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The Philippine Youth Development Plan (PYDP) 2017-2022

The Philippine Youth Development Plan (PYDP) 2017-2022 aims to promote the rights and welfare of Filipino youth aged 15-30. It serves as a framework for unified actions among youth-serving groups to enable holistic youth participation in society. By 2022, the PYDP envisions Filipino youth will be healthy, educated, patriotic, active citizens able to engage civically and economically. The plan focuses on 9 areas of youth participation: health, education, employment, social inclusion, peacebuilding, governance, citizenship, environment, and global mobility.

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100% found this document useful (1 vote)
4K views66 pages

The Philippine Youth Development Plan (PYDP) 2017-2022

The Philippine Youth Development Plan (PYDP) 2017-2022 aims to promote the rights and welfare of Filipino youth aged 15-30. It serves as a framework for unified actions among youth-serving groups to enable holistic youth participation in society. By 2022, the PYDP envisions Filipino youth will be healthy, educated, patriotic, active citizens able to engage civically and economically. The plan focuses on 9 areas of youth participation: health, education, employment, social inclusion, peacebuilding, governance, citizenship, environment, and global mobility.

Uploaded by

Rohaina Sapal
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd

The Philippine Youth

Development Plan
(PYDP)
2017-2022
Anchored
on a long-
term
vision
Anchored
on a long-
term vision

The 25-year plan which envisions the Philippines as a “prosperous middle-


class society where no one is poor. People live long and healthy lives and
are smart and innovative. The Philippines is a high-trust society where
families thrive in vibrant, culturally diverse, and resilient communities”
Anchored on
a medium-
term vision

Aims “to lay down the foundation for inclusive


growth, a high-trust and resilient society, and a
globally-competitive knowledge economy”
Long

RELATIONSHIPS SDG Term


(until
2040)
United
Nations

25 years
AMBISYON
(until National
NATIN 2040
2040)

PDP 2017- 6 years


(Medium
Sectoral –
2022 Term)
National

6 years
PYDP 2017- Sectoral –
(Medium
2022 Term)
National

LYDP 2019-
2021 Sectoral -
3 years
Maguindana Provincial
o
Who are the Filipino youth?
They comprise

* (30.3 M) of
the population.

They are categorized into the following:

Child Youth (15 – 17 years old)


Core Youth (18 – 24 years old)
Young Adult (25 – 30 years old)

*2017 PSA Data


7
The Filipino youth can also identify
themselves as a member of any of the
following different subsectors.
School Placement
 In-school
 Not in education, employment or training
 Working

Youth with Disability/ies

Youth with Specific Needs

Gender

Geography

Indigenous peoples group affiliation


What does the National Youth Assessment
Study tell us about the Filipino youth?

14% have About half are not


26% have thought at
considered taking fully aware of
least once that life
their life, engaged HIV/AIDS and
was not worth living
in steps to push sexually transmitted
through with it diseases

More than half of


50% of the working About 70% are not
the working youth
youth prefer to go members of any
do not receive
abroad youth organization
employment
benefits

1 out of 2 of the
youth is not satisfied 69.3% believe that
with the state of corruption is
governance in the unavoidable
country
What does the National Youth Assessment
Study tell us about the Filipino youth?

About 78% agreed that


political participation is 65% of those no
important longer studying
want to go back to
school

78% agree that there


is nothing wrong
with seeking 90% are PROUD TO BE
professional FILIPINOS
counselling for
mental problems
The Philippine Youth
Development Plan 2017-2022
which is basically a participatorily-
developed, participation-focused plan to
enable, promote, and ensure the rights and
welfare of the Filipino youth.
- Serves as a framework for unified actions
among the youth and youth-serving groups,
agencies & institutions to promote holistic
youth participation in the society.
By 2022, Filipino youth are:
living in a
peaceful, secure,
and socially-
healthy, inclusive society
educated,
patriotic and
active citizens

able to access and


use technology and
services as partners
able to engage in in nation-building
gainful economic
activity

