SDEAS Counselors attend International Conference in Hong Kong
The Deaf Counselors of the School of Deaf Education and Applied Studies (SDEAS) of the De La Salle-College of Saint Benilde (DLS-CSB) attended the Regional Conference on Women with Disabilities organized by the Association of Women with Disabilities Hong Kong (AWDHK). This event took place at the City University of Hong Kong from January 7-9, 2008, and centered around the theme "Innovations and Solution Focused".
Ms. Jeniffer C. Mendoza and Ms. Florisa L. Punsalan presented papers on research participated in by female students of DLS-CSB SDEAS as well as their own research that they undertook as leaders of the Filipino Deaf Women's Health and Crisis Center (FWDHCC). Ms. Nicky Templo-Perez and Mr. John Xandre Baliza served as interpreters for this event.
The issues that were discussed during the various paper presentations for this conference centered on violence, poverty, health concerns, family concerns, and arts as it affects women with disabilities.
From L-R: Jeniffer Mendoza, Florisa Punsalan, John Baliza & Nicky Templo-Perez)
Tuesday, February 26, 2008
Monday, February 11, 2008
SDEAS hosts symposium on NBN-ZTE Controversy
11 February 2008 – De La Salle-College of Saint Benilde School of Deaf Education and Applied Studies (DLS-CSB SDEAS) organized a symposium on the NBN-ZTE Controversy with Rep. Teddy Casiño as the resource speaker and presenter. With a full-house crowd at the Augusto Rosario Gonzalez Theater, Rep. Casiño gave an overview of how the NBN-ZTE contract started as a good idea and ended as one of the most talked about corruption issues in the Philippines under the Arroyo administration.
The audience of 120 students, faculty and staff eagerly asked questions during the open forum, proof that Benildeans are very much interested in understanding vital issues in public governance and what can be done to address these issues.
View slideshow
Q&A With SDEAS Student Ana Kristina Arce on the NBN-ZTE Controversy
Deaf E-News (DEN): What can you say about the talk of Rep. Teddy Casiño?
Ana: I was totally not aware about the ZTE-NBN issue. Today I learned about what is happening in our country when I read the newspapers and listened to Congressman Teddy Casino during the forum.
I felt frustrated that some politicians lose their moral values in their quest to become millionaires while most people work hard to pay their tax to the government. Many of us got angry because of these corrupt government officials.
We are shocked because we don't really know what the government is doing.
DEN: What do you think about our government and what should we do?
Ana: Government system and policy are not strong. It's a mess.
We should study the background of people who would be candidates for mayor, governor, congressman and senator in the
Philippines. If they have good ethics and morals and can serve our country without being corrupt, we should vote for them during elections.
DEN: What is our role as students to the country?
Ana: As students, we should learn how to strengthen our morality, ethics and values so we can become good examples to our country.
DEN: Any suggestions for next topic of discussion?
Ana: I want to know about Charter-Change (CHA-CHA) and the problem in our government system. Thank you for your encouraging us to get to know about issues.
Download PDF
11 February 2008 – De La Salle-College of Saint Benilde School of Deaf Education and Applied Studies (DLS-CSB SDEAS) organized a symposium on the NBN-ZTE Controversy with Rep. Teddy Casiño as the resource speaker and presenter. With a full-house crowd at the Augusto Rosario Gonzalez Theater, Rep. Casiño gave an overview of how the NBN-ZTE contract started as a good idea and ended as one of the most talked about corruption issues in the Philippines under the Arroyo administration.
The audience of 120 students, faculty and staff eagerly asked questions during the open forum, proof that Benildeans are very much interested in understanding vital issues in public governance and what can be done to address these issues.
View slideshow
Q&A With SDEAS Student Ana Kristina Arce on the NBN-ZTE Controversy
Deaf E-News (DEN): What can you say about the talk of Rep. Teddy Casiño?
Ana: I was totally not aware about the ZTE-NBN issue. Today I learned about what is happening in our country when I read the newspapers and listened to Congressman Teddy Casino during the forum.
I felt frustrated that some politicians lose their moral values in their quest to become millionaires while most people work hard to pay their tax to the government. Many of us got angry because of these corrupt government officials.
We are shocked because we don't really know what the government is doing.
DEN: What do you think about our government and what should we do?
Ana: Government system and policy are not strong. It's a mess.
We should study the background of people who would be candidates for mayor, governor, congressman and senator in the
Philippines. If they have good ethics and morals and can serve our country without being corrupt, we should vote for them during elections.
DEN: What is our role as students to the country?
Ana: As students, we should learn how to strengthen our morality, ethics and values so we can become good examples to our country.
DEN: Any suggestions for next topic of discussion?
Ana: I want to know about Charter-Change (CHA-CHA) and the problem in our government system. Thank you for your encouraging us to get to know about issues.
Download PDF
Thursday, February 7, 2008
January 25 General Assembly
Faculty and staff of DLS-CSB SDEAS held their first General Assembly also in January 25, (yes it was a busy day) and went straight into the seminar "Learner Centered Parameters." It sets the tone for what SDEAS will aim for in this Year of the Rat (2008): A new & trailblazing direction for a New Year.
And right after the assembly food was served to celebrate the birthdays of staff and faculty born in January. Everybody concentrated on the food and talk of the celebrants' ages did not come up. It was a busy happy day.
View Slideshow
Faculty and staff of DLS-CSB SDEAS held their first General Assembly also in January 25, (yes it was a busy day) and went straight into the seminar "Learner Centered Parameters." It sets the tone for what SDEAS will aim for in this Year of the Rat (2008): A new & trailblazing direction for a New Year.
