Samut Saring Ceylon


Tue 16 Sep 2008

Why Homeschool WILL work in the Philippines
Posted in doon po sa amin
Hmm, 5 more requests to be approved, just a few clicks and 2 gets in, the rest rejected. Oh, they have a chance to request again but they should fill up the form.

At  Pinoy Homeschool yahoogroup, we get emails everyday from parents in the Philippines (some from abroad yet connected to the country in one way or another) who want to look into homeschooling as an alternative education for their children. Many are already homeschooling. Some have replied to our auto-gen form for a basic profile to be filled up, once we get this completed form, it is as lot easier to approve membership requests. For the rest, they will have to submit the form. You see, we have 300+ already and we have to manage the group wisely. We do not want to the member's inboxes to get junk mail through the group, so we have to screen the application forms carefully.

Homeschooling is getting recognition in the Philippines as more and more families get interested in this alternative lifestyle. I say lifestyle because educating your children at home changes the typical day in a 2-income family setting many in our generation has grown up with where everybody wakes up early, father goes to work all day, mother goes to work outside the home  OR stay home... and the children go to school to be with other children and one adult teacher for about 6-8 hours. Everybody meets at night for a 2 hour dinner and proceed to spend a few hours together in front of the TV or better, just hit the bed due to exhaustion.

Homeschooling shatters this picture. You will see totally different life behind the walls of a homeschooling home. But I will not delve into that now. Instead, let me lead you back to our subject matter.

Just the other day, I have read a blog which says that homeschooling will not work in the Philippines and many commentors affirmed his stand. I disagree. The post is mainly "haka-haka" - an opinion, usually without basis. He mentioned an educator in the US and built his presuppositions on one person's statement.

Homeschool, I strongly believe will work in the Philippines. Why? Because the Filipinos are great learners. For one, try to observe a young child exposed to TV at home, he immediately learns the jingles of ads, lines of an actor in a re-run movie like "'sang bala ka lang" or " bukas...luluhod ang mga.." and all about lives of celebrities. That in itself is one good reason why homeschool is an effective way to learn. Don't get me wrong - I am not advocating your child to watch a lot of  TV. We have no cable and seldom watch commercial TV. But a child has more chances of learning well at home than in school with 40-70 kids in a class versus one adult teacher... Let me guess, that teacher will have to employ creative crowd control measures to make them all learn. I mean, all of them! Else, she joins the rank of Dr Biyo, the teacher who won the INTEL Excellence in Teaching award besting 4000 teachers from all over the world. Unfortunately, there are only a precious few of the Biyo tribe and we have millions of children hungry for learning.

Here are just a few of the many reasons why homeschool will work in the Philippines.

1. Homeschooling in the Philippines is constitutional.
It is stated in .."The 1987 Philippine Constitution Article 14,section 2 (which) provides that the State shall encourage nonformal, informal and indigenous learning system, as well as self-learning independent, and out-of-school study programmes particularly those that respond to community needs."

In the list of the current Literacy/Non-formal Education Objectives/Strategies of the Department of Education(Philippines), one of the objectives stated is the provision of an alternative pathway of learning to out-of-school youth and adults to gain reading, writing and numeracy skill. Personally, I do not like "out of school youth" as a term/brand given to homeschoolers, but for lack of terms in their already established system, this is being used to classify anyone who has no school records. They fit unschoolers or independent homeschoolers in this category, but still we prefer to be called homeschoolers. So, what we are doing is not unlawful.

 2. Filipinos are flexible and resourceful. As I have said, we are good learners. We easily adapt to a new lifestyle once we make up our minds for it. We never pass up a chance to learn new things from a variety of materials.. ranging from indigenous komiks, magazines at "lumang dyaryo", second hand books, old stories/oral tradition, etc. With a computer at home and a handy printer, learning is just at our fingertips. A parent and child may work together at home or if not possible, in a quiet internet cafe downloading materials from the web and having it printed there. Second hand books are quite cheap, BookSale and BooksandMags have good titles with prices ranging from P10 and up! It just needs a lot of patience and a good booklist to know exactly what you are hunting for. Our society is awash with all kinds of available learning opportunities the whole year round. If you get a weekend newspaper magazine, many of the week's activities like plays, classical concerts, seminars, lectures, free cultural shows/movies, workshops and what-have-you are listed in the back or lifestyle section of weekly publications. It doesn't have to be expensive.

