22/09/2025
THE GROUND JUST SHIFTED: IS THE PHILIPPINES READY TO MOVE?
On September 12 in Athens, DeepMind CEO Demis Hassabis issued a wake-up call that should rattle every educator, policymaker, and parent:
"Learning how to learn" is the only truly future-proof skill.
He's not exaggerating. As AI accelerates past human benchmarks in writing, coding, creativity, and reasoning, traditional education systems, especially in countries like the Philippines, are falling dangerously behind.
What's at Risk? Everything.
The idea that you can study one profession, master a narrow set of skills, and stay employed for life? It's dead. Hassabis warns that Artificial General Intelligence (AGI) could arrive within the decade. Whether that's optimistic or not, what's already clear is that AI is evolving faster than most people can keep up.
That's why "static skills" like memorizing formulas, definitions, and frameworks no longer guarantee relevance. In some cases, they may even be a liability if they prevent someone from adapting fast enough.
What Is Meta-Learning?
If we want to keep up or even contribute to the future being built, we need meta-learners.
Meta-learning is the ability to:
โข Learn something new efficiently.
โข Unlearn obsolete habits or ideas, and
โข Relearn with better strategies.
It's not a buzzword. It's based on solid research in cognitive science and educational psychology, built around these core elements:
โข Metacognition: Being aware of your own thought process.
โข Self-regulation: Planning, goal-setting, and reflecting.
โข Transfer: Applying knowledge across different contexts.
โข Growth mindset: Believing your abilities are not fixed.
Countries like Singapore, Finland, and Estonia are already building meta-learning into their education models. Their students don't just memorize-they question, create, reflect, and adapt.
Meanwhile in the Philippines...
We're still asking students to:
โข Sit quietly for hours.
โข Memorize and recite facts.
โข Choose the "correct" answer.
โข Fear failure instead of learning from it.
This is a system designed for predictability and control, not adaptability and creativity. It worked for a world of factory jobs and clerical work. That world is gone.
Ask any college graduate in the Philippines today: How much of what they memorized in school actually prepared them for today's job market-or for tools like ChatGPT, GitHub Copilot, or Notion AI?
The disconnect is real. And dangerous.
What Needs to Change โ Immediately
If the Philippines wants to participate in and not just consume the AI-powered future, systemic change in education is non-negotiable. Here's what we need to start doing right now:
1. Make meta-learning a national education priority. It should be part of the DepEd and CHED frameworks. This means curricula must include self-assessment, metacognitive exercises, and explicit teaching of learning strategies from elementary to college.
2. Retrain teachers as learning coaches. Teachers should shift from being content deliverers to facilitators of inquiry. That means more training in coaching, feedback, and reflective thinking-not just subject expertise.
3. Redesign classrooms for
real-world problem-solving. This
includes project-based learning,
design thinking challenges,
simulations, and cross-disciplinary
work. These develop collaboration,
creativity, and resilience-not just
content recall.
4. Build a culture where mistakes
are part of mastery. Right now,
students are punished for failure.
That's backwards. Mistakes are
how we grow. Classrooms should
model iterative learning: try > fail > reflect > improve.
5. Align assessments with thinking,
not recall. If our grading system
only rewards memorization, we'll
never escape the old model. We
need tools and rubrics that assess
reasoning, self-awareness, and
transfer of knowledge.
๐ฏ Why Meta-Learners Win in
the Age of AI
Meta-learners can:
โข Learn new software in days.
โข Shift industries without starting
from zero.
โข Adapt when their field gets
disrupted (again).
They're not afraid of being left
behind-because they've mastered
how to catch up.
This is the kind of Filipino talent
we need to nurture. Workers who
don't just use AI tools-but who are
ready to retool themselves every
time the world changes.
And it will keep changing.
? The Big Question
Are we ready to stop pretending our education system still works?
The students are ready. The
teachers are willing. The challenge is leadership-and urgency.
If you're a policymaker: push
for curriculum redesign. If
you're a teacher: experiment with
metacognitive strategies in your
classroom. If you're a student or
parent: ask better questions than
"What grade did you get?"
Start asking:
โข "What did you learn about how
you learn?"
โข "What strategy did you try when
you got stuck?"
โข "What feedback helped you
improve this week?"
Those are 21st-century questions.
We are not preparing for the
future. We are already late. But
meta-learning gives us a way to
catch up-and stay in the game.
So: what are you doing to teach or
practice "learning how to learn"?
Let's build a future where Filipino
learners don't just adapt-they
lead.