ETS opens doors to higher education in many countries

MANILA, Philippines – Educational Testing Service (ETS), the leading academic and business assessment company in the world, has recently updated its Graduate Record Examinations (GRE) General Test, to make it more test-taker friendly for thousands of applicants planning to take graduate-level studies in different countries including the Philippines.

More than 600,000 prospective graduate and business school applicants from 230 countries take the GRE General Test each year. GRE scores are used by admissions or fellowship panels to supplement undergraduate records, recommendation letters and other qualifications for graduate studies.

The test measures verbal reasoning, quantitative reasoning, critical thinking and analytical writing skills that are not related to any specific field of study. GRE scores are sent to more than 3,200 institutions and used by all types of graduate programs around the world, including over 450 MBA programs.

In August 2011, ETS, the creator of the GRE Tests, will launch the GRE revised General Test. Revisions to the test will include a more test-taker friendly design, and new question types that better reflect the kind of thinking students will need to do in today’s demanding graduate and business school programs.

Registration for the GRE revised General Test opens on March 15, 2011, and the revised test will be administered beginning Aug. 1, 2011. Students who take the GRE revised General Test in August and September of 2011 will receive a special 50 percent discount.

It is important to note that students who take the test in August and September 2011, will receive their GRE test scores until mid-November 2011. That means students who need their scores reports before November 2011, must take current test before Aug. 1, 2011.

The GRE General Test is offered as a computer-based test (CBT) year-round by appointment at most locations. It is considered less expensive than other graduate admissions tests that measure the same skills, while providing students with added value through access to free GRE test preparation materials, free GRE Search Service and the free ETS Personal Potential Index (PPI) Evaluation Reports with a GRE General Test registration.

Students interested in preparation materials for the GRE revised General Test can visit https://www.ets.org/gre/revised_general/prepare/ where they will find free preparation materials for the computer-based and paper-based versions of the GRE revised General Test.

Aside from developing the GRE General Test, ETS is also the creator of the Test of English for International Communication (TOEIC) and Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) tests.

The Philippine Star, January 13, 2011

PNU celebrates 19th University Week

MANILA, Philippines – With the theme: “Charting the Roadmap to Education for Sustainable Development,” the Philippine Normal University marks its 19th year of elevation as a university with a week-long celebration starting Jan. 10 to 15, 2011.

Newly elected 10th PNU president Dr. Ester Ogena presides over the celebration assisted by the three vice presidents, Drs. Adelaida Gines, Rebecca Nueva España and Evangeline Golla.

The highlights include a “Salute of Excellence” to PNU students who topped the LET Board Exams given last September 2010. They are on the elementary level: Ruby Abalos Rivamonte, 6th place, PNU Manila; Ma. Lyn Parto Igliane, 9th place, PNU Lopez; secondary level: Dominic Parcon Guaña, 6th place, BS Physics and Technology, Carlo Angelo Noel Pelotenia, 6th place, BS Physics for Teachers, PNU, Manila; Jessie Sjaron Gueriba, 7th place, BSE Physics and Technology, PNU, Manila; Larry Fontanilla Tengco, 7th place, BS Chemistry for Teachers, PNU Manila; and Anna Khares Gallos Garcia, 9th place, BSE Mathematics, PNU Manila; Johanna Jayne See Tacus, 7th place, Bachelor of Library and Information Science, Licensure Examination for Librarians, PNU Manila. Cash prizes and plaques of appreciation will be given to those achievers.

The Philippine Star, January 13, 2011

NZ education system impresses DepEd execs

PAGADIAN CITY, Zamboanga del Sur, Philippines – The public school system in New Zealand (NZ) is so advanced in terms of Information and Communication Technology (ICT) that preschool children in rural schools are already each provided with laptop by the government. 
This was one of the significant observations made by a group of Department of Education (DepEd) regional directors, including Western Mindanao (Region 9) education chief Walter Albos, during their recent week-long educational tour in NZ which, unfortunately, was hit not long ago by a killer earthquake.

The visiting DepEd field officials, aside from Albos, included directors Paraluman Giron of Calabarzon, Ligaya Miguel of Ilocos, Josephine Tamondong of Cordillera Administrative Region, Mario Ramirez of Central Luzon, Isabelita Borres of Central Mindanao, and Estrella Babano of Northern Mindanao.

Albos noted that each NZ elementary and secondary school is governed by a local board of trustees which implements the national government’s educational programs and projects in its own state.

NZ public education is free and compulsory even as the government collects no school and miscellaneous fees from students.

Albos also observed that NZ parents who don’t send their children to school are sanctioned by the government; hence, school participation rate is virtually 100 percent even as school dropout is never a problem in that country which boasts of more cattle and sheep than people.

