School Rules and Regulations
School Rules and Regulations
These guidelines shall be included in the Child Protection and Anti-Bullying Policy of
the school, and Learner’s Discipline Manual/Code of Conduct.
To aid in the creation of the Learner’s Discipline Manual, the following Rights and
Responsibilities, and Obligations of the Learners as outlined in Batas Pambansa Bilang
232 and DepEd Order No. 40, s. 2012 must be emphasized:
Pupils, students and learners shall have the following duties and responsibilities:
A. Comply with the school’s regulations, as long as they are in harmony with their best
interests. Pupils, students and learners shall refrain from:
vi. Introducing into the school premises or otherwise possessing prohibited articles, such
as deadly weapons, drugs, alcohol, toxic and noxious substances, cigarettes and
pornographic material; and
vii. Performing other similar acts that cause damage or injury to another.
An allegation that any of these acts has been committed shall not be used to curtail the
child’s basic rights, or interpreted to defeat the objectives of this Department Order.
i. Regularity of attendance and punctuality are required in all classes. A student who has
been absent or has cut classes is required to present a letter of explanation from his/her
parents or guardians or to bring them to school for a short conference with the section
adviser or guidance counselor as the case may be.
ii. Attendance of students in special holidays, activities relative to their religions shall be
allowed provided permission of the school head is sought.
iii. Habitual tardiness especially during the first period in the morning and in the
afternoon shall not be allowed. Teachers concerned shall call for the parents of the
student concerned or visit him/her at home.
b. Pursuant to DepEd Order No. 45 s. 2008 and DepEd Order No. 46 s. 2008, Our
president suggested that wearing of school uniform is not mandatory this school
year.
(The school administration shall fund these from their MOOE.) pwde na dili e istorya
While the general policy is that the wearing of a school uniform shall not be required in
public schools (as embodied in DepEd Order No. 45 s. 2008), it is necessary to provide
guidance on what constitutes proper school attire. The following principles should serve
as a guide: ( Kung dili gyud e require nga magschool uniform ang mga students,
dapat kabalo pud mo sa mga dapat nnyu suoton)
i. A student’s basic right to go to school, study and learn is of paramount importance and
should be respected and promoted at all times.
ii. A student’s attire should reflect respect for the school as an institution for learning.
iii. A student’s attire should not become a cause for discrimination particularly for
students belonging to a lower socio-economic status.
iv. Promoting physical hygiene and proper school decorum is part of the teaching-
learning process in schools, thus a student’s attire and physical appearance should
manifest learnings from this process.
Given the above principles, the suggested attire for elementary and secondary learners
may be:
Polo shirt/T-shirt with sleeves – any plain color, with a minimum prints
Pants (long or short) – any color
Footwear – any
For Female Learners
Dress, skirt and blouse, blouse and pants – any color, print
Footwear-any
Learners with existing uniforms may continue using these uniforms, if they so desire, in
order to avoid incurring additional costs for new attire.
Learners are discouraged from wearing expensive (signature or designer brands) or flashy
clothes, tight-fitting pants/blouses/dresses, mini-skirts, short shorts, blouses with
plunging necklines, hip-hop pants for boys, and sleepwear.
A learner who violates the above guidelines is required to present a letter of explanation
from his/her parents or guardians or to bring them to school for a short conference with
the section adviser or guidance counselor as the case may be.
c. Suggested haircut for boys: at least 1 inch above the ear and 3 inches above the
collar line.
A learner who is not in proper haircut is required to present a letter of explanation from
his/her parents or guardians or to bring them to school for a short conference with the
section adviser or guidance counselor as the case may be.
Colored hairs are not allowed unless it is the natural color of the hair and also wearing of
piercings and tattoos are prohibited.
1. Cheating/dishonesty
2. Stealing
3. Assaulting a teacher, or any other school authority or his agents, or other
learner/s
4. Smoking inside the school premises and bringing tobacco products, vapes,
etc.
5. Vandalism – writing on or destroying school property like chairs, tables,
windows, books, laboratory equipment and others
6. Gambling of any sort
7. Drinking intoxicants and liquor or entering the school premises under the
influence of liquor, or bringing of alcoholic beverages
8. Carrying and concealing deadly weapons or instruments
9. Fighting, causing injury to others
10. Hazing in any form or manner whether inside or outside the school
premises
11. Sexual abuse, immorality, illicit relationships
12. Preventing, threatening learners or faculty members or school authorities
from discharging their duties or from attending classes or entering school
premises
13. Absenteeism, cutting of classes, and tardiness
14. Uttering (plastic cups, bottles, candy wrappers or any waste) inside the
school campus specially inside the classroom and corridors
15. Loitering and staying inside or outside the school campus during class hour
16. using gadgets like cellular phones during class hour.
17. Unruly behavior inside the classroom or school premises, during
assemblies, school activities, etc.
18. Uttering profanities/swearwords inside the school campus. (Hilig
mamalikas)
19. Going to restricted places (Dili magpataka ug sulod sa bisan asa nga
offices unless gisugo mo sa inyung teacher)
20. Tampering of school ID such as placing stickers and other objects on
school ID,
21. Drug dependency or drug use, possession, and sale of prohibited drugs such
as marijuana, ecstasy, shabu, etc. (it shall be subject to the Guidelines
prescribed by DO 40 s. 2012 entitled Guidelines for the Conduct of
Random Drug Testing in Public and Private Secondary Schools, and RA
9165 and its IRR)
22. Joining fraternities, sororities, and gangs;
23. Bullying acts – physical, emotional, mental and cyber-bullying (Bullying
cases or offenses shall be handled in accordance with Republic Act 10627
and DepEd Order No. 55, s. 2013)
24. Other analogous acts that may endanger/threaten any learner, school
personnel, or the school.
