Mengag-gag-ay tako.

Gawis ay agew yo.

Saturday, March 22, 2008

Around Mountain Province



I remember something I read that says, "Whatever you do, you have to choose to be happy." Whether you know that the next 24 hours will be a lot different from what you were used to. That is exactly what I did. I chose to be happy even before I started my journey visiting Grade 1 students in Sagada, Besao and supposedly Natonin but was reassigned to Paracelis.




I really enjoyed my first assignments outside of the usual daily work. I enjoyed giving posttests for Grade 1 and i observed different kind of pupils. Really, Grade 1 teachers should be the best in attitude, especially in patience, and in teaching. Imagine teaching children who would sometimes just look at you as if you are talking of Mars. But, Grade 1 is also one of the most rewarding grades. In this grade, teachers can really see their outputs - whether they have done something or not.




In Sagada, I went to Tanulong Elementary School and Fidelisan Primary School. It's not just to lift Sagada up but these schools topped the posttests I administered. (Well, I have not yet checked the test given to the other schools.)




I saw the beauty of Panabungen being the part of Mountain Province very near the boundaries of Mountain Province, Abra and Ilocos. In fact, the Tirad Pass is so clearly "natitirad." I have been to Besao but never to Catengan and Panabungen. So, going there had been an adventure and I truly enjoyed every minute of it, especially including the great snacks and meals prepared by the very hospitable teachers and school heads in the person of Madam Semon and Madam Agnaonao. (In fact, the teachers of Panabungen ES even went to get fresh shrimps, wading ya tokak. Ulay iman basta men ipabulek et aped men imis ay kanen amed no ipangan isan binayo da. Aye pay di busog ko isdi.)




The difficulty of multi-grade classes is very clear in Camparadi, Paracelis. Imagine a complete elementary school, meaning they offer Grade 1 to 6, with only two teachers. One teacher will teach Grades 1-3 and another for Grades 4-6. Wow, they have to be superwomen to do that and they are. Though the pupils are very few (there are only 10 Grade 1 pupils) still it is hard to prepare for three classes with all the subjects. Added to that is the hardship in going there. It entails hiking. And, though it did not rain for two days, the road is still unpassable by vehicle. Accordingly, a motorbike can but the motorbike can carry you as well as you need to carry it too when the going gets too rough. We preferred to hike for almost six to seven hours to reach Camparadi, which is a combination of Camfiangan and Paradi (the school is in between these two sitios).




I saw several problems in my visit here. Aside from the multi-grade classes, it is so hard to reach the school. Even if the soil is already dry, it is still slippery. If adults find it slippery, how much more to pupils? They also need to cross rivers which get really turbulent during typhoons and rainy seasons. The ili helloare far from each other and the people keep on moving as we have seen along the way. When the soil is not so fertile anymore, they move to a greener pasture. They still have a percentage of nomadism. As I said a while ago, the people are very far from each other so it follows that they have to walk very far distances to reach each other.




The road is not even a road at all. There is a road that reaches the place but it's not usable. It can only be serviceable during the summer if it does not rain for five days or more but there are more rainy months (about 9) in Paracelis than summer so the road is basically useless as a road. By the way, the road reaches kalinga.




The case of Camparadi is not new in Paracelis. In fact with the 30 plus elementary schools, only seven has a 1teacher:1 grade ratio. The rest are combining two or three grades at a time.




I learned a lot and though i earned some wounds i will never forget the lessons that experience taught me again. Experience is really the greatest teacher of all time.





Thursday, March 6, 2008

Hurray to the gold medallists!!!