NZ average class size is only about 15 students who actually perform most of the classroom activities themselves. The teacher’s task is focused mainly on classroom supervision and management, Albos said, adding that instruction is very informal with every classroom having a socialized atmosphere where children often do their class work freely sitting or squatting on the floor.

Classroom walls are replete with attractive instructional devices even as reading materials openly lay on corner tables. Every local classroom also boasts of a corner kitchenette complete with plates, glasses and utensils where children take their free snacks with milk during their free time. The NZ government also provides students with free school service buses which take them to school in the morning and return them to their respective homes after classes.

By J. Antonio Rimando 
The Philippine Star, May 12, 2011 

Luistro lauds free birth registration project

MANILA, Philippines – The Department of Education (DepEd) expressed its support to the Free Birth Registration project of the Department of Social Welfare and Development (DSWD), saying the project will help DepEd prepare the infrastructure for “universal kindergarten” for all five year-olds in the country. 

Education Secretary Armin Luistro said that proper birth documentation is very important especially now when it has made kindergarten mandatory to entry to Grade 1 as the initial phase of their ambitious K (Kindergarten) + 12 Basic Education Curriculum (BEC) plan.

“This project is very timely especially in preparation for the forthcoming enrolment of students in our public schools. Birth certificate is a very important document in securing student’s identity,” said Luistro.

Luistro also emphasized that this effort supports the Education For All (EFA) goal that the country pledged to meet by 2015.

The Free Birth Registration project advocates the protection of every child’s basic rights, more particularly in keeping children in school. Thus, he encouraged parents to grab the opportunity of registering their children for free.

This joint project is initiated to cover the registration of Indigenous Peoples (IP), children of indigent parents, children who are enrolled and will be enrolled in public schools and all beneficiaries of Pantawid Pamilyang Pilipino Program who have no birth certificates yet.

The project also responds to the difficulty in complying with the basic documentary requirements such as birth certificates of children in tribal communities. 

Alongside with DepEd and DSWD, the Free Birth Registration project under Pantawid Pamilyang Pilipino Program, is in collaboration with the National Statistics Office (NSO) and Department of the Interior and Local Government (DILG). 

Registration and processing fees of birth certificates will be shouldered by government funds for the month-long registration from May 3 to 31, 2011 in the Local Civil Registrar’s Office of every municipality.

By Rainier Allan Ronda 
The Philippine Star, May 12, 2011

Enlist schools in ecological waste management, DepEd urged

MANILA, Philippines – Environmentalists yesterday urged the Department of Education (DepEd) to push the country’s 55,230 public and private elementary and secondary schools to engage in waste prevention in line with the opening of a new academic year. 

The EcoWaste Coalition specifically requested Education Secretary Armin Luistro to issue a memorandum that will remind school administrators to put in place appropriate policies and systems for reducing and managing school discards if they have not yet done so. 

The last time the Education Department issued a reminder on the implementation of ecological solid waste management in schools, the group noted, was in 2001 during the term of then Secretary Andrew Gonzalez. 

“With another La Sallian brother at the helm of the department, we hope to see more schools becoming centers of excellence in terms of eliminating garbage and promoting environmental stewardship and action among our students and citizens,” said Roy Alvarez, EcoWaste Coalition president. 

He stressed, “Zero waste resource management will contribute to a healthy and socially-responsible school system that will not add to the 35,000 tons of trash that the whole country generates each day.” 

Alvarez recalled that DepEd Memorandum No. 33-2001 provided for the monitoring of school implementation of ecological solid waste management, including the promotion of “sorting-at-source,” the “use of recycled materials” and “banning any form of open burning.” 

“Now is the best time for DepEd to reiterate school involvement on Zero Waste resource management as this will complement the government’s national green agenda, particularly in preventing and reducing trash,” said Christina Vergara, also of the EcoWaste Coalition. 

“The memorandum can also include attractive incentives for schools to enforce and shine in ecological waste management, including morale-boosting commendations for practicing schools,” she added. 

The group cited the grand winners of the “National Search for Sustainable and Eco-Friendly Schools,” namely, the Peñablanca East Central Elementary School in Peñablanca, Cagayan; La Castellana National High School in La Castellana, Negros Occidental; and Palawan State University in Puerto Princesa; as well as the recipients of the “Dark Green School” label from the Environmental Education Network of the Philippines such as the De La Salle University- Dasmariñas Cavite; Miriam College in Quezon City and Visayas State University in Baybay, Leyte; and the Cavite Institute in Silang, Cavite, which the World Bank cited for its innovative recycling for scholarship program. 

By Rhodina J. Villanueva 
The Philippine Star, May 12, 2011 

Tagum City relaunches literacy programs

The City of Tagum under the leadership of Mayor Rey T. Uy, relaunched its City Literacy Coordinating Council Skilled Workers English Enhancement Program (SWEEP) and IELTS Review for Skilled workers on January 31, 2011 at UM Tagum College, Tagum City. The graduates in this community- based training will have a chance to work here and abroad.

