Wednesday, December 23, 2009

CNN Hero of the Year

another reason why I am proud to be pinoy!
really inspiring =)

15 minutes with a hero: Efren Peñaflorida

By Grace Oliveros (The Philippine Star)


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MANILA, Philippines - It all starts with a piece of bread, but the donations are not your usual dole-outs. They are given only after the recipient, who is usually a small child or an out-of-school teenager, has accepted another invitation: this time, to attend a 15-minute class on reading, writing, and basic values formation.

It may take the young “teachers,” mainly volunteers and Christian workers, time to encourage their younger charges to open themselves up to learning as a constant in their lives – but it does happen. Soon enough, the students start gravitating to the books first, then the bread (and other goodies) later.

“Before, their motivation was food,” admits Efren Peñaflorida, 28, a high school teacher in Imus, Cavite’s upscale Palm Ridge School and a leader of the Christian group, the Dynamic Teen Company (DTC). “Now the kids are more excited to learn and read their books.”

An offshoot of the Christian organization Club 8586, DTC and its zealous young men and women have been holding classes on leadership, the 3Rs, and Christian values in dump sites, jails and cemeteries to reach out to the marginalized young and give them an alternative to street violence, gang wars, and ultimately, a life of mendicancy or crime.

Peñaflorida, who as representative of his group has just been chosen CNN’s Hero of the Year, is one such convert, both in faith and in lifestyle. Growing up as a young boy in an area near a dumpsite in Cavite, he shared a one-room shack with his parents and two siblings. Though he helped his folks make a living by packing fish crackers after school, the attraction of joining a gang was always present. Fortunately, a World Vision scholarship during his elementary years and his fateful meeting with a pastor from Club 8586 set him on the straight and narrow.

Other friends would follow his path, and not a few former street thugs eventually became his co-mentors. Believing in giving back, Peñaflorida remained active in volunteer work throughout his high school years, rising up the leadership ranks as he finished two courses in formal education. After receiving his associate diploma in computer technology from San Sebastian College, he went back to the classroom to finish his bachelor’s degree in education, this time from the Cavite State University.

“My own education was non-stop,” he says, “and I love it. Education is a passion.” His fervor is shared by more than a hundred of his peers who have taken up the cause to develop learning and a love for it among more than 300 – and still growing – kids who live in four areas in Cavite City.

The burden is made easier by their mobile kariton (pushcart) classrooms that literally deliver books, notebooks, lunch packs, hygiene materials, canteen station, chairs and tables, and a computer to their students. The ingenious devices have caught the attention of the media in the past couple of the years, which ultimately led to the CNN nomination and eventual award.

Peñaflorida and his group were awarded $25,000 for landing in the top ten, and get an additional $100,000 as the top prize. Though obviously enthused at the award, he has remained practical about the winnings – except for the ten-percent tithe to his church, the rest will go to re-equipping the kariton classrooms or probably creating more of them (the creation of one costs between P20,000 to P30,000).

These days, even the parents of the poor children are becoming converts. There were – and still are – times when Peñaflorida and his group would receive jeers and angry refusals from fathers and mothers who would rather see their offspring begging on the streets rather than attending the 15-minute classes. The kariton teachers’ reaction was classic: counter opposition with more education. Peñaflorida says, “We did tell them that their children, even though very young, had rights; these rights included opportunities for learning. We also told them that they had rights as parents.”

It was the message that hooked these elders into accompanying their kids and eventually attending. Once regular numbers of parents were coming, Peñaflorida and his group created a separate literacy program for them.

It is not just the eyes of the poor and marginalized that he wants to open. Sometimes, through the respective school’s own immersion classes, he brings their more well-heeled students on an exposure trip to the dumpsite and the other depressed areas. “These well-to-do kids took their education for granted,” Peñaflorida shares, but after those trips “they learned to value the fact that they have the opportunity to study.”

For everyone to share this belief and value is one item ona Peñaflorida’s wish list, because then, just maybe, the country will see a larger share of college graduates and fewer dropouts every year. “I can’t believe that every year only 120 students graduate from college out of a batch of 1000. These kids should be given the opportunity to study and learn,” says the teacher whose peers have affectionately teased as a future Secretary of Education.