One of DepEd's tenets in non-formal education is what they call the Flexible Learning Philosophy. DepEd has defined Flexible Learning Philosophy as "..an approach to learning, which gives learners as much control and choice as possible regarding the content, sequence, time, place and method of learning within the constraints of limited resources. This includes: allowing multiple entry and exit points; using a range of alternative delivery modes which support self-paced study options; having flexible programme requirements; encouraging the formulation and renegotiation of individual learning goals, individual learning plans and individual learning agreements; encouraging learner choice of curriculum materials according to individual learning needs, interests and learning styles; providing for pre-entry and on-going counseling; recognizing learners' prior learning (RPL); using learning portfolios and other authentic assessment methodologies; and providing access to appropriate interactive learning resources." Hmmm, doesn't this sound close to homeschooling? Add the word family there and it is exactly homeschooling ;-)

Anyway,  watch this 24 Oras segment on homeschooling and what DepEd has to say..

3. We love to do "bayanihan".
Read: Homeschool coops, support groups, homeschool libraries, used curriculum/book fairs, training and seminars for the parents, etc. Through Homeschool Coops, families who have limited resources may still be able to homeschool their children. This erases the notion that homeschooling is only possible for middle income families or parents with teaching or college degrees. If you do not have a teaching or college degree, it doesn't mean you don't know anything. You may be a good entrepreneur, a good cook, or have a unique hobby or talent. You may share your knowledge and skill in managing a small business, baking and cooking, playing chess/scrabble, teaching a musical instrument, a sport, a craft, writing, or you may good in conducting team/group dynamics workshops.

US Study (HLDA) shows that there is no direct correlation between school attainment of teachers (in this case, parents) and their students' (in this case, homeschooled children) SAT results.

Read The Myth of Teacher Qualifications.

Past government non-formal programmes and activities show that these are most functional if developed community based. Homeschool coops are community-based support groups. It has all the great features of non-formal, family-based schooling using quality materials. The movement is very young in the Philippines but it has so much potential.  The number of homeschool veteran-parents increases yearly, many of them have successfully graduated their children through homeschool. And their experiences are worth gleaning from and they are always willing to help. This means that the knowledge pool is growing and getting better each year. Homeschool Coops are great venues to invite them resource speakers for trainings and seminars of others parents who are new and willing to learn.  I am confident we will not run out of speakers in future homeschool conventions/events.

 4. My favorite reason why it works anywhere is Deuteronomy 6:1-9, in whatever country you may be. It is for any Bible believing parent and family who affirms that homeschooling is a way of life God has called them to do.

So there. Just four reasons for now... you may have more in your mind, so why don't you add them on the comment box?

 Will homeschooling work in the Philippines or not? Will it work for you? ____________________________________________________

 

Day Fourteen  Thailand Opportunities

Day Fifteen The Kanuri

Day Sixteen The Massalit in Darfur
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Tue 1 Apr 2008

Especially for my kababayans =)
Posted in doon po sa amin

This was forwarded to our church email group today.  A merry heart doeth good like a medicine, so laugh at this one aloud. LOL!

The following was written in 1999 by a British journalist stationed in the Philippines. His observations are so hilarious!!!

Matter of Taste
By Matthew Sutherland
 
I have now been in this country for over six years, and consider myself in most respects well assimilated.  However, there is one key step on the road to full assimilation, which I have yet to take, and that's to eat BALUT.
 
The day any of you sees me eating balut, please call immigration and ask them to issue me a Filipino passport. Because at that point there will be no turning back.  