One of the guests during the launch was Dr. Norma L. Salcedo of the Literacy Coordinating Council. Speaking before a group, she acknowledged and thanked the participants in the recently-concluded National Literacy Conference and Awards held last September 8-11, 2010 in Baguio Teachers Camp, Baguio City for their continuous support and participation. She also congratulated Tagum City for winning 1st Place in the 2010 National Literacy Awards, Outstanding Local Government Unit Category, Component City under the leadership of Mayor Rey T. Uy. She commended Mayor Uy for continuously supporting literacy programs in their City.

Mayor Uy focuses on iteracy programs not only focusing on basic literacy but also functional literacy. This demonstrates how a local government can provide for the development of functional literacy.

Dr. Saceldo emphasized in her message that the challenges in society today and in the future require that the competencies of educated Filipinos should not be merely restricted to reading, writing, comprehension and numeracy skills which alone may not be sufficient to insure that they will function effectively in their immediate and gradually expanding community and in the rapidly changing world.

She stress that “Globalization has dramatically altered structures in the world of work. In our globalized world, the competitiveness of national economies and enterprises depends, in a large measure, on a highly skilled workforce that can respond effectively and efficiently to changing work processes. An essential part of such processes is ICT. This requires continuous adjustment on account of evolving hardware and software, modern communication and the immediacy of information on the internet. As the knowledge and skills of workers are regularly updated and expanded, more advanced knowledge of ICT becomes a must. Such new and changing demands require appropriate and periodically updated training. Akin to the demands of rapid economic development, globalization requires appropriate and periodically updated training. Such catchwords as “lifelong learning” and “learning-on-demand” would appropriately describe the kind and extent of training needed. The training may heavily lean on ICT and may incorporate e-learning and mobile learning.”

According to her “A global environment is participative, consultative and decentralized. This means that the Filipino as a global citizen will need to behave in a more democratic and consultative manner. Greater public access to new information technology needs to be provided to give the public greater opportunities to participate and provide occasions for continuing dialogue and consultation. The kind of literacy needed in a global environment is the ability to be responsive and flexible, because times change and even occurrences that we do not anticipate do happen. The school through the curriculum, should teach the Filipino learner to be continually responsive or to even go beyond what is prescribed to be an effective member of society.”

Pledge of Commitment were given by Dir. Fely Rabaca, School Director; Hon Nicanor T. Suaybagui, Jr ., CLCC Co-Chairmperson; and Ms. Nenita E. Lumaad, School Division Superintendent. Mayor Uy gave words of challege for his city to achieve functional literacy for all.

Tagum City – Looking Back and Moving Forward

Tagum City wins the Hall of Fame Award for being three-time Outstanding Local Government Unit (Component City category) winner in the National Literacy Awards in the years 2001, 2008, and 2010. 

The City’s literacy packaged with livelihood programs helped develop the potentials of the constituents in the community specifically those in the marginalized sectors. 

The programs include the following: 

– Consistent implementation of functional literacy programs that reach out to learners of different ages, ethnicity, and gender, and taught in ways where learners are able to develop their artistic potentials, build their small enterprises, or get work in their locality or abroad

– Balik Sigla program where masseurs trained by the LGU are hired to give therapy to constituents who suffer from immobility due to heart attack or stroke; service is provided in all barangays based on a mapping done by the LGU. More than a thousand have graduated from this program and some of them are now earning through private practice in Tagum, where they have set up their clinics with the help of the LGU. Still others were accredited by TESDA and were able to work abroad. 

– Indigenous education – the young generation of indigenous communities taking pride in their culture and history as they learn the dances and rituals from their ancestors through education programs with the LGU; shared through the yearly festival held in the City 

– Organic farming – conversion of waste from the butchery and the market into organic fertilizer and training of more than 100 farmers in organic farming using the compost. 

Indeed, Tagum City is an LGU to reckon with. Its good literacy and livelihood practices have proven to be enabling mechanisms that contributed to the empowerment of its people, the Tagumeños and for other LGUs to benefit from through replication of the programs. 

The same programs brought Tagum City to the 2011 UNESCO Literacy Awards, winning for its City Literacy Coordinating Council the Honorable Mention in the 2011 King Sejong Prize for Literacy.

DepEd’s highly successful ‘Brigada Eskwela’ bags Anvil

MANILA, Philippines – The Department of Education (DepEd) bagged an Anvil Award for their highly-successful yearly effort to bring in the participation of the community and the entire private sector to prepare public schools for the June school opening. The National Schools Maintenance Week (NSMW) or the “Brigada Eskwela”, initiated during the term of former Education Secretary Edilberto de Jesus under the master-plan and guidance of former Education Undersecretary for Finance and Administration Juan Miguel Luz, won an Anvil Award of Merit given by the Public Relations Society of the Philippines. 

