Showing posts with label advocacy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label advocacy. Show all posts

April 17, 2009

DReAM Children Update: Advocacy for public libraries resumes

The DReAM Children project (see related posts) is resuming the advocacy for public libraries and reader development. The project hit a speed bump late last year when one of its main partners abruptly and inexplicably pulled out of the partnership. One partner's folly, however, cannot (and should not) stifle a good advocacy. So, after almost 7 months of laying low while regrouping, reflecting and re-prospecting, volunteers and other partners have picked up the pieces and are now taking steps, small as they are, to continue an endeavor that can help turn the tide for literacy in this region.

Lately, advocates began touring public libraries (including barangay reading centers) hoping to get a grounded glimpse of the latter's status in the Soccsksargen region, and arm themselves with telling information to help push for compliance of Republic Act 7743 (mandating establishment and support for public libraries). The visit to public libraries is being led by Mindanao Librarian who is about to deliver a case paper on the DReAM Children project at the CONSAL XIV General Conference in Hanoi, Vietnam. The visit to two municipal public libraries so far have already provided inspiration for the rekindling of the advocacy.

These old and dilapidated books, found in one of Soccsksargen's
public libraries, represent how real and big the challenges are for
the mainstreaming of public libraries in the region
.

As I write this, partners in the community of Tampakan (CDIC, Municipal Library, and LGUs) are busying themselves preparing for a one-day Children's Summer Reading Festival which is set to happen late May 2009.

Other than this, advocates have sought audience with the South Cotabato Sangguniang Panlalawigan Education Committee chair Atty. Rene B. Jumilla in early May for an exploratory discussion about mainstreaming the public libraries in the province.

Elsewhere in the country, good stories [Iriga (more photos here), Cebu] have continued to come out, proving once again that a public library is still among the best options a community can have if it wants to free itself from the bondage of ignorance.

It is the hope and goal of the advocates who are behind DReAM Children that a similar good story will eventually come out from among the local communities of Soccsksargen.

February 5, 2009

A different tune

Sometimes it takes a knock on the pate (ok, I was trying to find nicer English for kailangang batukan) for some rusting brain to wake up and work even for just a while.

The following link leads to a news article in the Cebu Daily News about the acting Cebu City mayor's change of tune as to the reported closure of the city's public library:

Rama ‘won’t eject public library’

So the Rizal Memorial Library of Cebu is staying after all.

In the first place, why would we be closing a city public library when all the world is even moving mountains trying to open one?

Why would we be substituting a city public library with "satellite libraries in several barangays"? We have been mandated to build both since 1993 (R.A. 7743)!

And library hubs? The National Library is correct, these are warehouses not libraries; as we all should have known since the time the concept paper of library hubs was first drafted!

They say we should do it (satellite libraries) "similar to Singapore". Well, Singapore has community libraries dispersed all over the city-state and one big National Library in the middle!

Others contend the Cebu's Rizal Memorial Library is in a sad, old, decrepit state that it's indeed one bound for the museum. Well then go ahead, put it in a museum; but build a new one!

That would seem to be what the acting LCE of Cebu City is saying this time. He intends to have the city public library re-opened once renovation of the building is done. But without him giving a clear timeframe and cost of renovation, who knows baka binibilog lang ni mayor ang ulo natin. Huwag naman sana.

December 1, 2008

An engineer for a moment

I was an engineer for a moment; and it felt wonderful. This happened a little more than a week ago when I got to present the DReAM Children project during the annual congress of the Philippine Librarians' Association, Inc. (PLAI) held at the Grand Men Seng Hotel in Davao City.

DReAM Children was presented within Prof. Corazon M. Nera’s lecture on Promoters of Multi-cultural Librarianship. Prof. Nera is the current chair of the PRC’s Board for Librarians. She was the chief examiner for the latest licensure examination for professional librarians where some 23% of examinees passed. I heard it is the lowest passing percentage in the history of the said examination. This development, I know, will have its implications but I leave it to the experts and professionals to discuss them.

Prior to my presentation, Prof. Nera introduced me to the audience as a "librarian by affinity" -- my ex-girlfriend Fraulein being a professional librarian -- and titled me an "Engineer". The first tag was 100% true; the title of "Engineer" was off but nonetheless very complimentary. Perhaps to the professor I sounded like one when we first met just a couple of months before; when I initially described how we were able to assemble local stakeholders to build a strong partnership in reader development.

