Child Protection Policy Code of Conduct: Fortune High School Students
Child Protection Policy Code of Conduct: Fortune High School Students
Child Protection Policy Code of Conduct: Fortune High School Students
PROTECTION
POLICY
CODE OF
CONDUCT
FORTUNE HIGH SCHOOL STUDENTS
2018-2019
Vision, Mission, Core Values, and Mandate
The DepEd Vision
We dream of Filipinos
who passionately love their country
and whose values and competencies
enable them to realize their full potential
and contribute meaningfully to building the nation.
As a learner-centered public institution,
the Department of Education
continuously improves itself
to better serve its stakeholders.
The DepEd Mission
To protect and promote the right of every Filipino to quality, equitable, culture-based, and
complete basic education where:
Students learn in a child-friendly, gender-sensitive, safe, and motivating environment.
Teachers facilitate learning and constantly nurture every learner.
Administrators and staff, as stewards of the institution, ensure an enabling and supportive
environment for effective learning to happen.
Family, community, and other stakeholders are actively engaged and share responsibility for
developing life-long learners.
The Fortune High School is committed to devising and implementing policies so that
everyone in school accepts their responsibilities to safeguard children from harm and
abuse. This means to follow procedures to protect children and report any concerns
about their welfare to appropriate authorities.
The aim of the policy is to promote good practice, providing children and young people
with appropriate safety/protection while in the care of school and to allow staff and
volunteers to make informed and confident responses to specific child protection issues.
b. all children, whatever their age, culture, ability, gender, language, racial origin,
religious belief and/or sexual identity should be able to participate in any school
activities in a fun and safe environment
c. taking all reasonable steps to protect children from harm, discrimination and
degrading treatment and to respect their rights, wishes and feelings
d. all suspicions and allegations of poor practice or abuse will be taken seriously and
responded to swiftly and appropriately
e. all FHS employees who work with children will be recruited with regard to their
suitability for that responsibility, and will be provided with guidance and/or training in good
practice and child protection procedures
f. working in partnership with parents and children is essential for the protection of children
section 2. Applicability
This Code applies to all students officially enrolled in the Fortune High School,
Santan St. Barangay Fortune, Marikina City.
ARTICLE II
1. GENERAL RULES OF BEHAVIOR
This department Order shall be known as the “DepEd Child Protection Policy.”
Pursuant to the 1987 Constitution, the State shall defend the right of children to
assistance, including proper care and nutrition, and special protection from all forms of neglect,
abuse, cruelty, exploitation and other conditions prejudicial to their development9Article xv,
section 3 (2).
A. “CHILD” - refers to any person below eighteen (18) years of age or those over but are unable to
fully take care of themselves or protect themselves from abuse, neglect, cruelty, exploitation or
discrimination of physical or mental disability or condition (RA 7610). includes pupils or students who
may be eighteen (18) years of age or older but are in school.
B. CHILDREN IN SCHOOL - refers to bonafide pupils, students or learners who are enrolled
in the basic education system, whether regular, irregular, transferee or repeater, including those
who have been temporarily out of school, who are in the school or learning centers premises or
participating in school sanctioned activities.
C. PUPIL, STUDENT OR LEARNER - means a child who regularly attends classes in any
level of the basic education system, under the supervision of a teacher or facilitator.
D. “ School personnel” - means the persons, singly or collectively, working in a public or
private school. They are classified as follows:
a. “ School Head” refers to the chief executive officer or administrator of a public or
private school or learning center.
b. “ Other School Officials” include other school officers, including teachers, who are occupying
supervisory positions or positions of responsibility, and are involved in policy formulation or
implementation in a school.
c. “ Academic Personnel” includes all school personnel who are formally engaged in actual teaching
service or in research assignments, either on a full-time or part-time basis, as well as those who possess
certain prescribed academic functions directly supportive of teaching, such as registrar, librarians,
guidance counselors, researchers, and other similar persons. They may include school officials who are
responsible for academic matters, and other school officials.
d. “ Other personnel” includes all other non-academic personnel in the school, whatever may be the
nature of their appointment and status of employment.
