Children’s literature is important because it:
 provides students with opportunities to respond to literature;
     it gives students appreciation about their own cultural heritage as well as those of others;
     it helps students develop emotional intelligence and creativity;
     it nurtures growth and development of the student’s personality and social skills;
     and it transmits important literature and themes from one generation to the next.
Studying Philippine literature is so important because it portrays as a living language. Philippine
literature introduces real life situations within the experiential background of the youth to the featured
literary pieces. This is bringing us into such issues as environmental awareness, peace education and
others. This is also telling us to the real human being, a human being having dual nature which is not
only doers of actions but also dreamers of dreams.
“EARLY TYPES OF LITERATURE IN THE PHILIPPINES”
Pre-Colonial Times
     Pre-colonial inhabitants of our islands showcase a rich past through their folk
      speeches, folk songs, folk narratives and indigenous rituals and mimetic
      dances that affirm our ties with our Southeast Asian neighbors.
The Spanish Colonial Tradition
     While it is true that Spain subjugated the Philippines for more mundane
      reasons, this former European power contributed much in the shaping and
      recording of our literature.   Religion and institutions that represented
      European civilization enriched the languages in the lowlands, introduced
      theater which we would come to know as komedya, the sinakulo,
      the sarswela, the playlets and the drama. Spain also brought to the country,
      though at a much later time, liberal  ideas and an internationalism that
      influenced our own Filipino intellectuals and writers for them to understand
      the meanings of "liberty and freedom."
     Literature in this period may be classified as religious prose and poetry and
      secular prose and poetry.
The American Colonial Period
     A new set of colonizers brought about new changes in Philippine literature.
      New literary forms such as free verse [in poetry], the modern short story and
      the critical essay were introduced. American influence was deeply entrenched
      with the firm establishment of English as the medium of instruction in all
      schools and with literary modernism that highlighted the writer's individuality
      and cultivated consciousness of craft, sometimes at the expense of social
      consciousness.
    The essay in English became a potent medium from the 1920's to the present.
      Some leading essayists were journalists like Carlos P. Romulo, Jorge Bocobo,
      Pura Santillan Castrence, etc. who wrote formal to humorous to informal
      essays for the delectation by Filipinos.
    The last throes of American colonialism saw the flourishing of Philippine
      literature in English at the same time, with the introduction of the New Critical
      aesthetics, made writers pay close attention to craft and "indirectly
      engendered a disparaging attitude" towards vernacular writings -- a tension
      that would recur in the contemporary period
The Contemporary Period
    The flowering of Philippine literature in the various languages continue
      especially with the appearance of new publications after the Martial Law years
      and the resurgence of committed literature in the 1960s and the 1970s.
    Filipino writers continue to write poetry, short stories, novellas, novels and
      essays whether these are socially committed, gender/ethnic related or are
      personal in intention or not.
    Of course the Filipino writer has become more conscious of his art with the
      proliferation of writers workshops here and abroad and the bulk of literature
      available to him via the mass media including the internet.       
    With the new requirement by the Commission on Higher Education of
      teaching of Philippine Literature in all tertiary schools in the country
      emphasizing the teaching of the vernacular literature or literatures of the
      regions, the audience for Filipino writers is virtually assured. And, perhaps, a
      national literature finding its niche among the literatures of the world will not
      be far behind.
   http://www.seasite.niu.edu/Tagalog/Literature/literary_forms_in_philippine_lit.htm
   “TIMELINE OF THE PHILIPPINE LITERATURE SHOWING SAMPLES OF LITERARY PIECES AND
   CHARACTERISTICS OF THE PERIOD”
   https://www.slideshare.net/sophiamarieverdeflor/timeline-of-philippine-literature