Goducate helpers offer combined academic and music lessons

Goducate aims to help the needy help themselves. One group of people in Laguna who have benefited from Goducate projects, and who have in turn been helping others as volunteers teaching academic subjects or music to others in the villages, have banded together to offer their services in the town for 2000 pesos a month per student. For this fee, a student will receive, each week, an hour of one-to-one tuition in academic subjects 4 times a week, and an hour of music lessons every Saturday. The music lesson will be given in small groups of 3.

The teachers will be Goducate helpers who are college or university graduates, and the 15 Goducate scholars. These Goducate scholars are those students who are continuing their college or university education on scholarships offered by the institutions on the strength of their musical ability.

We hope that this endeavor will serve as an example to other Goducate beneficiaries of how they can use their skills to help themselves and their families.

One-on-one tutorial in academic subject
Group music lesson

Goducate Model Farm helps the community

It’s been nearly a year since the extended Goducate Model Farm in Laguna went into operation. The aim of the model farm is to train community workers in organic ways of planting vegetables, in various forms of crop production, such as container gardening and hydroponics, in various forms of composting, and in farm management. These workers would then be able to help needy communities produce their own crops.

From about mid-year, there has been a series of harvests of the range of vegetables grown at the farm, as well as of papayas and bananas. What is not used for feeding the staff and for Goducate’s feeding program in the community has been sold either locally or in Manila. Staff enjoy some profit-sharing, and the rest of the income goes towards covering the expenses of the farm.

Residents in Blu-Paong prepare beds for their crops
Students at Tranca Elementary School watch demonstration on planting
Students at Tranca Elementary School plant seedlings

The Goducate Model Farm also serves as a place of training and of employment of some out-of-school youth. Two who are employed as cleaners are being trained in vermicomposting, and they have benefited from profit-sharing from sales of the vermicompost. Two others have been working part-time, while waiting to take up a course in technical work for TESDA (the Philippines Technical Education and Skills Development Authority) qualifications. 15-20 school-going children also help out at the farm, to earn some money for their schooling or to contribute to their families’ income.

From the start, the Goducate Model Farm has encouraged individual families to grow vegetables in their backyard for their own consumption (in Goducate’s veg@table project). This project was started in Dayap, a relocation village from victims in Manila of the 2009 Typhoon Ondoy. It has not been well taken up largely because of lack of running water in that village.

A few weeks ago another farming project was started in Blu-Paong, a small village where the majority of people are
unemployed. Instead of farming in individual backyards, Goducate is helping the villagers to set up a communal farm, a small replica of the Goducate farm, to give the community food for their own consumption as well as a means of livelihood.

The training that staff from the Goducate Model Farm extends also to schools. Recently, they were at an elementary school in Tranca, to teach farming methods to the students and teachers.

Several of Goducate workers and volunteers are now at the Goducate Training Center in Iloilo being trained to be community development workers. When they return, the model farm should be able to extend its work more widely into the community.

Mothers learn to help at Goducate Literacy Centers in Philippines

Last month, when most of our volunteer teachers at the Goducate Literacy Centers in Laguna were sent to the Goducate Training Center in Iloilo to join the training for community development workers, our literacy centers were left with only one teacher each.

This was a bit tough for them— until they realised that some of the mothers were hanging around outside waiting for their kids, and that these mothers could be trained to help in the classroom. So our teachers encouraged them to take on some of the classroom responsibilities. After all, Goducate’s experience in Sabah, where mothers are trained to teach their children, has shown that such mothers make the most passionate and effective teachers.

Mother assisting in classroom
John David as teacher

Additional help is provided by Goducate college scholars, who volunteer their services. During their free periods. One example is John David, who had to drop out of college when he was a 3rd- year information-technology student because of his addiction to computer games. His parents refused to send him back to college.

However, when he was invited to join our 2nd Summer Music Workshop last year, he became so interested and learnt to play the viola well enough to earn a place back at college on a music scholarship. The scholarship covers his college fees. Goducate gives him an allowance to help with his other expenses. He now also helps teach at the Goducate Literacy Center at Ulik every Thursday, exemplifying how Goducate beneficiaries go on to help others.

Fathers in the community are also chipping in to help at the Goducate Literacy Centers. As in Sabah, they help largely with the construction of the Centers and with making the classroom furniture.

Fathers making desk