According to the Republic Act 10533 also
known as the Enhance Basic Education Act of 2013, Section 5, “The DEpEd shall
adhere to the following standards and principles in developing the enhance BEC:
(g) the curriculum shall use the spiral
progression approach to ensure
mastery of knowledge and skills after each level.”
Spiral Progression is a teaching
approach developing same concepts from one grade level to the next in
increasing complexity. It revisits concepts at each grade level with increasing
depth. This approach avoids the major disjunctions between stages of schooling
provides the basis for continuity and consistency. Compartmentalization inhibit
transfer of learning across topics; students who exit school early do not have
the basic functioning skills across requisite areas especially in science
(University of Melbourne, Curriculum Comparison Study, 2011).
For example, the topic Heredity:
Inheritance and Variation is taught across Grade 7 to Grade 10, but with
increasing complexity in topics. In Grade 7 the topic starts with the Types of
Reproduction. The students will be asked to differentiate sexual and asexual
reproduction. In Grade 8, Cell Division and Mendelian Genetics will be presented. Non-Mendelian Genetics will be tackled in
Grade 9 and Central Dogma of Life is during Grade 10 (DepEd K to 12 Curriulum
Guide, Science).
Notice how the topics are gradually
discussed all throughout Grade 7 to Grade 10. Consequently, mastery of knowledge
and skills will be ensured. This helps learners learn the topics and skills
suited to their cognitive and developmental statages. However, it is also
important to note that the topics are connected to each other. To be able to
understand and master the concepts and skills, one should possess the mastery
of its basics, one should be able to recall. If the students could not recall
the topics in their previous grades, the mastery that the spiral progression
ensures would be very difficult and laborious.
For instance, how can Grade 9
students understood Non-Mendelian Genetics if they cannot even remember who
Gregor Mendel is? How can they understand the basic of DNA if they do not have the
prior knowledge of word “genes” or “chromosomes?” Teachers will instead spend
most of the time reviewing and going back to the basics always. So, this is the
challenge in the spiral progression approach. A challenge that first confronts
the teachers. Despite the fact that Spiral Progression Approach is meant to
strengthen the retention and mastery of the topics and skills, the question
still for the teachers is, how can they provide their students the instruction that
is more memorable and meaningful?