Sample ILAW Lesson Plan Template Based on DepEd Order No. 016, s. 2026

DEPED LESSON-PLANNING RESOURCE

Sample ILAW Lesson Plan Template Based on DepEd Order No. 016, s. 2026

A practical and editable lesson-planning guide organized around Intentions, Learning Experience, Assessing Learning, and Ways Forward.

SY 2026–2027 Teacher Reference Printable Sample
Sample ILAW Lesson Plan Template Based on DepEd Order No. 016, s. 2026
Important: The form presented in this article is an adapted sample based on the ILAW framework and the lesson-planning guide under DepEd Order No. 016, s. 2026. It should not be treated as the only nationally prescribed lesson-plan format. Schools and teachers may adapt the organization according to their context, subject to official regional, division, and school guidance.

What is the ILAW Framework?

DepEd Order No. 016, s. 2026, titled Guidelines on Lesson Planning and Learning Design, provides a more flexible and context-responsive approach to lesson preparation. It directs attention to the quality and coherence of instructional decisions rather than the length of the written lesson plan.

The framework guides teachers and Alternative Learning System implementers through four interconnected components:

I
Intentions

What learners are expected to know, understand, demonstrate, or accomplish.

L
Learning Experience

The experiences, interactions, resources, and learning process that will help learners achieve the intentions.

A
Assessing Learning

The evidence used to determine learner understanding and guide instructional adjustments.

W
Ways Forward

The next steps, extended learning opportunities, interventions, and teacher reflections after the lesson.

The Four Components of an ILAW Lesson Plan

I

Intentions

Intentions identify the applicable curriculum standards, learning competency, specific learning objectives, and relevant learner context. The teacher begins by deciding what learners should master by the end of the lesson or learning sessions.

L

Learning Experience

Learning Experience describes how learners will be prepared, guided, engaged, supported, and given opportunities to apply their learning. It may include pre-lesson activities, lesson development, application, contextualization, differentiation, and learning resources.

A

Assessing Learning

Assessing Learning focuses on evidence gathered throughout the learning process. Assessment should reveal learner progress, misconceptions, and support needs so that the teacher can make timely instructional adjustments.

W

Ways Forward

Ways Forward identifies what should happen after the lesson. It may include enrichment, intervention, remediation, extended learning, communication with stakeholders, or adjustments for the next session.

Sample ILAW Lesson Plan Template

This compact form is designed for easy completion, printing, and adaptation. The prompts are intentionally brief so the template remains a planning tool rather than a compliance checklist.

Republic of the Philippines
Department of Education
_______________________________________________

ILAW LESSON PLAN

Intentions • Learning Experience • Assessing Learning • Ways Forward

I
INTENTIONS What should learners know, understand, and be able to do?
Curriculum Standards and Learning Competency Indicate the applicable standards and learning competency.
Learning Objectives State what learners should demonstrate by the end of the lesson.
Learner Context Note relevant prior knowledge, readiness, interests, language, strengths, or learning needs.
L
LEARNING EXPERIENCE What meaningful experiences will enable learners to achieve the intentions?
Pre-Lesson Readiness activity, review, motivation, or activation of prior knowledge.
Lesson Development Describe the essential activities, interactions, modeling, discussion, and guided practice.
Application and Meaning-Making Indicate how learners will apply, explain, transfer, or demonstrate learning.
Learning Resources List the materials, references, technology, or alternative resources.
Integration and Contextualization Include relevant real-life, local, interdisciplinary, or values connections. Write N/A when not applicable.
A
ASSESSING LEARNING What evidence will show that learners are progressing?
Formative Assessment Identify the questions, tasks, observations, outputs, or performance evidence to be used.
Assessment Criteria or Indicators State the expected evidence or indicators of successful learning.
W
WAYS FORWARD What should happen next based on the evidence of learning?
Next Instructional Steps Identify enrichment, reinforcement, intervention, remediation, or the next lesson direction.
Teacher Reflection Record significant observations and necessary instructional adjustments.
References
Declaration of AI Use Briefly state whether and how AI assistance was used. Write “No AI tool was used” when applicable.
Prepared by Teacher
Reviewed / Noted by Instructional Leader
Note: This is an adaptable sample. Entries may be concise, integrated, or omitted when not applicable, subject to official school or division guidance.

