Thank you Goducate from Milan National High School in North Panay

When Super Typhoon Haiyan (Yolanda) struck Central Philippines last year, one sector that became very vulnerable was education. Schools were either partly damaged or totally destroyed.  The children stopped schooling for more than two months because the classrooms were deemed unsafe.

Lemery is one of the Northern Iloilo towns where Goducate deployed Goducate Tent Schools (GTS) teams to help restore classrooms.  In Milan National High School (MHS), however, the classrooms were quickly rehabilitated by the Local Government Unit, so there was no need for tents or for tarpaulin-covered classrooms.  But when the GTS community development workers offered to hold English Corners at MHS, the principal responded positively.

I interviewed some of the students and they shared very poignant stories.  Ailyn, a grade 8 student, mentioned that before the typhoon came, her family had already transferred to the concrete-built house of her grandmother. “It was very traumatic”, she said, “especially when we saw that the flood water from the heavy rains carried away the house of my aunt.  Fortunately”, she added, “the entire members of her household had abandoned the house few minutes earlier”.

For Sandy John, his parents initially ignored the warning to transfer to a secure shelter.  But when the wind started to blow away their galvanized iron sheet roofing, they decided to move to their neighbor’s house.  “Together with my three other siblings and parents, we made it safely to the next house by crawling on the ground, otherwise we would have been blown down by the wind”, said Sandy John.

“Our dwelling suffered slight damage but I was not psychologically prepared for the incessant shaking of the house and the terrible helicopter-like noise generated by the extremely strong wind which lasted for three hours” ,Michaela related.  “We have never prayed as hard as before for the typhoon to stop”.

According to Christine Joy ,whose mother works as a domestic helper in Singapore, “The English Corner topics on friendship, self esteem, love, courage, dreams, and impressions oftentimes shared through poetry, songs, games, and film showing have done so much to heal me from my emotional turmoil”.

Each of the three English Corners at MHS takes 10-15 students, who meet once a week, and the session is moderated by a CDW.  “During our initial sessions, some students would cry whenever the discussions became sensitive.  We would then switch to other lively topics” ,said Paul, one of the CDWs.  “But the upside is that the students are getting fluent in English since this is the required medium of communication.”

“On behalf of our school, I thank Goducate for its significantly positive impact upon the lives of our 498 students”, said Abe, MHS principal. “I hope that the English Corners can continue way beyond our recovery period.”

Paul with some of junior and senior high English Corner students
Paul with some of junior and senior high English Corner students
Some of grades 7 and 8 English Corner students
Some of grades 7 and 8 English Corner students

Water pump for community farm in Tagumpay

The community farm in Tagumpay set up early last year for the victims of the heavy monsoon known as Typhoon Habagat has proved to be very productive (see blogs Apr 19, 2013 and Feb 14, 2014) despite being unusable during August to December because of floods. After harvesting about 1.6 tons of mustard and pechay since the start of this year, the farmers have paid back to Goducate the seed capital.

Another plot of land about 1000sq m in area and adjacent to the original 2000sq m farm has been made available to the farmers. It has been planted with a variety of vegetables, such as tomatoes, eggplants, sweet gourds, corn, and squash. With so much area to cover, watering has been difficult. Hence Goducate has bought a water pump for the farm. The farmers will repay the capital for this pump in stages. 4 wells have been dug. Each well is 6-8 ft deep and takes a day for 2 persons to dig. Water can be pumped directly from the well to the hose used for watering the vegetables.

Pumping water from well
Pumping water from well
Farmer's son watering vegetables
Farmer’s son watering vegetables

Making ornamental orchid plants at Goducate Children’s Home in Cambodia

People in third-world countries have their own creative ways of survival, and the children at the Goducate Children’s Home in Cambodia have been introduced to one of these. The Home was privileged to have been visited towards the end of last year by a remarkable woman, Mrs Purita Tabanao, an agriculturist by profession, who had been involved both in the government sector and later in a non-governmental organization’s community-development efforts in the Philippines, in Cebu province as well as in several places in Mindanao.

In her more than 30 years of experience, she found that an easy way of earning some extra income is to plant orchids and other ornamental plants for sale. All it needs is some extra time every morning for watering the plants, and some extra time at the weekends for propagating them.

During her stay at the Goducate Children’s Home, she taught the children a novel way of growing orchids for sale. The orchids are not grown in containers. Instead they are mounted on pieces of wood, a method suitable for humid climates. The bark is removed from pieces of wood, which is left to dry for a week. Then the cuttings are tied to the wood with thin strips of stocking material and sprayed with water morning and evening. The ties are removed when the cuttings have grown into the wood.

This method costs us nothing. We had a few dozen pots of orchids growing near the staff house, mainly as gifts for visitors, so cuttings could be obtained from these plants. The small pieces of wood are available from the grounds of the Home, and the larger ones from nearby mountains. The plants are generally sold whole, together with their mounts. Hotels often rent these ornaments for big functions.

The first flowering is expected in July or August. The project is suitable for both the boys and the girls, who have taken to it enthusiastically, and there is healthy competition to see which dorm’s or orchids will flower best.

We hope to make turn this project into a business in the future.

Preparing the  wooden mounts
Preparing the wooden mounts
Tying cuttings to long pieces of wood mounted in concrete
Tying cuttings to long pieces of wood mounted in concrete