BALUT, for those still blissfully ignorant non-Pinoys out there, is a fertilized duck egg.  It is commonly sold with salt in a piece of newspaper, much like English fish and chips, by street vendors usually after dark, presumably so you can't see how gross it is.   The embryo in the egg comes in varying stages of development, but basically it is not considered macho to eat one without fully discernable feathers, beak, and claws.  Some say these crunchy bits are the best.

 

Others prefer just to drink the so-called 'soup', the vile, pungent liquid that surrounds the aforementioned feathery fetus...excuse me. I have to go and throw up now.   I'll be back in a minute.
 
Food dominates the life of the Filipino. People here just love to eat. They eat at least eight times a day. These eight official meals are called, in order: breakfast, snacks, lunch, merienda, merienda ceyna, dinner, bedtime snacks and no-one-saw-me- take-that- cookie-from- the-fridge-so-it- doesn't-count. The short gaps in between these mealtimes are spent eating Sky Flakes from the open packet that sits on every desktop.

 

You're never far from food in the Philippines . If you doubt this, next time you're driving home from work, try this game. See how long you can drive without seeing food and I don't mean a distant restaurant, or a picture of food. I mean a man on the sidewalk frying fish balls, or a man walking through the traffic selling nuts or candy. I bet it's less than one minute.
 
Here are some other things I've noticed about food in the Philippines :
 
Firstly, a meal is not a meal without rice - even breakfast. In the UK,  I could go a whole year without eating rice.  Second, it's impossible to drink without eating. A bottle of San Miguel just isn't the same without gambas or beef tapa. Third, no one ventures more than two paces from their house without baon (food in small container) and a container of something cold to drink. You might as well ask a Filipino to leave home without his pants on. And lastly, where I come from, you eat with a knife and fork. Here, you eat with a spoon and fork. You try eating rice swimming in fish sauce with a knife.
 
One really nice thing about Filipino food culture is that people always ask you to SHARE their food. In my office, if you catch anyone attacking their baon, they will always go, "Sir! KAIN TAYO!" ("Let's eat!"). This confused me, until I realized that they didn't actually expect me to sit down and startmunching on their boneless bangus. In fact, the polite response is something like, "No thanks, I just ate." But the principle is sound -if you have food on your plate, you are expected to share it, however hungry you are, with those who may be even hungrier. I think that's great!  In fact, this is frequently even taken one step further. Many Filipinos use "Have you eaten yet?" ("KUMAIN KA NA?") as a general greeting, irrespective of time of day or location.
 
Some foreigners think Filipino food is fairly dull compared to other Asian cuisines. Actually lots of it is very good: Spicy dishes like Bicol Express (strange, a dish named after a train); anything cooked with coconut milk; anything KINILAW; and anything ADOBO.  And it's hard to beat the sheer wanton, cholesterolic frenzy of a good old-fashioned LECHON de leche (roast pig) feast.  Dig a pit, light a fire, add 50 pounds of animal fat on a stick,  and cook until crisp. Mmm, mmm... you can actually feel your arteries constricting with each successive mouthful.
 
I also share one key Pinoy trait ---a sweet tooth. I am thus the only foreigner I know who does not complain about sweet bread, sweet burgers, sweet spaghetti, sweet banana ketchup, and so on. I am a man who likes to put jam on his pizza.  Try it!  
 
It's the weird food you want to avoid.  In addition to duck fetus in the half-shell, items to avoid in the Philippines include pig's blood soup (DINUGUAN); bull's testicle soup, the strangely-named "SOUP NUMBER FIVE" (I dread to think what numbers one through four are); and the ubiquitous, stinky shrimp paste, BAGOONG, and it's equally stinky sister, PATIS. Filipinos are so addicted to these latter items that they will even risk arrest or deportation trying to smuggle them into countries like Australia and the USA , which wisely ban the importation of items you can smell from more than 100 paces.
 
Then there's the small matter of the purple ice cream. I have never been able to get my brain around eating purple food; the ubiquitous UBE leaves me cold.

