Goducate Training Center sets example by helping itself

Goducate believes in helping needy Asians help themselves. Therefore, it believes in starting projects that are eventually self-sustaining. The exception to this is when Goducate helps out in emergency situations (eg, earthquakes, tsunamis, typhoons, floods).

Therefore, Goducate Training Center, where future Goducate workers are trained, must set the example of being self-sustaining. This will be a big challenge because it costs a lot of money to maintain an 11 hectare site, with multiple facilities on it. Furthermore, there is the need to feed, house, and train many trainees (hopefully 100 full-time trainees by 2012). We also need to feed about 100 teenagers from poor surrounding villages each weekend who come to the training center for weekend training in lifeskills such as discipline, teamwork, leadership, cultivating good habits, etc. Then there is the need to pay our faculty of agricultural lecturers and trainers, and teachers in English, literacy, computer skills, foreign language, and cross-cultural knowledge.

One way to help is to produce as much of our own food as possible. We have managed to grow high-yield rice that provides all our present rice needs. Our own vegetable gardens and fruit trees can produce most of our vegetable and fruit needs, with some extra for sale. Our impounding pond has an estimated 15,000 tilapia fish—which can provide most of our needs for animal protein.

However, we still need to raise funds to pay for the other expenses mentioned in para 2. We believe that we can raise this by renting out our facilities to corporations, institutions, schools, and even individuals for their special events. For example, a corporation may rent our multipurpose hall and facilities for their training or bonding event, or a university may rent our huts, dipping pools, and activity fields for a special event,

It is much more convenient to rely on donations to maintain the training center, but if we can’t help ourselves, we will not be able to train our workers to help others to help themselves.

All purpose gymnasium
Dipping pools for rent
Revenue-generating zip-line

Goducate Training Center’s “soft launch”

On April 9, 2011 we held a “soft launch” for Goducate Training Center in Iloilo, Philippines.

About 200 Goducate supporters and friends (including a dozen from Singapore and Australia) joined us for this occasion to celebrate the completion of Phase 1A of GTC’s development. We had had our ground-breaking in June 2010. So we have completed Phase 1A in 10 months of hard, efficient work.

Phase 1A includes all the basic infrastructure of security fencing, land development, road system, irrigation system, basic agricultural and aqua-cultural developments, office and classrooms, simple trainee accommodations, camp-site, and basic revenue-earning activities.

The main event for the soft launch was held in the canteen of the multipurpose hall, and other events were held in the activity field, agricultural area, camp-site, and restaurant.

We will be taking in our “pilot” batch of 20 over trainees at the end of April. They will be trained for about 6 months in the basic skills needed to help poor communities to help themselves.

The future of Goducate depends on its ability to train the right type of workers who will help needy Asians help themselves. Therefore, GTC is a vital part of Goducate’s future!

Entrance to Multi-purpose Hall which has main hall, dining hall, offices and training rooms.
Guests in Dining Hall of Multi-purpose Hall.
Guests at camp-site

Goducate Training Center – utilizing local talent and materials

The aim of Goducate is to help Asians help themselves. If all goes well, Goducate Training Center in Iloilo, Philippines, will take in our first batch of trainees in April who will be trained to be creative, innovative and resourceful workers who can help needy Asians to maximize their talents and limited resources.

GTC has been designed to promote this Goducate culture. Where possible, local materials are used instead of expensive “imported” stuff. One of the reasons for choosing this piece of land was the abundance of untapped natural resources – its interesting terrain of hills, valleys and plains, abundance of water sources (5 fresh water springs), forests of bamboo and mahogany and many neglected fruit trees.

Goducate also chose the Philippines as the country to build its main training center because of the large number of well-educated, resourceful, hard-working Filipinos – many of whom are often under-optimized.

Recently I brought 2 friends from a large established training camp in the United States to check out our facilities and to advise us on camp development. They had helped us to choose this site and had seen it when it was still undeveloped 7 months ago.

They were shocked to see how quickly the site had been transformed into a well developed “city” with all the necessary infrastructure (of terracing, irrigation, roads, electrification) for future growth.

They were particularly impressed with how the terrain and trees were used to develop Sky-city. They were impressed with how the terrain and natural rocks were used to develop a swimming area. They were impressed with how our team designed a zip-line built entirely with local materials. It wasn’t exactly a “Disneyland” high-tech construction but it is safe and will help GTC generate funds to help pay for the expenses of running its training courses and its maintenance.

Zip-line tower using natural terrain and local lumber
Testing our locally made zip-line over aqua-culture pond
Swimming pool using natural terrain and local materials.

When the 2 camp ‘consultants’ were asked for their comments on the camp, this was the summary of their opinion: “Wow!”