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CHED allows 24 colleges to hold limited face-to-face classes, netizens hit back with Hunger Games memes

Netizens, however, were not too happy about this announcement and expressed that the time is not right after close to 10,000 COVID-19 cases were confirmed positive on that day.

Netizens have just likened a recent decision from the Commission on Higher Education (CHED) in light of the Department of Health (DOH) posting a record high 9,838 positive cases of COVID-19 on March 26.

CHED allowed 24 colleges and universities to hold limited face-to-face classes beginning in the second semester of AY 2020-2021.

The catch: all 24 offer medical and allied health programs.

https://twitter.com/cnnphilippines/status/1375339231531257857

In a statement, CHED Chairman Prospero De Vera said, “The 24 schools can bring their third and fourth-year students for hands-on training and laboratory classes.”

It is something that has plagued medical students since the start of the pandemic.

Netizens, however, were not too happy about this announcement and expressed that the time is not right after close to 10,000 COVID-19 cases were confirmed positive on that day.

One Netizen even revived a classic: Katniss Everdeen from the hit trilogy The Hunger Games.

https://twitter.com/alfred_lnd/status/1375362219509047298

Others are concerned more because their college or university would be or is already on the list.

Some, however, saw what most Netizens probably have missed: only medical and allied health programs were allowed to hold face-to-face classes.

https://twitter.com/atierdjem/status/1375443224173551624

A Netizen, however, remembered an early proposed policy from the Inter-Agency Task Force for the Management of Emerging Infectious Diseases (IATF): having medical students be part of the healthcare workforce at the start of the pandemic.

Efforts to revive face-to-face classes have floated since the scheduled opening of AY 2020-2021 was pushed back due to the pandemic.

Despite assurances that measures are in place to prevent the spread of the virus between students, according to Education Secretary Leonor Briones–after discovering new coronavirus strains, President Rodrigo Duterte retracted a decision to allow a pilot implementation of face-to-face classes in January 2021.

Duterte later vetoed any suggestions for face-to-face classes in February, telling Filipino schools to wait until COVID-19 vaccines are available.

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