I remember I did once flirt with the idea of becoming an engineer for one semester in college when I took some Math electives in my hasty decision to shift course. I wound up dropping a subject (imposingly described then as Algebra with Trigonometry made meaner by a very impersonal teacher) and ended up taking a course in community development. The rest of the story is now part of a very fulfilling history. I did not turn out to be an engineer but have since “re-engineered” myself to becoming an instrument for "social progress".

In a way, community development is like engineering, it also "builds structures". Its strong adherence to the philosophical concept of praxis can be likened to engineering's constant blending of scientific knowledge, natural laws and physical resources to produce structures and processes for the ultimate benefit of humankind.

November 4, 2008

DReAM Children at the PLAI Congress

It's a few hours before the American presidential elections as I write this post. But no, I am not going to write about it anymore, lest this blog be misconstrued as socialist; that's how Obama is desperately being portrayed by the conservatives at the homestretch of the campaign, hoping to scare the centrists among the American populace into McCain's fold.

Let me instead share the news that is making me more upbeat and excited for two weeks now (i.e. besides the MBS2 euphoria). Last October 22nd , I received an email from Prof. Corazon M. Nera, Chairperson of the Professional Regulatory Commission's (PRC) Board for Librarians, requesting for a presentation of the
DReAM Children project during her own talk at the annual congress of the Philippine Librarians Association, Inc. (PLAI). The presentation is going to happen come November 22nd in Davao City where PLAI will hold its gathering for this year.

Prof. Nera actually addressed her email-invitation to both me and Ms. Fraulein A. Oclarit, herself a professional librarian and a co-consultant at
Sagittarius Mines Inc. (SMI) and an active volunteer of DReAM Children. The latter was most instrumental in providing me and DReAM the opportunity to initially talk to the professor about the project during my last networking activity in Metro Manila.

When we (Ms. Oclarit and I) visited Prof. Nera at the Lyceum of the Philippines University (LPU) in Manila (she is also its Director of Libraries), I was only then able to show her photos of the various activities and a general overview of the SMI-sponsored reader development project; but she nonetheless expressed keen interest on its prospects.

I have to admit I kind of least expected that Prof Nera's enthusiasm was that deep to have me get invited to PLAI's annual congress. PLAI is a big, if not the biggest, organization of licensed professional librarians in the country. The prospect of delivering in front of this group excites me a lot as it will certainly provide huge opportunities for DReAM Children and the overall advocacy towards reader development in the region.

This year's PLAI congress is themed The Multicultural Landscape of Philippine Librarianship.

-ooOoo-

Photos of the Sotero H. Laurel Library of the LPU
[click on photo to view larger image]


September 17, 2008

Books!Books!Books! Uso pa ba?

I was at the 29th Manila International Book Fair over the last weekend as part of my continuing networking activities for the DReAM Children* project. The trip was paid for by Sagittarius Mines, Inc. (SMI) a major project partner.


Every once in a while, I get confronted by people (of all ages, gender, income, profession and culture) with the eerie question "Uso pa ba ang mga libro?". This mostly happens when I get to present the concept of the DReAM Children as a project that intends to facilitate putting-up public libraries by helping the latter get books and reading resources from local and foreign sources.

The following are some images taken during my 2-day visit to the MIBF exhibit at the SMX Convention Center, Mall of Asia Complex in Pasay City. These will undoubtedly answer the question and hopefully will put it to rest.

Scenes of MIBF 2008

The SMX main lobby just outside the main entrances to the exhibit





Could have been a single title


Dream, child, dream...



Storybooks from Indonesia and Malaysia


Materials from China and Singapore



Know what's right...

... and what are not.



Among the crowd-favorites





Fair Warnings


Beautiful friendly reminder


I peeked inside to see if there were K-F-R people or some dirty old white male joining in the meeting... Thank God, there were none :)


Meeting People

During the two-day swim and dip into the 10,000 sq. meter-pool that is the MIBF exhibit, I got to meet publishers, booksellers, writers, book and reading advocates, and friends.

Ms. Shiela A. Barcelona of IBC Infotech. A good source of highly-illustrated kid's books in Math, English and Science.

