consolidate these reports and submit the same to the Regional Office which, in turn, shall consolidate all reports from the SDOs and submit a unified report to the Central Office through the Bureau of Learner Support Services, School Health Division (BLSS-SHD).

Targets and performance indicators shall be clearly defined based on the School Improvement Plan (SIP) and Annual Improvement Plan (AIP) in which the WinS program shall be included. Capacity building on how to run an effective monitoring and evaluation (M&E) of the WinS program shall also be undertaken.

VII. References

A. DECS Order No. 60, s. 1994, “Cleanliness and Maintenance of Schools and DECS Offices Toilets;”

B. DepEd Order No. 8, s. 2007, “Revised Operating Guidelines on the Operation and Management of School Canteens in Public Elementary and Secondary Schools;”

C. DepEd Order No. 56, s. 2009, “Immediate Construction of Water and Hand Washing Facilities in All Schools for the Prevention of Influenza A (H1NI);” and

D. DepEd Order No. 65, s. 2009, “Implementation of the Essential Health Care Program (EHCP) for the School Children.”

VIII. Separability Clause

If for any reason, any portion or provision of this Order is declared unconstitutional, other parts or provisions hereof which are not affected thereby shall continue to be in full force and effect.

IX. Effectivity

These guidelines shall take effect fifteen (15) days after its publication in the Official Gazette or a newspaper of general circulation. This shall be registered with the Office of the National Administrative Register (ONAR) at the University of the Philippines (UP) Law Center, UP Diliman, Quezon City.


DepEd WinS Program PowerPoint Presentations (PPT)

WINNING HEALTH

Congratulations to all of you for joining this Orientation and Planning for the WinS Policy Implementation Workshop. As with any program, the dedication of its participants is critical to its success.

It is pleasing to note that the five-member contingent from each region is led by their Regional Director, who stands together with the rest of our teaching and non-teaching personnel at the frontlines of the Department’s efforts to give our children the best possible chances for a better life.

Department Order No. 10, s. 2016 titled “Policy and Guidelines for the Comprehensive Water Sanitation and Hygiene in Schools (WinS) Program” was issued last February to promote a more holistic approach to the prevention of highly preventable diseases. It covers (1) Oral Hygiene; (2) Proper Handwashing; (3) Menstural Hygiene Management; (4) Food Sanitation; (5) Deworming; (6) Environmental Sanitation; (7) Provision of Safe Water, Handwashing, Toilet, and Proper Drainage Facilities; (8) Solid Waste Management; (9) Capacity Building for Program Implementers; and (10) Health Education Focused on Hygiene and Sanitation.

Everyday our students are exposed to the elements, and are susceptible to different health hazards even in schools. That is precisely what the WinS program seeks to address, because a healthy student equals a better learner.

I will not discuss further the details of the WinS for you are not just well aware of it, but experts if I may say, and far more familiar than I am. Let me, however, relay to you some policy directions that the Department, under the leadership of Secretary Leonor Magtolis Briones, has adopted or is discussing that concerns WinS.

Recognizing the different needs of different age groups, the Department will provide age-appropriate learning environments, particularly for our Kindergarten students. Starting with 2017, Kindergarten students shall now be provided with their own classrooms specific to their needs. While we will continue building standard-type classrooms, as we did the past years, we will now identify the appropriate number of rooms for Kindergarten classes and retrofit them accordingly – smaller bowls for their toilets, smaller chairs, matted floorings, more colorful environment, etc. Existing Kindergarten classrooms may also be retrofitted accordingly.

The queries of Education Committee and Sorsogon Representative Evelina Escudero and Albay Representative Joey Salceda during the recent budget hearings at the House of Representatives led us to this shift in policy. We do listen to our partners.

Since the Department has led in the WinS initiative and has been in the forefront, we better walk the talk. Hence, the standard designs of our school buildings will now include facilities for group and individual handwashing. Handwashing in groups before every meal is seen as a communal experience where students are encouraged to exercise the proper handwashing techniques together. That experience can now be realized through these added facilities.

The Department will also endeavor to allocate resources to fund Hygiene Kits that we will be distributing to every student every year. With the availability of these kits, coupled with daily exercises on handwashing and oral hygiene, we hope to reinforce these important habits in our students. The Schools Health Division, therefore, should always put this allocation as a priority in their annual budget. I have talked with the Undersecretary for Finance Ann Sevilla about this, and she said she will look into what is available for this year, but surely it will be included in 2017.

The Department also recognizes that the formation of proper hygienic habits can only take you so far, and so the Department is finding ways to be able to provide the proper facilities.

For the longest time, many students, including us decades ago, have suffered through the poor and unsanitary conditions of toilets and restrooms in our schools, as if their absence is a better alternative.

We will be proposing to implement a nationwide inspection of the status and conditions of public school toilets and restrooms in order to provide the appropriate funding for their repair or construction to make them better, not just tolerable, and comparable to what they have at home.

Of course, the very essential item after all the facilities and goods have been provided is the access to water, to clean and potable water. Without water, we can not hope to achieve the healthy environment we would like to have in our schools. We will therefore include in our plans and programs the provisions on access to clean and potable water as one of our priorities.

Help us craft these programs and be our whips in order that the apparatus of the entire Department will really move and work towards winning the health that we all wanted.

These reforms form only a small part of Secretary Briones’ agenda to ensure the general well-being of our learners by providing adequate facilities. But again, we wish to underscore that aside from the policies, programs, and physical items and structures the Department is providing, the anchor of the success of the Department’s undertakings rests upon the people at the frontlines -you – the administrators, implementers and teachers.

We would also like to recognize our partners in this endeavor: UNICEF, GIZ, Save the Children, and the International Medical Corps for their invaluable contribution.

Together let us all join hands in making the WinS program a resounding success! In doing so, it will bring us closer to our dream of a better future for our children and our nation.

Message to the Participants of DepEd’s Orientation and Planning for the WinS Policy Implementation Workshop Cebu City, 28 October 2016

ALAIN DEL B. PASCUA
Undersecretary for Administration
Department of Education


Session 1: The Water, Sanitation and Hygiene in Schools (WinS) Program and its Implications

Session 2: Enabling the Implementation

Session 3: Steering Structures

Session 4: The Three-Star Approach to WASH in Schools

Session 5: Translation of the Standards in a Three-Star Rubrics

Session 6: Three Star Approach

Session 7: TSA Monitoring System for Schools

Session 8 : School-Based Management – WinS – A Decentralized Approach of Governance for WASH in Schools

Session 9: Recognizing SDO Performance

Session 10: Recognizing Schools Division Offices in WinS Program Management

Workshop 11: School Planning


Orientation and Planning for The WinS Policy Implementation (Attachments)

WASH in SCHOOLS 3-STAR INDICATORS

DEPED’S THREE STAR APPROACH (TSA) FOR SCHOOLS

WASH IN SCHOOLS (WinS) MONITORING FORM

WASH IN SCHOOLS (WinS) MONITORING SYSTEM

WASH IN SCHOOLS (WinS) USER’S MANUAL FOR SCHOOLS

CRITERIA FOR RECOGNIZING SCHOOLS DIVISION OFFICES IN MANAGING THE WINS

RECOGNITION FOR SCHOOLS DIVISION OFFICE (SDO)

WASH IN SCHOOLS SDO MONITORING FORM FOR WINS PROGRAM MANAGEMENT

Recognition System for WinS Program Management

WASH IN SCHOOLS MONITORING SYSTEM FOR WINS PROGRAM MANAGEMENT ADMINISTRATOR’S MANUAL FOR THE SCHOOLS DIVISION IT OFFICER

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Mark Anthony Llego

Mark Anthony Llego, from the Philippines, has significantly influenced the teaching profession by enabling thousands of teachers nationwide to access essential information and exchange ideas. His contributions have enhanced their instructional and supervisory abilities. Moreover, his articles on teaching have reached international audiences and have been featured on highly regarded educational websites in the United States.

4 thoughts on “DepEd WinS Program (PowerPoint PPT)”

  1. how to request po a soft copies of these ppt of WinS for my presentation as I am our WinS Coordinator in our school..Thank you po..

    Reply

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