E. “ Child Protection” - refers to programs, services, procedures and structures that are intended to
prevent and respond to abuse, neglect, exploitation, discrimination and violence.
F. “ parents” - refers to biological parents, step-parents, adoptive parents and the common-law spouse or
partner of the parent;
G. “ Guardians or Custodians” - refers to legal guardians, foster parents, and other persons, including
relatives or even non-relatives, who have physical custody of the child.
H. “ School Visitor or Guest “ - refers to any person who visits the school and has any official business
with the school, and any person who does not have any official business but it found within the premises
of the school. This may include those who are within the school premises for certain reasons, e.g. student
teachers, catechist, service providers, suppliers, bidders, parents, parents and guardians of other children.
D. CHILD ABUSE – refers to the maltreatment of a child whether habitual or not, which includes the
following :
1.Psychological or physical abuse, neglect, cruelty, sexual abuse and emotional maltreatment.
2.Any act or deeds or words which debases, degrades or demeans the intrinsic worth dignity of a
child as a human being.
3.Unreasonable deprivation of the child’s basic needs for survival such as food and shelter; or
4.Failure to immediately give medical treatment to an injured child resulting in serious impairment
of his or her growth and development or in the child’s permanent in capacity or death. (section 3
(b) RA 7610)
It includes physical, humiliating or degrading punishment, including but not limited to the following :
1.Blows such as, but not limited to, beating, kicking, hitting, slapping, or lashing, of any part of a
child’s body, with or without the use of an instrument such as, but not limited to a cane, broom, stick,
whip or belt;
2.Striking of a child’s face or head, such being declared as a “no contract zone”;
3.Pulling hair, shaking, twisting joints, cutting or piercing skin, dragging, pushing or throwing of a
child;
Forcing a child to perform physically painful or damaging acts such as, but not limited to, holding
a weight or weights for an extended period and kneeling on stones, salt, pebbles or other objects;
Deprivation of a child’s physical needs as a form of punishment;
Deliberate exposure to fire, ice water, smoke, sunlight, rain, pepper, alcohol, or forcing the child
to swallow substances, dangerous chemicals, and other materials that can cause discomfort or
threaten the child’s health, safety and sense of security such as, but not limited to insecticides,
excrement or urine;
Tying up a child;
Confinement, imprisonment or depriving the liberty of a child;
Verbal abuse or assaults, including intimidation or threat of bodily harm, swearing or cursing,
ridiculing or denigrating the child;
Forcing a child to swear a sign, to undress or disrobe, or put on anything that will make a child
look or feel foolish, which belittles or humiliates the child in front of others;
Permanent confiscation of personal property of pupils, students or learners, except when such
pieces of property pose a danger to the child or to others, and
Other analogous acts.
G. CHILD EXPLOITATION – refers to the use of children for someone else’s advantage, gratification
or profit resulting in an unjust, cruel and harmful treatment of the child.
Two forms :
1.Sexual exploitation – abuse of position of vulnerability, differential power, or trust, for sexual
purposes.
2.Economic exploitation – use of the child in work or other activities for the benefit of others.
– refers to a single act or a series of acts committed by school administrators, academic and non-academic
personnel against a child which result in or is likely to result in physical, sexual, psychological harm or
suffering or other abuses including threats of such acts, battery, assault, coercion, harassment or arbitrary
deprivation of liberty. It includes, but is not limited to the following acts :
1.Physical violence – bodily or physical harm. It includes assigning tasks which are hazardous to
their physical well-being.
2.Sexual violence – acts that sexual in nature. It includes, but not limited to : rape, sexual
harassment, forcing the child to watch obsence or indicent shows, forcing the child to engage in sexual
activity.
3.Psychological violence – acts or omissions causing or likely to cause mental or emotional suffering
of the child.
4.Other acts of violence of a physical, sexual or psychological nature that are prejudicial to the best
interest of
the child.
– is committed when a student commits an act or a series of acts directed towards another student,
or a series of single acts directed towards several students in a school setting or a place of learning,
which results in physical and mental abuse, harassment, intimidation, or humiliation.