They were ordinary students. In fact, like all students, they have some problems with their grades like whether they will pass or not or whether they will still make it to the honor roll. But, in spite of that, they were able to excel and grabbed golds for Mountain Province during the 2008 Cordillera Administrative Region Athletic Association (CARAA) Meet held at La Trinidad and Baguio City on February 24-29.
The Little League (Elementary) Baseball boys, after the championship row against the Abra, excitedly reviewed their play. When asked why they tuouth they were able to win, the boys unanimously raised their hands, each willing to be the first to give his answer.
“We did our best,” Teddy Bawaan of Ankileng ES said.
“We concentrated,” Jaser Lizardo of Bangaan ES added.
“We were really disciplined,” Kevin Viray of Aguid ES volunteered.
“We worked with positive minds,” Franklin Baldo of Sagada CS added to the already growing reasons.
“We supported and cooperated with each other,” Jerry Marco of Tanulong ES and Jude Awingan of Ankileng ES excitedly supplemented.
“We had strategies and we really keenly watched the ball,” volunteered the other members of the group. And the list could have gone on and on have no one started to sing their team song.
After singing their team song, “No panggep di baseball (originally di ayat), anusan di rigat,” the boys shared the typical hardships as a baseball player that they have met already. One pointed out missing class for practices and games which was chorally seconded by members of the group.
Their discipline in their games extended to their interview session for they supported each other’s statements, piping out additional information to whatever one said. Nobody contradicted what the other said. Asked for hardships that they need to endure as baseball players as they have sang, one said, “Our coach would sometimes get angry for he would be saying the same things every now and then but we would always commit the same error but we know that his anger is for our good.”
And, what do they still need to improve? “Best running. We need to practice running the fasters and best way we can,” one piped in. Another said, “We still need to improve our grades. When we go back, we still need to cope with our lessons.”
When asked for any additional reasons they can attribute for their win, one said, “We always pray. We pray before and after a game led by our coach, Allen Angway or his co-coach Frenzel Doligas.”
Jeanine Pearl CariƱo of Abatan ES also experienced so many difficulties before she finally forked the gold in the table tennis individual category with her coach, Romeo Lacbawan. She had been to the CARAA twice placing third in the same event last year. “The support of my parents as well as my desire to go to Palawan helped me edge my opponents.”
Composed of students from Sabangan and Sadanga, the secondary boys team championed in the 4 x 100 Medley Relay and 4 x 100 Freestyle relay. Lido Modcharang of Sadanga NHS garnered the gold in the 200 M Breast stroke.
“These they were able to garner despite only one week practice in Bontoc just before the CARAA,” explained their coach, Jess Chomaran. “We need longer period of practice if we want better performance especially if the swimmer came from different districts, so we could also culturally and socially adjust to each other,” he continued.
Asked for their reflections on why they won, Noel Amboni of Betwagan NHS and Jose Yagyagan of Sadanga NHS claimed, “While we swam as fast as we can, we really gave our best. We supported each other. It was really team work.”
Madle Con-o of Betwagan NHS mentioned their swimming spree along the Betwagan River during their leisure time as a further contributory factor to their win despite their very short training period.
A family that plays together, wins together is the case of the Alawas brothers, Merv and Erwin, 2nd and 4th year respectively of MPGCHS, who gained gold in the Lawn Tennis Team Category. Coming from a family where almost everybody plays the game, these two openly admitted that they really worked hard for they wanted very much to go to Palawan, the venue for the Palarong Pambansa.
Playing together on the same game since elementary, these boys developed team work and trust in their own selves as well as to each other. This accordingly helped them snatch the gold after placing third in the 2007 CARAA in Kalinga. Yet, they also championed in the 2004 CARAA in Kalinga when they were still in the elementary. Interestingly, their small brother also placed third in the Lawn Tennis Individual Boys Category while their older brother is a Lawn Tennis varsity player in St. Louis University. Coming from a mother and a father who play tennis, can we say that being a player is genetic? (Hups.)
Determined to win the gold after garnering silver in the last CARAA, Ruben Bibat of MPGCHS, finally landed first in the 400 M Low Hurdle. “I was so challenged by my loss in the past that I really aimed for the gold this time,” he said.
Still having one year in high school, Bibat with his coach Regina Codpayas, still aims for the gold next year. And, when Bibat was asked for his secret weapon, this lanky fellow said, “Ipapati yo anggay nan ay-ayam yo.”
Alvoredo Polic-ew’s hobby of constantly throwing stones from home to school has finally paid off when he grabbed the gold in the javelin throw, elementary boys level.
Polic-ew is from Natonin Central School, one and a half hour walk from their house. So, to amuse themselves while walking to and from school, they would always challenge each other to aim at the “bulong ti atifangran (as he puts it).” That experience, he says had contributed to his win when he concentrated in his play, “It was like concentrating for the bull’s eye on the newly sprouted leaves of the atifangran tree.”
Aside from these, Mountain Province also championed in the last day of the CARAA in Lawn Tennis Girls Elementary in the person of Ayra Joy Alingawad of Besao Central School with his coach Peter Bangsoy.