We know how
important education is, and every parents in New Canaan, one of the most remote
and unvisited barangays in Alabel, Sarangani dream that their children graduate
from college or at least finish Grade 6. But Analie Eday, a lumad like them, knows that as an
education worker, her first order of the day is for the children to learn how
to read because that is the parents’ more frequently mentioned and telling
aspiration everytime she talks to them.
So
what motivates Analie: “I am offended at seeing my fellow lumads exploited simply because they do not know how to read and
write. That is motivation enough for me,” she said.
The
barangay residents hardly had any idea what life is like beyond the mountains
until 2009 when the provincial government led by a young Governor Miguel
Dominguez, started bringing education to them with help from private companies
and civil society group.
Building
on its non-conformist leadership and youthful base, the provincial government
launched an umbrella program called Quality Education for Sarangani Today
(QUEST). Developed with technical guidance from Synergeia Foundation, QUEST’s
reform strategies include increasing awareness of the province’s state of
education, supporting public school teachers and improving the performance of
elementary school pupils.
At
the helm of QUEST is the governor’s younger sister Cecille who was then
executive director of the Alcantara Foundation, another key partner of the
province in education reform.
Although
much is yet to be done, QUEST ticks off
some early results: 10,000 Grade 1 and 2 pupils benefitted, 28 primary schools
opened, 57 primary schools made into complete elementary schools, 33 integrated
schools established, workbooks for pupils
and manuals for teachers were developed, 11,000 youth returned to school and
50,000 parents were trained to become mentors.
What
about reading? The Sarangani Big Brother, a summer reading camp for children
has become so successful DepEd Undersecretary Rizalino Rivera has declared it
will soon become a national program.
Education
Secretary Br. Armin A. Luistro FSC is thankful to DepEd education partners.
“Investing in education can never go wrong because the positive social impact
of its dividends is intangible and incapable of monetary estimation,” he
explained.
The
efforts of QUEST and its education workers translate to the province topping
the 2012 National Achievement Test results across Region 12, from only number 9 in 2007. And
official figures state that 8 of 10 Sarangani children now have access to
education compared to only 4 before 2007.
QUEST
is now replicated in Tampakan, South Cotabato, Koronadal City, Semirara,
Antique, Compostela Valley and Palawan.
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