Towards evening, we visited the major ASEAN Summit hotel site of Shangrila Mactan, where the UNESCO National Commission intends to showcase a live exhibit of the Pagsasarili Mothercraft functional literacy course. About 16 ASEAN and East Asian heads of state with their spouses can enjoy watching this innovative training of village parents in Grooming and Hygiene, Housekeeping, Maternal and Child Care, Cooking and Nutrition, which can be duplicated in their countries when UNESCO Paris approves the future UNESCO LLCSD.
This is the first of three FGDs that will be held for Luzon, Visayas and Mindanao, which I am conducting with our LLCSD Interim Director Dr. Juanita Guerrero, TWG head on LLP Dr. Ethel Valenzuela, UNESCO Education development officer Helen Balderama, LLCSD assistant Emmy Yanga and Education commissioners.
Cebu Normal University, one of the oldest educational institutions in Cebu, was established in 1902. It is one of seven national teacher-training institutions founded during the American governance of the Philippines. After the Philippine Normal University in Manila, CNU has the second largest number of enrollees 14,000 in 11 campuses. The others are: Agusan Normal University, Iloilo Normal University, Isabela Normal University, Leyte Normal University and Quezon Normal University.
The present Cebu Normal University was established as Cebu Normal School, a branch of the Philippine Normal School. It became an independent institution in 1924, a chartered college in 1976, and a university in 1998. It has been offering courses in Nursing, Education, Public Administration and other academic programs relevant to the training of teachers, administrators, as well as employees of public and private entities.
It is also proud of its programs for differently-abled individuals, such as the Sign Language Functional Literacy for Parents, as well as the Teachers Summer Institute for Vision-Hearing Impaired where classes are conducted every Sunday for two hours. Their Center for Teacher Excellence is housed in a new building donated by the Ramon Aboitiz Foundation. It was conceptualized, through the initiatives of CNU, City Savings Bank and the Coalition for Better Education, for pre-service and in-service teacher training to develop teachers competency.
ESD prepares people of all walks of life to plan for, cope with, and find solutions for issues that threaten the sustainability of our planet: these issues come from the three spheres of sustainable development environment, society and economy. Understanding these global issues of sustainability that affect individual nations and communities are at the heart of ESD.
Through Executive Order 483, the Philippine government has issued a national policy on DESD "establishing the UNESCO Lifelong Learning Center for Sustainable Development of the Philippines (UNESCO-LLCSD)" and "designating the Operation Brotherhood Montessori Center, Inc. as the national laboratory" for quality formal and non formal education.
The Philippine bid to be a second category Regional Center for the UNESCO Lifelong Learning Center for Sustainable Development in Asia and the Pacific was officially presented in UNESCO Paris in 2005 by UNESCO National Commission Chairman and DFA Secretary Alberto Romulo. On the same year, a nationwide survey of lifelong learning programs (LLP) was conducted involving 110 institutions all over the Philippines.
The objective of the UNESCO LLCSD FGD, therefore, is to focus on how our Asia Pacific LLCSD laboratory can assist all the schools and institutions surveyed with regards to their various LLESD programs. It will redirect the ESD best practices along the standards of the UNESCO LLCSD. It is also necessary to emphasize the networking of the stakeholders of the community from the local government units, corporations, tourism agencies and schools. It will also explore possible budgetary support for the activities of the lifelong learning centers.
The results of these FGDs in Luzon, Visayas and Mindanao will be useful for the defense of the proposal in the forthcoming Paris Executive Board spring session in April 2007.
UNIVERSITY OF ST. LA SALLE BACOLOD Dean Dr. Marissa Quezon reported that their Bahay Pag-Asa is a prison cell for youth offenders, but does not exactly look like a prison cell. It is more of a home to the youth offenders aged 18 years and below, where they undergo schooling and skills training specifically on computer repair, food preparation, hair science, as well as basic subjects in English, Math and Science.
This can only be self-sufficient, if they can provide equipped carinderia or parlor and open it to the public who can avail of their services at an affordable cost. This would lead to financial sustainability to stabilize the project. But, what kind of education do they offer to this youth offenders? Is it for grade school, high school or multi-grade?
Dean Quezon also recounted that their Balayan Fisherfolk Project teaches the fisherfolks of Negros realistic livelihood projects in its coastal-marine environment in the three pilot barangays. This now covers seven coastal barangays in Cauayan, Negros Occidental with ten partner associations, two of which are women organizations.
For this project to be self-sustainable, they should have a fisherfolk association with linkages with the local government. The wives should be involved in the fish processing or salting as well as in selling these to the nearby markets. Fish conservation as well as processing and cooking should be included in the school curriculum as early as elementary school and high school.
The Australian Government donated a concrete hollow block machine and a motorized concrete mixer. Then with a donation of a two-hectare lot, a two-storey health care building was constructed, fully equipped with medical facilities, school building for technical and vocational courses, as well as day care facilities. Major Spanish NGOs and government agencies, such as Manos Unidas, Gobierno Vasco and Gobierno de Navarra, also came to financially support the various components of the program.
Of SILLIMAN UNIVERSITYs Community Extension Programme, Director Nichol Elman explained that the most popular is its Apo Reef island sanctuary where two-thirds of it is open to commercial fishing for the livelihood of the people, while a third is kept a buffer zone to conserve the reef and continue the propagation of marine life, such as fishes, corals, seaweeds, etc. Three years ago, I snorkeled at the coral reef guided by a local trained "police" diver. The island economy sustained by small hotels and rented scuba, snorkel gears has expanded to the whole town where tourists take the ferry boat. Meantime, Australia has helped set up their IT Center.
CHED REGIONAL OFFICE VII Director Enrique P. Grecia explained that in Cebu, ETEEAP (Expanded Tertiary Education Equivalency and Accreditation) has greatly helped Cebuanos who work in the Mactan Export Processing Zones since it recognizes, accredits and gives equivalencies to knowledge, skills, attitudes and values gained by individuals from relevant work. The Cebu Center for International Education also provides cross-border education, which links to United Kingdoms University of Cambridge, etc. Consequently, there is a boom among Cebus Call Centers and has made the province a Center for Outsourcing.
TESDA PROVINCIAL OFFICE REGION VI Director Lorena Yunque reported that schools are supervised through the registration of TESDA programmes. For example, Polytechnic College in Lucena, Ilo-Ilo has paramedical courses including care-giving, health care services, institutional housekeeping and Elderly Health Care resulting in the mainstreaming of gender development. Modules for Entrepreneurship Training for Women, such as dressmaking, are developed to ensure self-sufficiency. Documentation is done in cooperation with the UP Women Resource Center and LGUs.
LEYTE STATE UNIVERSITY President Dr. Pacencia Milan reported that they have been training unemployed adults and out-of-school youths for livelihood. Agriculture training in abaca, rootcrops, and ornamental plant raising, as well as tissue culture, and coconut raising is done. They even manage macapuno production, which sells at P500 per jar.
(For more information or reaction, please e-mail at exec@obmontessori.edu.ph or pssoliven@yahoo.com)