In the meantime, he and his group continue planting the seeds of renewal. One of their most zealous volunteers is 10-year-old Chris, who was abandoned by his mother near a store franchise. Today, he is leading the charge to hold classes among kids of his own age and to bring them books, some of which he bought out of his own small savings. It is stories like these that encourage Peñaflorida to continue his calling and dream of bigger things, and to raise up more heroes among our youth.

Saturday, June 13, 2009

Pacquiao gets Fighter of the Year honor in NY

abs-cbnNEWS.com

International boxing superstar Manny Pacquiao has formally received the “Fighter of the Year” award for 2008 from the prestigious Boxing Writers Association of America (BWAA) in New York Friday (Saturday in Manila).

A report by InsideSports.ph said Pacquiao, the best Filipino boxer in history, received a standing ovation when he climbed the stage to receive the award from BWAA president Jack Hirsch.

It was Pacquiao’s second “Fighter of the Year” award having first won the honor in 2006.

Hirsch reportedly even hinted that Pacquiao’s sensational second round knockout of Ricky Hatton last May 2 may put the Filipino among the Fighter of the Year candidates for 2009.

In receiving the award, Pacquiao thanked Top Rank promoter Bob Arum for backing him up, his trainer Freddie Roach, his family and his countrymen for all their support.

He also said that he realized the value and prestige of the award which is why he flew all the way to New York.

Meanwhile, Roach won his third “Trainer of the Year” award. He credited his prized ward for much of his success.

“[His] work ethic is amazing and I’m real happy he walked through my door one day,” said the US trainer.

Roach said he wants Pacquiao to have two more big fights and then retire.

“With (Floyd) Mayweather Jr. coming up and, of course, (Miguel) Cotto and (Shane) Mosley, we’ll fight the winner of that down the line,” said Roach.

Roach said he saw “no problem whatsoever” in fighting Cotto or Mosley but added “right now, I think Mayweather is the better fight for Manny and that’s the fight I want.”

He said Mayweather “is not as strong as Cotto or Shane (Mosley)."

"He is not a big puncher. He’s been off for a long time now. He struggled with (Ricky) Hatton and was behind after six rounds. We destroyed Hatton. He struggled with Oscar De La Hoya and Manny destroyed Oscar so who’s the better fighter?” Roach said. -- Ronnie Nathanielsz

Friday, June 12, 2009

4 young Pinoy scientists bag awards in international science fair

– Rainier Allan Ronda
www.philstar.com


Fourteen-year-old Angeli Yap-Dy, an incoming junior at the Capiz National High School, won a 2nd Special Award given by the American Association for Clinical Chemistry and a $1000 cash price for her research on the anti-oxidant properties of the bangus or milkfish and their possible use to fight lung and colon cancer.

Jovani Tomale, 16, won a 2nd Special Award from the American Statistical Association for his mathematical formula that determines the gender of the Philippine eagle. Tomale graduated last March from the Davao City National High School and is an incoming freshman at the Ateneo de Davao University taking up accountancy.

Arlita Narag, Intel Philippines’ corporate affairs manager, expressed pride in the Filipino students’ impressive performance at the ISEF, where they were pitted against the best and brightest foreign students on science and engineering.

Intel Philippines presented the winning students to education and information technology industry reporters at the Edsa Shangri-la Hotel in Mandaluyong City yesterday.

All four winners said that their victory at the ISEF was a “life-changing” experience that gave them confidence and spurred their interest in science research.

Tomale said that while they were somewhat intimidated by their fellow students, especially those from developed countries such as the US, Japan and Canada, they knew that they can hold their own in science.

Education Secretary Jesli Lapus also expressed his elation over the students’ win in New Mexico.

“We salute our young scientists who again made the country proud in the international science fair. Congratulations too to Intel for being a strong partner of DepEd in helping develop a culture of science, math and engineering research in our schools,” Lapus said in a statement.

This year’s ISEF was dominated by women, with the top prizes being won by three female high school students namely Tara Adiseshan, 14, of Charlottesville, Virginia; Li Boynton, 17, of Houston; and Olivia Shwob, 16, of Boston. The three won a $50,000 scholarship from the Intel Foundation.  

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