Mr. Rey Ignes of A-Z Direct Marketing. He has Reader's Digest, Catholic Digest, Discovery Channel Magazine, National Geographic/NG Kids, Time, Newsweek, Fortune, Forbes, Financial Times, FE Economic Review, etc. Among his best deals is TIME Magazine at P51.00/copy for a 1-year subscription.


Ms. Jeanne Fontelera of REX Publishing which brings to the Philippines California's Teacher Created Materials (TCM) through the program Building Fluency through Reader's Theater!

[ That's free advertisement for you, guys! :) ]


Among the most fruitful, albeit brief, encounters I had during the MIBF were those with reading and literacy advocate Ms. Zarah Grace Gagatiga; and Ms. Lily Pahilanga of the National Book Development Board.

After a very avid and animated chat with Ms. Pahilanga at the NBDB booth, I and NBDB's executive director Atty. Ma. Andrea Pasion-Flores were able to talk over the phone and further discussed areas of partnership between DReAM Children and NBDB. Voila! Prospects are bright for a tie-up for some major training activity/ies before the year ends.


Ms. Zarah's immediate smiling assessment of DReAM Children: "Wow, ambitious kayo, ha?" But readily pledged support to the reader development initiative. Ms. Zarah is the librarians' sector representative to the Philippine Board on Books for Young People (PBBY).


At the UP PRESS Booth

L-R: DReAM volunteer Fraulein Oclarit [herself networking for her Community Resource Center (CRC) project], me, Ms. Zarah Gagatiga, and doctor-writer Luis Gatmaitan. Dr. Gatmaitan sits at the PBBY as the writers' sector representative.


Eli R. Guieb III -- multi-awarded writer, filmmaker, development worker, biker, mountaineer, and friend -- signs off my copy of PAMILYA: Mga Katha [an anthology about contemporary Filipino families and relationships].

Me and my PAMILYA; Eli Guieb and his.


And a big (literally) surprise: Koronadal's own, Mr. Bien Manzares.


Yes, uso pa ang mga libro!... and they are here to stay.



*DReAM Children is Democratizing Reading Among Mindanaoan Children. It is a partnership-driven reader development project which aims to help build libraries, school-based learning resource centers, and community reading centers within the KITACO (Kiblawan, Tampakan and Columbio) and adjacent regions. Its current partners are the Department of Education, the Local Governments (Municipal and Barangay), Sagittarius Mines, Inc., and a host of other local professional, academic and socio-civic organizations and individuals.


June 28, 2008

Knowledge vs. Ignorance

The following article was first published in the Tampakan Update, the official publication of the Municipality of Tampakan. The author is a development worker since the early 1990's and currently a consultant of SMI for the DReAM Children Project.

(Photos are courtesy of CDIC-Tampakan)

------------

KNOWLEDGE VS. IGNORANCE
by: Ariel Marco T. Oclarit

If you think knowledge is expensive, try ignorance.

This was among the words of wisdom, originally quoted from renowned writer Mark Twain, which Prof. Arturo Barbosa imparted to the participants during a recently-held seminar in Tampakan. The professor, who himself is a distinguished academician-librarian in the region, was giving a lecture on Library Management; and, in sharing Twain’s wisdom, he wanted to underscore the importance of collection-building (acquisition of library materials) as among the priority activities of managers of libraries and reading centers.

The lecture was given during the Seminar-Workshop on Basic Library Skills and Management held on April 17-18, 2008 at the Municipal Conference Hall of Tampakan. The seminar was attended by some some 37 individuals – all Barangay officials and personnel of Barangay Development Information Centers (BDICs) which directly oversee the village-level reading centers all throughout Tampakan.

The holding of the activity was a concerted effort of the Local Government of Tampakan through its Municipal Library, the Community Development Information Council (CDIC), and the Sagittarius Mines, Inc (SMI).These entities, incidentally, are among the collaborators of the DReAM Children Project, a partnership-driven reader development project initiated by SMI which aims to help build libraries, school-based learning resource centers, and community reading centers within and around the company’s copper-gold project.

Need over Want

During his lecture, Prof. Barbosa, imparted guiding principles to follow in the procurement of resources (collection) for the library or reading center. “NEED over WANT; if it’s cheap and you need it, then buy it; if it’s expensive but you need it, then buy it; if it’s not needed, it be expensive or free, do not get it.”

