Abstract This paper examines the issues and trends encountered by educators in selected Indigenous Peoples Education (IPEd) schools across the Philippines. Despite the Department of Education's Indigenous Peoples Education Curriculum Framework (DepEd Order No. 32, s. 2015) aimed at culturally contextualizing the K to 12 curriculum for 1.2 million indigenous students, significant challenges persist. Key issues include a lack of formal training for non-indigenous teachers in indigenous values and pedagogies, the marginalization of community elders in decision-making, and the profound scarcity of culturally contextualized learning materials. Educators also navigate physical accessibility barriers, limited inter-agency synergy, and the absence of specialized indigenous education in teacher training programs. Socio-economic factors, traditional gender roles, and the prevalence of Tagalog as a medium of instruction contribute to high dropout rates and academic struggles. Furthermore, a digital divide, systemic biases, and the exclusion of indigenous content from curricula undermine students' sense of cultural value. The findings highlight the critical need for a rights-based, interface model of education. Solutions involve empowering educators as agents of change, actively involving indigenous communities in curriculum development, and integrating local knowledge systems into core subjects. This approach aims to cultivate equitable and empowering learning environments that honor the rich diversity and heritage of indigenous peoples, enabling students to bridge modern education with their ancestral realities. Keywords: Indigenous Education, Educators, Cultural Contextualization, Educational Disparities
Ma. Nora Derla Lai (Tue,) studied this question.
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