And lastly on the subject of weird food, beware: that KALDERETANG KAMBING (goat) could well be KALDERETANG ASO (dog)...
 
The Filipino, of course, has a well-developed sense of food.  Here's a typical Pinoy food joke:  "I'm on a seafood diet. "What's a seafood diet?" "When I see food, I eat it!"
 
Filipinos also eat strange bits of animals --- the feet, the head, the guts, etc., usually barbecued on a stick. These have been given witty names, like "ADIDAS" (chicken's feet); "KURBATA" (either just chicken's neck, or "neck and thigh" as in "neck-tie"); "WALKMAN" (pigs ears); "PAL" (chicken wings); "HELMET" (chicken head); "IUD" (chicken intestines), and BETAMAX" (video-cassette- like blocks of animal blood).  Yum, yum. Bon appetit! 
 
"A good name is rather to be chosen than great riches"-- (Proverbs 22:1)
 
WHEN I arrived in the Philippines from the UK six years ago, one of the first cultural differences to strike me was names. The subject has provided a continuing source of amazement and amusement ever since. The first unusual thing, from an English perspective, is that everyone here has a nickname. In the staid and boring United Kingdom , we have nicknames in kindergarten, but when we move into adulthood we tend, I am glad to say, to lose them.
 
The second thing that struck me is that Philippine names for both girls and boys tend to be what we in the UK would regard as overbearingly cutesy for anyone over about five. Fifty-five-year- olds colleague put it. Where I come from, a boy with a nickname like Boy Blue or Honey Boy would be beaten to death at school by pre-adolescent bullies, and never make it to adulthood. So, probably, would girls with names like Babes, Lovely, Precious, Peachy or Apples.   Yuk, ech ech. Here, however, no one bats an eyelid.
 
Then I noticed how many people have what I have come to call "door-bell names". These are nicknames that sound like -well, doorbells. There are millions of them. Bing, Bong, Ding, and Dong are some of the more common. They can be, and frequently are, used in even more door-bell-like combinations such as  
Bing-Bong, Ding-Dong, Ting-Ting, and so on.  Even our newly appointed chief of police has a doorbell name Ping .  None of these doorbell names exist where I come from, and hence sound unusually amusing to my untutored foreign ear.
 
Someone once told me that one of the Bings, when asked why he was called Bing, replied, "because my brother is called Bong". Faultless logic.

Repeating names was another novelty to me, having never before encountered people with names like Len-Len, Let-Let, Mai-Mai, or Ning-Ning. The secretary I inherited on my arrival had an unusual one: Leck-Leck. Such names are then frequently further refined by using the "squared" symbol, as in Len2 or Mai2. This had me very confused for a while.
 
Then there is the trend for parents to stick to a theme when naming their children. This can be as simple as making them all begin with the same letter, as in Jun, Jimmy, Janice, and Joy .
 
More imaginative parents shoot for more sophisticated forms of assonance or rhyme, as in Biboy, Boboy, Buboy, Baboy (notice the names get worse the more kids there are-best to be born early or you could end up being a Baboy).
 
Even better, parents can create whole families of, say, desserts (Apple Pie, Cherry Pie, Honey Pie) or flowers (Rose, Daffodil, Tulip). The main advantage of such combinations is that they look great painted across your trunk if you're a cab driver. That's another thing I'd never seen before coming to Manila -- taxis with the driver's kids' names on the trunk.
 
Another whole eye-opening field for the foreign visitor is the phenomenon of the "composite" name. This includes names like Jejomar (for Jesus, Joseph and Mary), and the remarkable Luzviminda (for Luzon, Visayas and Mindanao , believe it or not). That's a bit like me being called something like "Engscowani"  (for England , Scotland , Wales and Northern Ireland).  Between you and me, I'm glad I'm not.
 
And how could I forget to mention the fabulous concept of the randomly inserted letter 'h'. Quite what this device is supposed to achieve, I have not yet figured out, but I think it is designed to give a touch of class to an otherwise only averagely weird name. It results in creations like Jhun, Lhenn, Ghemma, and Jhimmy. Or how about Jhun-Jhun (Jhun2)?
 
