Goducate celebrates 7th anniversary of work in East Malaysia

Goducate Sabah celebrated its 7th anniversary in Sabah last month. The work there is a good example of how Goducate fulfils its mission of helping the needy to help themselves. The population served consists mostly of undocumented aliens who are not entitled to state education. It has meant that children used to loiter around, sometimes getting into trouble. What Goducate does there is to train the mothers to teach the children. Goducate trainers go over periodically to upgrade the teachers.

The people live in remote primitive villages, and the environment has been made particularly difficult in the past couple of years because of the intensified security searches. So the anniversary celebration was an opportunity to thank all those teachers who have perservered in giving the children a chance at some form of schooling. Most of the schoolrooms are makeshift ones, in people’s homes.

For the teachers the anniversary was a chance for them to testify how they have been inspired by the challenges they have had to face, and how they have discovered their own potentials. From being housewives or menial laborers in markets, they have learnt to teach literacy and numeracy, to help children build their characters, to build relationships with others in the village, and to cope with the difficult environment they face. One young teacher said, “Goducate did not teach us to learn but they teach us hope”.

The anniversary program was enlivened by various presentations by students and teachers—ranging from declamations, recitation of poems, to song and dance performances.

Many of the students who have been through the Goducate learning centers in Sabah have found jobs, some as assistant teachers in our learning centers, and one is now a university student (see blog Oct 2, 2015). Goducate is hoping to give many others from this community the opportunity to get a tertiary education.

*Our guest writer is Joy de Pallo

Pioneer teacher giving declamation
Pioneer teacher giving declamation
Young teacher testifying how Goducate has helped her
Young teacher testifying how Goducate has helped her
Chance for teachers to spend day in modern hotel
Chance for teachers to spend day in modern hotel

Goducate offers livelihood skills training in housekeeping and automotive skills in Iloilo, Philippines

Poverty due to unemployment is a serious problem in the Philippines, so Goducate provides training to help Filipinos get recognized government certificates in livelihood skills.

Last year the Goducate Training Center in Iloilo became a partner of the Philippines Technical Education and Services Development Authority (TESDA), and enabled 21 people to get their TESDA certificates in housekeeping.

This year Goducate is helping to train 54 others to get their TESDA housekeeping certificates. The training is being done in collaboration with World-class Competency Unlimited and the local government unit of Alimodian. The trainees are residents from 5 municipalities and 20 barangays in District 2 of Iloilo. People with housekeeping qualifications can apply for jobs in hotels and on cruise ships.

Goducate is also training 6 men for TESDA certificates in automotive skills in barangay Balantang, Jaro, Iloilo Ciity. The training is being done in collaboration with Techno Development Institute and Assessment, Inc.

Housekeeping training
Housekeeping training
Automotive training
Automotive training

*Our Guest writer is Joanna De Leon , a community development worker

Goducate student from East Malaysia enters university in Philippines

In July 2014, the Goducate Training Center (GTC) in Iloilo, Philippines, started to prepare youths and adults for the Accreditation and Equivalency program of the Alternative Learning System (ALS). The ALS is a Philippines Department of Education program for people who have not finished their schooling. Those who pass the ALS at the high-school (secondary) level can qualify for tertiary education. GTC embarked on this program in partnership with a local school.

Angelica Amodia comes from East Malaysia. Her parents are Filipinos from Mindanao. To escape the civil strife and poverty in their province, they went to East Malaysia, where the family lived as undocumented aliens. As such, the children were not entitled to state education.

Angelica learnt literacy, numeracy, and had some basic schooling at a Goducate learning center in East Malaysia, after which she helped to teach others at one of the centers. However, she wanted to further her education. So she returned to the Philippines to undergo the ALS at GTC. She passed the examination at the secondary level and now, aged 19, is a freshman at the Northern Iloilo Polytechnic State College in Lemery, Iloilo, taking up Hotel and Restaurant Management, but she plans to switch to Education because she has realized that her passion is in teaching.

Her hope is that when she graduates she will be able to help her family and community. Meanwhile, she spends her spare time as a volunteer in Goducate’s community work in Lemery.

School acknowledging ALS passers
School acknowledging ALS passers
Angelica in the library
Angelica in the library

*Our guest writer is Joanna De Leon, a community development worker.