Goducate Teachers’ Day in Sabah

After four months of teaching this year, the teachers in the Goducate literacy centers in Sabah gathered for a day specially organized for them. Teachers’ Day was held at a function room at the town’s Sports Complex. 60 teachers, including the assistant teachers and the livelihood trainers, attended. In the morning we had our meeting, our team-building exercise, the evaluation of the Comprehensive Exam Results, and the distribution of mid-year bonuses (based on students’ exam performance), and our monthly birthday celebration. In the afternoon, we relaxed in the swimming pool, and some of the assistant (teen) teachers played their newly mastered game, the frisbee.

The teachers had mixed feelings about their pupils’ exam results (352 out of 544 passed) but almost all of them were very satisfied with the evaluation, which was properly administered by the team of examiners. The evaluation indicates how the pupils mastered and applied the lessons they had learnt, and it helps us assess the effectiveness of our curriculum and how it ought to be modified for the rest of the school year.  Overall, the teachers were very proud of themselves, and they committed again to do their best next time.

That event was unusual in that it was also a family day since the teachers brought their own children along, in that it was an exposure trip for some who had not been to the sports complex or into a swimming pool, coming as they do from primitive villages. While we were having our session in the morning, the children were taught balloon art.

All the teachers enjoyed the short time they had casting off their roles as teachers to playing around like pupils. This beneficial and recharging activity for our teachers should give them the energy to drive extra miles in the world of teaching and learning.

Children learning balloon art
May's birthday celebrants
Morning Session in air-conditioned comfort
Teen teachers bonding with adult teachers

Goducate agricultural consultant from The Philippines helps center in Sabah

Goducate has been training Filipinas who are undocumented aliens in Sabah to teach literacy and numeracy to the children in their own community. There are now 22 Goducate literacy centers catering to over 1000 students.

In another town on the other side of Sabah a Malaysian couple, concerned about how street kids usually end up as child laborers, troublemakers, or victims of child abuse, had also set up a center to teach literacy to the children of undocumented aliens. The husband had grown up in a village where he had learnt some farming, and he believes that a school that teaches practical organic agriculture to out-of-school youth could help transform their condition from one of hopelessness to one of usefulness. Hence they were also starting a little farm.

They turned to Goducate for help with their farm project, and thus it was that I found myself there for 5 days to train them in some agricultural techniques—namely, vermicomposting and vermitea brewing, hydroponics and aquaponics, organic container gardening, and organic moringa production. The first 2 days were spent teaching with powerpoint presentations and discussions, and the next 2 days were spent with hands-on work at the farm. The last day was spent on mapping the area for optimum land use and a field visit to a nearby vermiculture project.

The big dream of this center is that the farming project will end up as a center for organic farming initiative that can contribute significantly to the food security of Sabah. For now, it is a means of turning out-of-school youth into useful and productive citizens instead of troublemakers.

Stateless children with no access to state education
Children attending class at the literacy center
The classroom-dormitory under construction

Goducate opens 2nd Lifepegs student activity center in China

Goducate, with its mission of helping young adults in China to help themselves, has opened a second Lifepegs student activity center in southern China. The new center is located in one of the city’s major campus districts with a student population of 60,000 to 70,000 from 8 universities.

The core team of 3 native workers trained by Goducate worked hard to renovate and get the center started within 28 days. They were supported by volunteers in the city who had longed for such a set-up where they could get opportunities to acquire lifeskills and an education that goes far beyond their university or their individual abilities.

The center's cozy interior

The new center is geared towards providing members with essential lifeskills education, unique opportunities for healthy relationships, and new and exciting modes of recreation. Most of all, it aims to position itself as the “Ultimate Choice for Outdoor Activities”, like none other!
Whether it is a basketball tournament, rock-wall climbing, a workshop on leadership or financial management, a mountain hiking adventure or a trip to scenic places for camping, each activity is meant to teach a lifeskill as well as provide some new and exciting experiences whilst participants get to know each other and find a lasting and enthusiastic group of friends.

The new center also hopes to invite members to take part in a leadership training program that evaluates the development of their leadership skills and presents them with opportunities to lead activities. Some of these trained leaders who believe in the philosophy of the student activity centers may be involved in the expansion plan in other parts of China.

Talk being given by guest speaker