DepEd was the only government line agency to win an award this year in the prestigious search. 

The award was received by Education Secretary Armin Luistro together with De Jesus and Luz, with the latter being present to recognize their pioneering role in the program. Brigada Eskwela which started in 2003 enjoins the participation of the whole community to do repairs and clean up of schools prior to the opening of classes, thus effectively reviving the dying bayanihan spirit. 

Luistro said the award brings home the point that private sector participation is important in improving the quality of education in the public school system. 

“The award is very timely since three months from now we will once again call on the community stakeholders for another round of Brigada Eskwela and we hope for a more enthusiastic response,” said Luistro.

By Rainier Allan Ronda 
The Philippine Star, February 24, 2011  

DepEd to start ‘K+12’ in June

The Department of Education (DepEd) is set to implement the first phase of its ambitious K+12 (kindergarten plus 12 years) proposal with the establishment of thousands of “kindergarten schools” in most of the 38,000 public elementary schools throughout the country by the opening of school year 2011-2012 this June.

Education Secretary Armin Luistro said yesterday the kindergarten schools would also be bolstered by thousands of pre-schools to be created from the Department of Social Welfare and Development (DSWD) barangay day care centers in collaboration with the Department of Health.

Luistro said the DepEd was given much encouragement to push ahead with their grand plan to add two years to the basic education curriculum (BEC).

The current BEC has 10 years of elementary and secondary education, but the DepEd now wants to have six years of elementary education, four years of junior high school and an additional two years of senior high school.

Luistro said consultative meetings in the country’s 17 regions regarding the K+12 program have been completed, and results of a survey conducted among the participants of these meetings showed that 77 percent approved of the plan.

“We’re very happy with the results,” Luistro said in a press briefing yesterday at the DepEd central office in Pasig City.

Luistro noted that there were even several regions, namely IV-A, IV-B, V, VII, VIII, XI, and Caraga, that were 100 percent supportive of the program.

The stakeholders invited to attend the consultative meetings were students and educators in private and public schools, their parents, and representatives from the government and the private sector, according to Luistro.

The education chief, however, said there were also some sentiments against the program that were raised during the meetings.

“We noted that in most of the regions, there was a turnaround in sentiment on K+12 when we explained it clearly, when we presented the benefits of the program and allayed concerns on the additional costs and years in school,” Luistro said.

He said that what they emphasized was that the K+12 program will make high school graduates ready for employment straight out of high school.

The DepEd earlier said that the K+12 plan is projected to need additional funding amounting to P43.67 billion for more classrooms, teachers and textbooks.

But Luistro said the DepEd is not yet focusing on the financial aspect of the program since the additional two years of school that will be instituted in public schools will only be set up by school year 2016-2017.

“That’s a long time from now. We’re focusing now on addressing the current shortages in classrooms,” Luistro said.

The Philippine Star, April 26, 2011  
By Rainier Allan Ronda 

A new standard in student-centered, international education in the Philippines

MANILA, Philippines – In continuing to deliver quality international education in the country, Esteban School formally renames itself the Australian International School (Australian IS). The announcement coincided with their celebration of a family sports day held last Feb. 26. 

The event kicked off with a parade led by the students, together with a square-off between the school’s two houses – Wisdom and Integrity. The two teams battled in a series of sporting events, showcasing their talents, skills, and athleticism. This year, Integrity proved to be mightier emerging as the champion after winning in the various sports challenges.

After a morning of competitive and fun-filled events, the whole community of Australian IS relaxed with a picnic for all students, parents and guests. More than 400 people participated in the family day which fostered camaraderie and goodwill among parents of the students. The students of Australian IS also wowed the crowd with their talents as they performed several special numbers.

Representative from the Australian Embassy Carolyn Atkinson graced the event and talked about the outstanding quality of Australian education. Atkinson expressed confidence that Australian IS will deliver a very high standard of academic excellence to its students. She recognized the educational institution as a pioneer and one of the largest and most instrumental organizations in promoting Australian education in the Philippines.

What sets a graduate of AIS apart from other students is the Australian high-school diploma that one will earn. “It gives the student an edge when they apply for a university anywhere in the world,” said David Esteban, Australian IS’s director for marketing and communications.

“Enrollees and prospective enrollees will enjoy the high standard that we are offering to them,” added Esteban. “They will be exposed to an environment that nurtures their passion for learning and gives space for creative and personal growth.”

The Philippine Star, May 12, 2011

Australian IS sets a new standard in student-centered, progressive, international education in the Philippines. Students and parents that come to Australian IS will be joining a happy and healthy, welcoming school community.
Australian International School is located at 2332 Chino Roces Extension, Fort Bonifacio, Taguig City.