Update on Goducate’s Typhoon Haiyan (Yolanda) relief work in North Panay

About a month ago Goducate began to send out Goducate Tent Schools (GTS) teams to help rehabilitate schools in North Panay damaged in early November by Typhoon Haiyan (Yolanda). Before then the teams had been busy designing and making the tents and roof coverings.

The 4 teams (5-6 members per team) are based in their respective base-camps in the following towns—Lemery, Concepcion, Mambusao, and Carles. From their base camps the teams go to damaged schools to cover roofless classrooms with tarpaulins, and to set up specially designed tent-classrooms to replace damaged classrooms declared unsafe.  These teams are supported by the GTS engineering team, logistics team, and accounting team.  When classrooms are covered or replaced, classes can resume “normally.”

So far we have helped 38 schools, covered 63 classrooms with tarpaulins, and set up 18 tent-classrooms.  There are still hundreds of damaged classrooms in North Panay that we hope to rehab.

After GTS helps restore the physical condition of the classrooms in a school, we organize a Goducate Teachers’ Appreciation Day for the teachers of the school.  Many teachers have themselves lost their homes and have had to teach in roofless classrooms and work overtime to do make-up classes for their students.  They are Typhoon Haiyan’s unsung heroes/heroines.

Goducate provides gifts to the teachers, and our community development workers (CDWs) who are trained in massage therapy pamper the teachers with “spa” treatment.  We then give blank thank-you cards to the students to write their personal thank-you messages to their teachers. Many teachers are so moved by the messages that they cry uncontrollably before the whole school.  One teacher remarked “In the past we organized the Teachers’ Day activities in our school.  This is the first time someone else has organized a Teachers’ Appreciation Day for us. We are so touched!”

After the Goducate Teachers’ Appreciation Day, we work with the teachers to do “remedial” classes for students (most of whom have fallen behind in their studies because of the disruption by Typhoon Haiyan). Our CDWs also work with the Parents-Teachers Associations to hold community classes on public health, nutrition, agriculture, and livelihood skills. This community work will intensify when summer holidays begin in March, and our CDWs can focus their energies on communities (rather than remedial classes).

Goducate is planning to send its 5th GTS team to Leyte (near Tacloban) to do similar rehab work.

Roofless classroom covered by tarpaulin by Goducate team
Roofless classroom covered by tarpaulin by Goducate team
Damaged classroom replaced by Goducate Tent School
Damaged classroom replaced by Goducate Tent School
Goducate Teachers' Appreciation Day
Goducate Teachers’ Appreciation Day

Goducate students in Laguna do relatively well in ALS exams

In 2013 Goducate in Bay, Laguna Province, Philippines, had been helping 40 students through the Alternative Learning System (ALS). The ALS is a Philippines Department of Education non-formal education program for people who did not complete their schooling. Of the 40, 31 were mothers, and 4 were fathers. Goducate held twice-weekly classes for them.

On Nov 10, 13 of them conquered their fears and sat for the ALS secondary-level examination held at the San Pedro Memorial National High School.

Nationally, 6135 of 24,998 (24.5%) elementary-level candidates passed their examination, as did 72,076 of 221,598 ( 32.5%) secondary-level candidates. In our town of Bay, more than 1000 took the examinations, and only 3 of the elementary-level candidates and 19 of the secondary-level candidates passed. 4 of the 19 were Goducate students.

The 4 who passed will now be able to sign on for other short training courses or for vocational education. The other 9 Goducate candidate have the option of repeating the course with the 2014 students.

Examination candidates with an instructor on extreme left
Examination candidates with an instructor on extreme left
On the way to the exam
On the way to the exam
Exam results
Exam results

Farm in Tagumpay made productive again

When the severe monsoon rains known as Typhoon Habagat flooded the area around Laguna Bay in August 2012, Goducate helped rehabilitate some of the affected families in Tagumpay by training the men in agricultural skills. With their newly acquired skills, 5 of the men set up a community farm on a piece of land that a former mayor of Bay offered to Goducate. The farm was productive, enabling the men to sell their crops by April 2013.

Unfortunately, in this flood-prone area, the farm was under water again from August to December 2013. During this time one of the men turned to container gardening, growing vegetable hydroponically on other premises, and sold his produce at the market every morning.

Still, the men did not give up on the farm. When the flood subsided in December, they cleaned it up, and with financial help of about PhP 3000 ($67) from Goducate they bought material to start planting again. By the end of February they harvested nearly a ton of vegetables (666kg of pechay [kind of cabbage known as “pak choi” in Chinese], and 333 kg of mustard). By next week they hope to have another harvest of another ton of vegetables. With the sale of these vegetables, the men have been able to repay the loan they took from Goducate.

The 5 men need additional help during planting and harvesting, and have been able to offer part-time jobs to others.

What the buyer rejects is taken by the man who turned to container gardening, to be sold at the market every morning.

New vegetable beds being prepared
New vegetable beds being prepared
Carrying sacks of pechay
Carrying sacks of pechay