Two weeks into their six-month training and the new batch of international students at the Goducate Training Center are all primed up to becoming effective community development workers in Asia. The course contents are quite diverse but the main emphasis is on teaching them how to teach needy Asians help themselves through practical but scientific technologies to produce safe and wholesome farm products. Through hands-on training, they will learn how to follow good agricultural practices to ensure social, economic, and environmental sustainability—knowledge that they should be able to pass on to farmers and members of their household.
The diversity of the students goes beyond culture because they also vary in age, gender, and academic background. The common denominator, however, is their passion and eagerness to become effective change agents. Their first few days at GTC were spent on acclimatizing, bonding, getting acquainted with the faculty and staff, and learning the basics of various courses. For practicum, they had already been exposed to actual seed planting and harvesting of moringa pods, corn, rice, and fish.



The following are impressions shared by some of the trainees:
“Before I thought that agriculture is boring but soon things turned 180 degrees for me. I learned to appreciate and love it. I was amazed to learn that plants can be successfully grown in nutrient-rich water. And to pluck a corn cob from its stalk for the first time ever? Simply amazing! I’m so excited to learn more .” —Jean, Malaysia
“I am very thankful to all my sponsors for enabling me to study at GTC to learn many things especially about agriculture. Coming from a children’s home and to another country for the first time, I am overwhelmed by the new and rich experiences. Surely I will have a lot to share with my own people after completing my study here.”—Nathan, Cambodia
“It’s a great privilege to be at GTC. In the beginning I thought agriculture is very boring but during the lecture on recent trends that included tissue culture, biotechnology, hydroponics, bubbleponics, aeroponics, and aquaponic, my interest on these things went up several notches. Now I am an eager student of agriculture.”—Lexon, Indonesia
“Magnificent. Intensive. Flexible. These are how I describe the place, training and fellow trainees. Magnificent in the sense that GTC is a venue where we can learn a lot of skills that can never be learned from a four-walled traditional classroom. Intensive because theory combined with hands-on are being taught by brilliant mentors and facilitators. Flexible as the six month-training is continually attuned with the absorptive capacity of its international students. As one of the future GTC-trained community development workers, I must therefore GO and EDUCATE!”—Nini, Philippines