How boring to come from a country like the UK full of people with names like John Smith.

How wonderful to come from a country where imagination and exoticism rule the world of names. 
 
Where else in the world could that really be true?
 
Where else in the world could the head of the Church really be called Cardinal Sin?  
 
Where else but the Philippines !
 
Note: Philippines has a senator named Joker, and it is his legal
name.

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Mon 24 Mar 2008

2 Pinoys Receive Science Awards
Posted in doon po sa amin

I get a dose of the daily news from the Philippines online through Inquirer.net. Newsworthy articles about great people are a gem. Stories about these people inspire our younger generation and provide good models of hard work and success. We seldom find ones that give the Filipinos a good boost, and this is what we need these days. Aside from the Bible and biographies, I try to scour the current news online to print out stories about people (not only Filipinos) who have strong faith, uphold good values and strive hard to achieve their goals. I let my children read and learn from their example. But these good news about our Philippine society or history are rare and few and far between. We are already  too muddled with news of political and economic woes. Bless the children's hearts, these have not touched them yet.

Today, it is different. Here is a story which  is a great boost to us Pinoys.  Read about Reinabelle Reyes - Filipina wins Science Award for Black Holes. Here is another published a week back. It is about  Baldomero “Toto” M. Olivera - professor of biology at University of Utah in the United States and the Harvard Foundation’s 2007 Scientist of the Year. Mabuhay kayo!

It is not about homeschooling alright but as a Filipino, these news really made me feel...

Proudly Pinoy.

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Wed 19 Mar 2008

Homeschooling in the Philippines
Posted in doon po sa amin

Homeschooling isn't new in the Philippines. Our National Hero Dr. Jose Rizal was first homeschooled by his mother, Teodora Alonzo Rizal in his early childhood years before being sent to Ateneo De Manila to continue studies. And that was in the 1860s!

Anyway, as I know, homeschooling later was introduced (or perhaps adapted) from the foreign missionaries (mostly Protestants from the US) who came with their children. They taught their kids at home. Filipinos, as we are, are very good in adopting new ideas have embraced this and made it work in our context.

We know that Filipino families are not immuned from the same problems that plague our educational system and the society as a whole. The present state of our school system is such in a slump that parents were driven to decide and take matters in their hands - that is, to educate their children at home and play a major part in molding their future. To me and my husband, and some parents that we know, homeschool is not just an alternative. We homeschool because we primarily believe it is our God-given role to teach and train our children. We love our children that we are acting in the best of their interests. Our prayer for them is that they will become disciples - followers of Christ.

I am so thrilled to say that this is a growing community not only in Metro Manila but in several provinces as well. Our family resided in Laguna, 2 hours down South of Metro Manila, for several years and had been in touch with families who were homeschooling since 2001, even earlier. We had started a support group and some activities. Sadly, some families, including ours, have relocated some place else so these initiatives somehow faded.

Our annual visits back home have given us a chance to meet a few families who continue to homeschool.  I have been exchanging email lately with Ms. Vicki Arioder of The Learning Place, a primary and secondary private school within the University of the Philippines - Los Banos campus where my husband and I attended college. And the great news I am so excited about is that they have a homeschool department. We are elated. Years back, it did not cross our minds that these new growth spurt in the homeschooling field will become possible.

Yesterday, I got an email from the local email group. A new blog is being started for this support group based in Quezon City (Metro Manila). Immediately, I realized the importance of adding new links on my righthand bar - a separate table or box just for Philippine Homeschool.

So, if you want to check it out.. Click the tag Homeschool_Philippines on the del.icio.us cloud (right-hand bar)

I am hopeful it will grow as more families choose to follow this path.. so if you have a blog or website and you are homeschooling in the Philippines, do drop me a line.

Homeschooling  is not only thriving in the Philippines ... it is alive!

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