And right after the assembly food was served to celebrate the birthdays of staff and faculty born in January. Everybody concentrated on the food and talk of the celebrants' ages did not come up. It was a busy happy day.
View Slideshow
Teachers' Day G.A. at SDEAS
(January 25) - A fitting opening to the new term and the New Year is an assembly and a seminar.
At the PEN-MLC Laboratory, Deaf and hearing faculty and staff of De La Salle-College of Saint Benilde School of Deaf Education and Applied Studies gathered to listen to Mr. Rodel Bugarin, (Director of Center for Learner-Centered Instruction and Research, CLCIR), explain "Learner Centered Parameters." But first, a briefing on how it came about…
On the imprimatur of Vice President for Academics Robert Tang, the Center for Learner-Centered Instruction and Research (CLCIR) took on the task of collating and then synthesizing existing DLS-CSB documents related to Learner Centered principles.
Fundamental definitions came out of that effort, example:
Who Are Learners?
Students – those who receive instructions under the academic programs
Faculty - the teachers who give instructions are also in the process of learning, perfecting their teaching techniques, improving themselves
Administrators – leaders of the institution and developers of the curriculum, like the Dean, have to study the directions the programs are headed, they learn about their jobs
Staff - non-teaching staff have as much to learn about the support roles they play as anyone else
Alumni - graduates comeback to share their experiences, some become faculty members, they learn from their work outside and bring it back into the campus
Parents - they are the first to support the instructions in the school, and they are the first to teach values to their children, parents have to constantly learn Everyone in the DLS-CSB community is a stakeholder, a contributor, a learner.
This synthesis has led to LEARN, an acronym for the skills necessary for a teacher to become Learner Centered:
L - learns continuously about his job and himself\herself, attends seminars, workshops etc.
E - evaluates learning experiences, seeks feedback
A - advances synergy and collaboration, develops an atmosphere of cooperation
R - respects diversity, accepts the fact that different students have different qualities,uniquely gifted
N - nurtures relationships, harmonizes, strengthens the community of learners
And to gauge a teacher's development (or lack of it) in LEARN, some Behavioral Indicators have also been identified. These Behavioral Indicators may reflect, for example, in the evaluation by students of their teachers. From there, the CLCIR will know which areas a teacher is weak and it can give appropriate training or workshops for them to take.
SDEAS Dean Theresa Christine de la Torre, explained that all these are products of DLS-CSB's growth, the evolution of its experiences, "It brings everything together, it will guide us on what we will do as a school."
She also roused-up everybody in the seminar to put their interest and energy into these skills because it will guide them and benefit their students in the classroom. It will also serve as a guide in their activities inside the campus. On a much larger scale, it can guide them in their participation as citizens of the Filipino nation.
Under the CLCIR logo are four words that best summarize the efforts of moving DLS-CSB into becoming a Learner Centered community – Developing People, Managing Change.
(January 25) - A fitting opening to the new term and the New Year is an assembly and a seminar.
At the PEN-MLC Laboratory, Deaf and hearing faculty and staff of De La Salle-College of Saint Benilde School of Deaf Education and Applied Studies gathered to listen to Mr. Rodel Bugarin, (Director of Center for Learner-Centered Instruction and Research, CLCIR), explain "Learner Centered Parameters." But first, a briefing on how it came about…
On the imprimatur of Vice President for Academics Robert Tang, the Center for Learner-Centered Instruction and Research (CLCIR) took on the task of collating and then synthesizing existing DLS-CSB documents related to Learner Centered principles.
Fundamental definitions came out of that effort, example:
Who Are Learners?
Students – those who receive instructions under the academic programs
Faculty - the teachers who give instructions are also in the process of learning, perfecting their teaching techniques, improving themselves
Administrators – leaders of the institution and developers of the curriculum, like the Dean, have to study the directions the programs are headed, they learn about their jobs
Staff - non-teaching staff have as much to learn about the support roles they play as anyone else
Alumni - graduates comeback to share their experiences, some become faculty members, they learn from their work outside and bring it back into the campus
Parents - they are the first to support the instructions in the school, and they are the first to teach values to their children, parents have to constantly learn Everyone in the DLS-CSB community is a stakeholder, a contributor, a learner.
This synthesis has led to LEARN, an acronym for the skills necessary for a teacher to become Learner Centered:
L - learns continuously about his job and himself\herself, attends seminars, workshops etc.
E - evaluates learning experiences, seeks feedback
A - advances synergy and collaboration, develops an atmosphere of cooperation
R - respects diversity, accepts the fact that different students have different qualities,uniquely gifted
N - nurtures relationships, harmonizes, strengthens the community of learners
And to gauge a teacher's development (or lack of it) in LEARN, some Behavioral Indicators have also been identified. These Behavioral Indicators may reflect, for example, in the evaluation by students of their teachers. From there, the CLCIR will know which areas a teacher is weak and it can give appropriate training or workshops for them to take.
SDEAS Dean Theresa Christine de la Torre, explained that all these are products of DLS-CSB's growth, the evolution of its experiences, "It brings everything together, it will guide us on what we will do as a school."
She also roused-up everybody in the seminar to put their interest and energy into these skills because it will guide them and benefit their students in the classroom. It will also serve as a guide in their activities inside the campus. On a much larger scale, it can guide them in their participation as citizens of the Filipino nation.
Under the CLCIR logo are four words that best summarize the efforts of moving DLS-CSB into becoming a Learner Centered community – Developing People, Managing Change.
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