How to Complete the ILAW Template

01
Begin with the curriculum.

Identify the competency and applicable standards before choosing activities, resources, or assessment tasks.

02
Study the learner context.

Consider prior learning, readiness, interests, language, strengths, barriers, attendance patterns, and available learning time.

03
Write clear learning objectives.

Objectives should describe what learners will know, understand, produce, perform, explain, or demonstrate.

04
Design coherent learning experiences.

Every activity should contribute directly to the intentions. Avoid activities included only for decoration or routine compliance.

05
Embed formative assessment.

Check understanding throughout the lesson instead of waiting until the final activity to determine whether learning occurred.

06
Use evidence to determine the next step.

Ways Forward should respond to actual learner evidence rather than a generic statement repeated in every lesson plan.

Declaration and Proper Use of Artificial Intelligence

AI assistance should not replace the teacher’s professional judgment. The teacher remains responsible for the curriculum alignment, appropriateness, accuracy, contextualization, and quality of the lesson plan.

NOT APPROPRIATE

Replacing Teacher Judgment

  • Submitting a fully AI-generated lesson plan without review;
  • Allowing AI to make core instructional decisions;
  • Using unverified or inaccurate AI-generated content;
  • Ignoring learner context and curriculum requirements; or
  • Entering confidential learner information into public AI tools.
POSSIBLE SUPPORT

Teacher-Directed Assistance

  • Checking grammar and spelling;
  • Improving clarity of teacher-written instructions;
  • Formatting or organizing teacher-developed content;
  • Generating options for review and adaptation; and
  • Assisting with routine technical tasks.
Sample Declaration of AI Use

“AI assistance was used only to check grammar, improve the clarity of instructions, and format the lesson-plan document. The learning objectives, learning experiences, assessment activities, and instructional decisions were developed, reviewed, and validated by the teacher.”

When AI Was Not Used

Write a direct statement such as: “No AI tool was used in the preparation of this lesson plan.”

Transition Period for SY 2026–2027

FIRST TERM
Transition and Capacity-Building Period

Teachers may continue using the DLL or DLP formats previously provided under DepEd Order No. 42, s. 2016 until the end of the first term of SY 2026–2027.

SECOND TERM
Full Implementation

Full implementation of the revised lesson-planning guidelines begins in the second term of SY 2026–2027.

Schools should use the transition period for orientation, capacity-building, collaborative planning, coaching, and technical assistance—not merely for transferring old content into a new set of boxes.

What Teachers and Instructional Leaders Should Remember

The template is adaptable.

It is a sample organization and should not be treated as the only allowable format for all contexts.

Not every prompt requires a long paragraph.

Brief notes, bullets, annotations, and integrated responses may be sufficient.

Inapplicable entries should not be invented.

Teachers should avoid artificial statements written only to fill every space.

Lesson quality is not measured by page count.

A concise and coherent plan may be stronger than a long, repetitive, or disconnected document.

Review should focus on instructional quality.

Lesson plans should be examined for curriculum alignment, coherence, learner responsiveness, and useful assessment evidence.

Collaboration should reduce workload.

LAC sessions and collaborative planning may be used to share resources and strengthen instructional decisions.

The essential point

A new template does not automatically improve teaching. ILAW becomes meaningful only when it strengthens the alignment among curriculum intentions, learner experience, assessment evidence, and subsequent instructional decisions.

Read the Complete DepEd Order

Teachers and school personnel should read the complete issuance, including its policy provisions, implementation responsibilities, transition arrangements, and annexes.

VIEW DEPED ORDER NO. 016, S. 2026 OPEN THE OFFICIAL PDF
Disclaimer

This article and template are provided for educational and reference purposes. The template is an adapted presentation of the ILAW framework and is not an official replacement for the complete provisions and annexes of DepEd Order No. 016, s. 2026. Schools and teachers should follow applicable guidance from DepEd, their regional office, schools division office, and school instructional leadership.

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