Abstract
<jats:p xml:lang="en">This commentary examines the integration of digital technologies in secondary and tertiary mathematics education in the Philippines. Although tools such as Desmos, GeoGebra, and Maple Calculator offer opportunities for enhanced visualization, exploration, and student engagement, their classroom use remains largely superficial and inconsistent.&nbsp; The paper draws on the Technological educational Content Knowledge (TPACK) framework to highlight the persistent gap between access and meaningful pedagogical integration. It points out barriers like limited teachers' training, poor infrastructure, misaligned curriculum, and deep-rooted conventional mindsets. This paper draws lessons from the move to digital learning during the COVID-19 pandemic. The paper calls for a clear and purposeful approach to using digital technologies. This advocates for policies that prioritize fairness, infrastructure investment, ongoing professional development, and curriculum alignment. The study concludes that digital technologies must be strategically and thoughtfully embedded within pedagogy to foster deeper understanding, collaboration, and a more future-ready mathematics education system in the Philippines.</jats:p>