Magna Carta @ 60: Reform Happens When Teachers Organize
Sixty years after the passage of the Magna Carta for Public School Teachers (Republic Act No. 4670), perhaps the most important lesson is not found in the law itself but in its history. The past six decades show that meaningful reforms do not happen simply because Congress passes a law. They happen because teachers organize, speak with one voice, document problems, engage institutions, and persist until government responds.
This was my strongest takeaway from a recent conversation with Liza Puri of E-Net Philippines and ASSERT. While much of the public discussion understandably focuses on the provisions of the Magna Carta that remain unimplemented, we should not overlook the reforms that have actually succeeded. Those victories offer valuable lessons on how public policy evolves and how governance can work.
One of the clearest examples is the abolition of mandatory election service for public school teachers. For many years, teachers had no choice but to serve during elections, often under difficult and sometimes dangerous circumstances. According to Puri, that policy changed only after years of sustained advocacy by teachers’ organizations and courageous leaders such as Tess Tablante, who helped expose the risks faced by teachers on election duty. What was once compulsory eventually became voluntary. That reform did not happen overnight, nor was it granted as a matter of generosity. It was earned through persistence, organization, and constructive engagement with government.
The same pattern can be seen in other gains won by the profession. High school teachers were eventually nationalized. Salary standardization improved compensation compared with previous decades. Honoraria for election service increased. These achievements remind us that reforms are rarely accidental. They are usually the product of organized citizens who refuse to accept that long-standing problems are simply part of the system.
At the same time, the interview also underscored how much work remains unfinished. Teachers continue to shoulder numerous non-teaching responsibilities that reduce the time they can devote to lesson preparation and classroom instruction. Important health provisions envisioned by the Magna Carta have yet to be fully realized. Calls for salary grade correction, stronger retirement benefits, and even a National Hospital for Teachers reflect concerns that have persisted across generations of educators.
These issues should not be viewed solely as teachers’ concerns. They are education concerns. Every hour a teacher spends completing administrative reports instead of preparing lessons affects the quality of instruction. Every experienced teacher who leaves the profession because of poor working conditions weakens the country’s capacity to educate the next generation.
Neither is it fair to place the entire burden on the Department of Education. Implementing the Magna Carta requires coordinated action by Congress, the Department of Budget and Management, the Government Service Insurance System, local governments through the Special Education Fund, and other institutions. Good governance is almost always a shared responsibility.
There is another lesson that deserves attention. Teachers did not simply protest. They organized evidence, built coalitions, proposed reforms, and remained engaged long after public attention had shifted elsewhere. That distinction matters. Sustainable reforms are achieved not only through resistance but through informed, persistent, and solutions-oriented advocacy.
Perhaps this is the most fitting message as we commemorate the 60th anniversary of the Magna Carta for Public School Teachers. Instead of asking only why some provisions remain unimplemented, we should also ask why certain reforms succeeded. Understanding those successes may offer the best roadmap for completing the work that remains.
After sixty years, the Magna Carta is no longer being tested as legislation. It is being tested as a measure of our capacity to govern. And history suggests that when teachers organize, institutions listen, and citizens remain engaged, meaningful reform is not only possible—it becomes inevitable. #