PYDP’s collective vision for the youth


PYDP 2017-2022
is geared
YOUTH
towards
PARTICIPATION
9 CENTERS
OF
PARTICIPATION
WE NEED THEYOUTH’S
PARTICIPATION
We need to make sure that the Filipino youth are
able to meaningfully participate in the following
areas:
Health
Education
Economic Empowerment
Social Inclusion and Equity
Peace-Building & Security
Governance
Active Citizenship
Environment
Global Mobility
WE NEED THEYOUTH:
MAJOR CHANGE-MAKER
(PYDPStrategies)
• In Health by:
– Ensure youth participation in healthy living
& prevention of accidents & injuries;
– Strengthen youth participation in
responsible sexual and responsible health;
– Address and mitigate youth participation in
sexual risk-taking behavior;
– Address and mitigate youth participation in
non-sexual risk-taking behavior; and
– Address psychosocial concerns.
WE NEED THEYOUTH:
MAJOR CHANGE-MAKER
• In Education by:
– Increase and improve youth participation in
education; and
– Improve educational quality and
performance.
WE NEED THEYOUTH:
MAJOR CHANGE-MAKER
• In Economic Empowerment by:
– Optimizing youth participation in the labor
force;
– Stopping youth participation in vulnerable
employment;
– Promoting youth participation in
entrepreneurial activities; and
– Strengthening youth participation in
employment enrichment support systems.
WE NEED THEYOUTH:
MAJOR CHANGE-MAKER
• In Social Inclusion and Equity by:
– Promoting the prosocial participation of youth with special
needs;
– Maximizing participation of youth with disability in society;
– Promoting the participation of indigenous people youth in
society;
– Strengthening equal and equitable participation across
genders (addressing violence against women);
– Strengthening equal and equitable participation across genders
(addressing job discrimination);
– Strengthening equal and equitable participation across
genders (addressing issues confronting LGBTQ+); and
– Strengthening equal and equitable participation across genders
(addressing male enrolment and attrition).
WE NEED THEYOUTH:
MAJOR CHANGE-MAKER
• In Security by:
– Strengthening youth participation in
promoting peace and order;
– Optimizing youth participation in the peace
process;
– Promoting the prosocial participation of
youth with special needs (wayward youth);
and
– Promoting the prosocial participation of
youth with special needs (drug-dependent
youth).
WE NEED THEYOUTH:
MAJOR CHANGE-MAKER
• In Governance by:
– Ensuring universal participation in the
Sangguniang Kabataan (SK);
– Ensuring universal participation in (non-SK)
local and national elections; and
– Promoting youth participation in government
and bureaucracy.
WE NEED THEYOUTH:
MAJOR CHANGE-MAKER
• In Active Citizenship by:
– Strengthening enabling mechanisms for
youth organization and participation:
accreditation, awareness and assistance;
– Engaging the youth in the preservation,
safeguarding, development, and
promotion of Philippine culture and arts;
and
– Inculcating volunteerism through the
academe and community engagement.
WE NEED THEYOUTH:
MAJOR CHANGE-MAKER
• In Environment by:
– With active citizenship: Strengthening
youth participation in environmental
activities; and
– With active citizenship: Promoting
environment- friendly practices among the
youth.
WE NEED THEYOUTH:
MAJOR CHANGE-MAKER
• In Global Mobility by:
– With education: Promoting youth
participation in cross-border exchanges;
– With active citizenship: Promoting youth
participation in cross-border socially relevant
activities;
– With economic empowerment: Supporting
youth participation in cross-border economic
activities; and
– Addressing cross-border youth trafficking.
We cannot always build a future for our
youth, but we can always build our youth
for the future. Franklin D. Roosevelt

Maraming Salama

The Philippine Youth 
Development Plan 
(PYDP)
2017-2022
Anchored 
on a long-
term 
vision
Anchored 
on a long-
term vision
The 25-year plan which envisions the Philippines as a “prosperous middle-
class society wher
Anchored on 
a medium-
term vision
Aims “to lay down the foundation for inclusive 
growth, a high-trust and resilient society
SDG
Long 
Term 
(until 
2040)
United 
Nations
RELATIONSHIPS
AMBISYON 
NATIN 2040
25 years
(until 
2040)
National
PDP 2017-
20
Who are the Filipino youth?
* (30.3 M) of 
the population.
They comprise
7
*2017 PSA Data28.89%*
They are categorized into th
The Filipino youth can also identify 
themselves as a  member of any of the 
following different subsectors.
School Placemen
What does the National Youth Assessment 
Study tell  us about the Filipino youth?
26% have thought at  
least once that life

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