Knowledge (or information) – with all the physical (and social) infrastructures needed to gather and manage it – indeed, does not come by cheap. Local governments are mandated to build public libraries and reading centers (R.A. 7743) but “limited or absence of funds” would normally be stated as among the reasons why these infrastructures are not prioritized by most municipalities and barangays.

In the case of Tampakan, the advocacy for the establishment and meaningful operation of its own public library system is continuing and is not without its own hardships. One thing going for it is that the advocacy was started way back and, today, Tampakan’s constituents are already beginning to reap the fruits of the labor of Sir Butch (Barroso; current Municipal Administrator and CDIC adviser) and Sir Efren (Villarina; Community Affairs Officer), among others; their labor characterized by innovativeness and perseverance.

In his inspirational address during the opening program of the seminar-workshop, Sir Butch remembered how in the early 1990s they had to wring their minds for creative ways to set up the library and put resources into it. There were virtually no funds, but to choose ignorance was out of the question. He and his colleagues initiated a “Mutya” fund-raising contest where instead of the Peso, the winner would have to raise “books”. After the contest, the Tampakan Municipal Library had its first "sacks" of books.

Tampakan knew its need for a public library. It was just a matter of thinking ways to go around the barriers.

LGU Support

Today, Tampakan is among the few, if not the only one among the municipalities of South Cotabato, which has strong, operational programs for both the Municipal Library and the barangay reading centers.

In his own opening talk during the seminar-workshop, Hon. Relly Leysa, acting Municipal Vice-Mayor, happily announced that the local government through the Sangguniang Bayan has just approved fund allocation (PhP50,000.00) for the current year for the further improvement of the municipal library.

The amount of financial support may be far from the ideal to fully cover the needs the Municipal Library much more those of the barangay reading centers; but it can already go a long way, especially in providing for the municipal library’s current identified need for more bookshelves and repainting of its interior. This amount may also be utilized as leverage for any assistance and support sought from the outside.

During the topic Cataloging and Classifying Library or Reading Center Materials, as delivered by Prof. Marissa Montaño of the Notre Dame of Marbel University (NDMU), it was noted that classification tools (e.g. Sears List of Subject-Headings, DDC System, etc) which one cannot do without in organizing the collection of libraries or reading centers, now cost no less than PhP 75,000.00 to acquire. The Municipal Library currently has none. There maybe a need to acquire one (1) set for its principal use and for the secondary use of the barangay reading centers.

Learning Spaces

Another resource person-lecturer during the seminar-workshop, Ms. Fraulein A. Oclarit, a professional librarian and a DReAM Children volunteer, also gave emphasis on the importance of looking beyond the traditional definitions of “libraries” as physical places and see their relevance based on the what their own communities need.

Ms. Oclarit pointed out that more than a space and a collection, the development of strong library-based programs for children and the creation of other learning spaces to explore knowledge other than from reading are essential components in the success of this initiative. She emphasized that the library can host programs that encourage voluntary reading (as opposed to reading as a requirement to earn credit in school), learning through play, conversation and discovery. This way, the library now becomes more children and experience-focused. She emphasized that these programs need to be attuned with the context by which these children are now living and growing.

Continuing Partnership

Besides the individual learnings from the different topics discussed during the seminar-workshop, the activity brought forth other important realizations which are themselves significant output in the continuing advocacy towards reader development. Among these is the addition of two more individual supporters from among the professional sector who have expressed willingness to extend more time and talent to help cater to the needs at the community level.

Professors Barbosa and Montaño are among the few, unfortunately, in the librarianship profession who possess the same big heart for the community as they have brilliant minds for the craft of librarianship; which all the more make their commitment more meaningful.

Barring any hitches in the schedule, there will be a second conduct of the same Seminar-Workshop on Basic Library Skills and Management in the first week of June 2008. This time, the participants will be all Principals/TICs & SLRCs-in-charge of the different elementary and high schools of Tampakan.

All current DReAM Children project partners in Tampakan – the Municipal and Barangay local governments, the Department of Education, the Municipal Library, the CDIC, the Rotary Club, and Sagittarius Mines, as well as the individual volunteers from the academe – have began a movement for literacy in Tampakan. The direction is all forward.

Between knowledge and ignorance, for these partners, the choice is clear enough.