1.Threats to inflict a wrong upon a person, honor or property of the person or on his or her family;
2.Stalking or constantly following or pursuing a person in his or her daily activities, with unwanted
and obsessive attention;
3.Taking of property;
4.Public humiliation, or public and malicious imputation of a crime or of a vice or defect, whether
real or imaginary, or any act, omission, condition, status, or circumstance tending to cause
dishonor, discredit or expose a person to contempt;
5.Deliberate destruction or defacement of, or damage to the child’s property;
6.Physical violence committed upon a student, which may or may not result to harm or injury, with
or without the act of weapon. Such violence may be in the form of mauling, hitting, punching,
kicking, throwing things at the student, pinching, spanking, or other similar acts;
7.Demanding or requiring sexual or monetary favors or exacting money or property from a pupil or
student; and
8.Restraining the liberty and freedom of a pupil or student.
K. CYBER-BULYING
– is any conduct which results to harassment, intimidation, or humiliation, through electronic means or
other technology, such as, but not limited to texting, email, instant messaging, chatting, internet, social
networking websites or other platforms or formats.
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 interests. Pupils,
students and learners shall refrain from:
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.
ARTICLE III
ESTABLISHMENT OF CHILD PROTECTION COMMITTEE
2.initiate information dissemination programs and organize activities for the protection of
children from abuse;
3.develop and implement a school-based referral and monitoring system;
4.give assistance to parents or guardians, whenever necessary;
5.coordinate closely with the PNP, DSWD, NGOs and other non-governmental
institutions;
6.monitor implementation of positive measures and effective procedures;
7.ensure that children’s right to be heard are respected and upheld in all matters and
procedures affecting their welfare.
Section 4. Penalties :
1st Offense – reprimand
2nd offense and subsequent time – suspension for not more than one (1) week (this is after the
offending child has received counseling or other interventions)
Note: during the period of suspension, the offending child and the parents or guardians may be required to
attend further seminars and counseling.
Section 5. Procedure
If the bullying or peer abuse resulted in serious physical injuries or death, whenever appropriate,
the case shall be dealt with in accordance with the provisions of Republic Act No. 7610 and its
Implementing Rules and Regulations.
Depending on the gravity of the bullying committed by any pupil, student or learner, the school
may impose other non-disciplinary measures.
In all cases where the imposable penalty on the offending child is suspension, exclusion or expulsion, the
following minimum requirements of due process shall be complied with :
1.The child and the parents or guardians must be informed of the complaint in writing;
2.The child shall be given the opportunity to answer the complaint in writing, with the
assistance of the parents or guardians;
3.The decision of the school head must be writing, stating the facts and the reasons for the
decisions;
4.The decision of the school head may be appealed as provided in existing rules of the
Department.
ARTICLE IV
Abuse
Violence
Exploitation
Discrimination
Corporal Punishment
Bullying
Other Forms of Abuse
Evelyn Chua-qua vs. Jacobo C. Clave Tay Tung High School, Inc-aug. 14, 2015
A truly remarkable case wherein the supreme court ruled in favor of Love. the setting of the case was
in when marriage betweeen minors was still legal , way before the family code. In this case, a 30 year
old teacher had married her student which promptedthe school to terminate her. and against all odds
the supreme court Ruled in favor of her, hence, creatinglandmark case. if the two eventually fell in
love ,despite the disparity in their ages and academic levels, this only lends substance to the " truism
that the heart has reasons of its own which reason does not know"
Section 3. Public Schools
ARTICLE V
GENERAL PROVISIONS
Section 1. Applicability
a. This policy supersedes all those previously issued and shall take effect upon the approval of the
principal and the Committee.
b. This policy shall govern all cases of misconduct brought after it takes effect and to further pending
proceeding except to the extent that its application would not be feasible or would cause injustice to any
party.
All existing School rules and regulations in so far as they are inconsistent with this policy, are hereby
repealed or amended as the case may be.
FORTUNE HIGH SCHOOL
COMPOSITION OF CHILD
PROTECTION COMMITTEE
MEMBERS: