Teen’s Tale Inspires Parents At QC District 5 Workshop

It is our choices not our circumstances that will determine our fate. This was essentially the message of Dr. Tonton Torralba, Synergeia Trustee and dean at University of Asia and the Pacific, during the parent-leaders workshop under the initiative of Quezon City District V Councilor Alyson Medalla early this month.

Dr. Torralba said that there is no such thing as a broken home because home is where the heart is. Whether a family is composed of two parents, a single parent or even a guardian to a child unrelated by blood, it is when one chooses to consider each other family that determines a home. It is this choice that gives one the strength to face the challenges of life without bitterness. To illustrate his point, Dr. Torralba invited 16-year old Ara Joy Cruz of Tinajeros, Malabon City to share her life story with the participants.

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Ara is the youngest of three sisters whose parents separated after their father had an illicit affair while their mother worked overseas. She related how difficult it was to deal with the situation as she and her sisters were forced to take care of each other with their parents’ absence. They even had to spend two Christmases on their own that their neighbors felt sorry for them. Despite the unpleasant events, Ara chose to remain positive. “Yung ibang kabataan, magrerebelde na,” she said.

She holds no ill-feelings toward her parents. She and her siblings instead chose to stay away from bad influences. Ara not only studies hard but is also a student leader in Tinajeros National High School. Her positive outlook and determination prove that indeed, it is our choices that determine our fate.

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The participants, mostly parents and some single parents, shed tears as Ara related her touching story. It prepared everyone to actively engage in the workshop activity that followed. The parents leaders workshop dubbed “Wanted: Mabubuting Magulang” was initiated by Coun. Aly Medalla, chairperson of the Committee on Education,  in response to the programs identified during the education summit held for District V in July. Both activities are held in partnership and support of Synergeia Foundation and Unicef.

Coun. Medalla urged the participants to take advantage of the seminar in order to improve the education status of Quezon City children. She offered her full support in future efforts to cascade the training methods to other parents in the district.

Left: QC District V Parent Leader Seminar Banner; Top: Ara Joy Cruz relates her story as Dr. Tonton Torralba looks on.

QC District 3 Summit Raises Awareness on Children’s Reliance on Internet

Children need to learn how to read instead of relying too much on the internet. This was the statement of Irene Camua, head librarian of Quezon City District III library as she appealed to teachers to bring their students to a real library and learn to do proper research.

On the district’s first education summit held at the Quezon City Hall on Dec. 6 in partnership with Synergeia Foundation and UNICEF, Camua lamented that students no longer put any effort in doing their assignments and instead  resort to the ‘cut and paste’ method wherein they extract prepared studies from internet sources like Wikipedia.org. They don’t even bother to edit or cross-reference materials and just submit the text with its online formatting intact.

“Students will improve through reading and writing,” Camua said explaining that these skills cannot be honed if the students keep on resorting to Google or Yahoo to do information search for them. She said that with support from the local government, the local library has been upgraded to cater to the students’ needs. They only need to go there to take advantage of the available resources. “Magaganda po ang collection namin,” she said as she invited everyone to visit the library.

Apart from infrastructure, Councilor Allan Benedict Reyes said during the summit that the city has enough funds to support educational programs to make Quezon City kids at par with world standards.   “It is not enough to just build schools. It is also important to provide good teachers and a good curriculum. That is why partnering with groups like Synergeia is a very welcome move for us,” Reyes said.

Department of Education District Supervisor Jun Lever Sipagan joined in the call for unity saying that DepEd needs the partnership of the community and the schools for the benefit of QC District 3 children.

A series of education summits have been making its rounds in all Quezon City districts through the initiative of its district. The summit in District III was facilitated by a team from Synergeia Foundation headed  University of Asia & Pacific Dean and Synergeia trustee Dr. Antonio “Tonton” Torralba.