The School may add to the list above as long as it is presented and approved by the
GPTA, and the Schools Division Office subject to existing laws, rules and regulations;
The School may categorize the offenses as minor, less grave, and grave offense. In case
of doubt as to the category, it shall be the lesser offense.
i. Minor Offense
ii. Manual labor detrimental to the health and safety of the learner or that demeans the
well-being of the child;
vi. Non return of confiscated items except for illegal drugs, weapons or any illegal item,
which shall be turned over to appropriate authorities;
viii. Barring entry to the school during class hours for whatever reason except when the
learner is under preventive suspension;
xi. Deprivation in any school activity except in sports and other competitions where
banning the participant is justified under existing polices;
V. PROCEDURE
Procedure in Learner Discipline
A. The School Head shall issue a Notice in writing to the learner through the
Parent/Guardian by personal service or any other means of service within 5 three (3)
working days from date of incident/report.
B. The Answer in writing of the learner with the assistance of the parents/guardian must
be submitted within three (3) working days from receipt on Notice.
C. A Notice of Conference with parents/guardian shall be issued within three (3) working
days from receipt of Answer. The conference shall be before the School Head if it is a
first minor offense; otherwise, before the Child Protection Committee
ii. The conference must be recorded through a minutes of conference duly signed by all
die parties and members present.
D. The Decision in writing shall be issued within 3 working days by the School
Head/Administrator.
ii. The Decision imposing a penalty of suspension is appealable to the SDS for public
schools. For private schools, exhaust administrative remedies available within the
school/institution, and the final decision of the private school is appealable to the SDS.
The appeal must be made within fifteen (15) days from receipt of the Decision. The
Decision of the SDS is executory.
For private schools, the penalty of suspension shall not exceed 20% of the prescribed
school days of a school year. If it does, the decision shall be forwarded to the Regional
Office concerned, within ten days from the termination of the investigation of each case
for its information.
iii. The Decision imposing exclusion for private school is appealable to the SDS and
higher authorities. No prior approval of the Department is required in the imposition of
the penalty.
The decision of the school on every case involving the penalty of exclusion from the
rolls, together with all the pertinent papers therefor, shall be filed in the school for a
period of one year in order to afford the Department the opportunity to review the case in
the event an appeal is taken by the party concerned.
iv. The Decision in every case involving the penalty of expulsion, together with the
supporting papers shall be forwarded to the Regional Office concerned within ten (10)
days from the termination of the investigation of each case.
The decision imposing die penalty of expulsion must be referred to the Secretary for
approval before implementation.
v. Pending the case, the learners and parents/guardians shall undergo counseling and
appropriate interventions such as but not limited to the following: referral to the MSWD
for psycho-social support, attendance to character formation activities, community
service provided it will not disrupt class hours, etc.
Disciplining Authority – shall refer to the Principal or School Head of the School
Learner – shall refer to female or male pupil/student duly enrolled in the school
Parent/Guardian – Parent shall refer to the mother and father identified in the
Certificate of Live Birth of the learner. Guardian1 is defined as:
i. An individual authorized by the biological parent/s whom the care and custody of the
learner has been entrusted;
ii. Relative of the learner within the 4th degree of consanguinity or affinity provided that
said relative has care and custody of the child;
iii. An individual appointed by a competent court as the legal guardian of the learner;
iv. In case of an orphan, the individual/institution who has the care and custody of the
learner.
Exclusion – a penalty in which the school is allowed to exclude or drop the name of the
erring learner from the school rolls.
Expulsion – an extreme penalty in which the erring learner is excluded from admission
to any public or private school in the Philippines which requires the prior approval of the
Secretary.
B. Therefore, it is emphasized that the Department has a zero tolerance policy for any act
of child abuse, exploitation, violence, discrimination, bullying and other forms of abuse.
C. All Learners’ Discipline Manuals of the public and private schools with Recognition
status shall be submitted to the Schools Division Office on or before February 28, 2019
for the review by the Review Committee composed of the Attorney III, Division Child
Protection Coordinator, and at least one Child Protection Specialist.
D. The review committee has sixty (60) days from the submission to review and
recommend to the SDS for approval provided that all manuals must be approved before
June 1, 2019 for public schools and recognized private schools. For private schools
applying for permit, the manual shall be submitted during the application or renewal of
permit for review by the committee within sixty (60) days from receipt.
E. Only upon the approval of the Schools Division Superintendent shall the Learners’
Manual be effective for SY 2019 – 2020 and beyond. The schools are encouraged to
update their manuals every 3 – 5 years and submit to the SDO for approval.
References:
DepEd Order No. 55, s. 2013 (Implementing Rules and Regulations of RA 9155 – Anti
Bullying Act of 2013)
DepEd Order No. 88 s 2010 (2010 Revised Manual of Regulations for Private Schools in
Basic Education)
DepEd Order No. 45 s. 2008 (Student Uniforms not required in Public Elementary and
Secondary Schools)
DepEd Order No. 40, s 2017 (Guidelines for the Conduct of Random Drug Testing in
Public and Private Secondary Schools