Wednesday, October 13, 2010

The sex life of the urban poor (1)

TWO DECADES ago, I did a feature story for the Sunday Inquirer Magazine on the sex life of the urban poor, titled “A few meters of loving space.” It was based on my interviews with couples living in blighted, depressed areas of Manila. The story was illustrated by Inquirer cartoonist Jess Abrera (done in semi-abstract, okay?).

There was a debate at that time on family planning methods and reproductive health. Today, several millions of babies later, the debate rages again. In this context, I bring out compressed excerpts (for just two columns instead of three) from that feature for your enlightenment, if not for your entertainment:

When I asked her how couples can be intimate in such a congested setting, the woman gave out a throaty laugh. “Ah, wala nang pa-tumbling-tumbling pa. Deretso na kaagad para makaraos.” She sounded almost casual.

“You know,” she added, “you are the second person to ask me that. The first one was a Belgian woman who came to see how we lived.”

After she had unraveled her personal life, we talked about urban congestion and its effects on people. Of course I had to inquire about the slum dwellers’ private lives but only after we had discussed their food and wages, their dilapidated homes, their religious faith and political views, their coping abilities, even their toilet habits.

Some nights, the woman said, when every single one in her multi-family household was at home, their two-story patchwork structure would be packed to the corners with steaming horizontal bodies in deep slumber. In the heat of the night, when she lay awake, she would feel movements and hear muted sounds. “Alam ko na kung ano yun. Naiintindihan ko,” she said rather solemnly.

Studies on people’s sex life have become commonplace but most of them, it seems, are conducted among the middle and upper classes. The studies’ results are published in expensive publications for these same classes to lap up, for they see in these glossies a reflection of their bedroom lives, their fatal attractions, their forbidden romances, even their gynecology.

Who cares what the poor do? The way the idea of sex has been glamorously and expensively packaged (as in the glossy girlie mags, the ads, the movies), it is as if only the haves make love while the have-nots merely copulate. Sex and the poor are oftentimes discussed only in the context of prostitution, child abuse and such worries as population explosion. But despite the constraints of space, time and privacy, the poor also generally live normal and vigorous sex lives. Whatever quirks and pathologies they have could not be any worse than those of their well-to-do counterparts.

I tried to find research literature on the poor’s sexual habits or something closely related to the topic but there was none, so I decided to go down to the slums and ask around. What at first I thought would be a voyeuristic undertaking yielded no-holds-barred discussions with very open and articulate interviewees. No euphemisms—they call a spade a spade, a penis a penis.

The first and last time Joel and Yolanda Lapena had a very private moment to themselves was when they attended, with some other poor couples, a three-day marriage encounter seminar in Taytay a few years ago on the invitation of a nun. The encounter, the Lapena couple says, was “honeymoon talaga.” But more important to them was that they had time to talk intimately to each other. “We even wrote letters to each other,” a beaming Yolanda reports. A non-physical dimension and a spiritual communion with each other were, to them, new and exhilarating.

Married for almost 15 years, the 34-year-old Lapenas have six children aged 14 to eight (that means one baby every year). “Sa bunso na kami kinasal,” reveals Yolanda who adds that they were married in mass wedding rites sponsored by civic groups.

Joel works as a taxi washer while Yolanda has her hands full just taking care of the family. Joel earns P20 for every taxi he washes. On a good day he can earn P100. Home to the family is the second floor of a creaky house squeezed between two rundown structures in the Malate slums. The place, measuring about five by 15 feet is divided by a curtain. At night the couple, the six children and several in-laws sleep in this cramped space. There is only one bed, so the rest have to sleep on the floor.

So how and when did Joel and Yolanda make those six children? “Panakaw-nakaw lang pag-walang tao,” says Joel. Never at night. “Mabilisan lang. Pag umakyat ang mga bata napipigilan pa.” Even in the daytime, there is no way the couple can hide if someone happens to climb the ladder and enter the narrow door. So husband and wife are always on their guard and have their outer garments on just in case. “Wala nang romansa-romansa, basta makaraos lang, pero hindi naman bitin. Nerbiyos lang ho yung madalian. Pagkatapos wala nang paguusap. Tayo kaagad.” They can hear the children playing downstairs.

Yolanda admits to being so fertile. “Mahagisan lang daw ng briefs o malakdawan buntis na.” Several times she tried the pill but she developed rashes and had difficulty breathing. Although Joel worried about her, he never considered vasectomy. So after the sixth child Yolanda had a tubal ligation. It has been sex without worry twice weekly since then, she says.

“Maligo ka na,” is Joel’s way of inviting his wife. She has never been one to ask for it, Yolanda admits. “Minulat kaming malayo sa lalaki,” she reasons.

(To be continued)

Monday, October 11, 2010

From vulnerability to empowerment

BEING A storyteller myself, I read with interest the stories told by individuals who were witnesses to and participants in the transformation of communities. Ten little stories, but each of them spoke of hope despite seeming hopelessness, of how people could exceed the limits and go beyond limitations because they believed in themselves and their dreams.
Clueless, frustrated or despondent local government officials could take a cue or two from these community experiences. But I am getting ahead of the story.
A few days ago the World Bank (WB) Group in the Philippines held a Forum on Community-Driven Development where it announced the approval of $59.1 million additional financing for community-driven development projects in the Philippines. This amount will expand the Kapit-bisig Laban sa Kahirapan-Comprehensive and Integrated Delivery of Social Services (Kalahi-Cidss) projects. Kalahi-Cidss empowers local communities in targeted poor areas to achieve improved access to basic public services and to participate in more inclusive local planning and budgeting.

Kalahi-Cidss has been implemented by the Department of Social Welfare and Development (DSWD) since 2002 and, according to a WB report, has benefited 1.1 million households in 4,229 barangays in the country’s poorest provinces. Social Welfare Secretary Dinky Soliman who spoke at the forum had only good words for Kalahi-Cidss which she had been involved in even during her previous incarnation as secretary, that is, in a past administration.

Said Soliman: “When local residents come together to discuss their own problems and find solutions to these common challenges, programs and projects are sustained and implemented effectively and in the most transparent manner.” Note the word transparent.

I have been to several Kalahi-Cidss projects in the National Capital Region and Samar and I have seen for myself how even just a few kilometers of road to connect a village to the market could transform a remote community and individual families.

“Empowering the Poor: The Kalahi-Cidss Community-Driven Development Project” is a handsome square booklet of 10 stories (two pages for a project story) and also a “toolkit of concepts and cases.” The against-all-odds stories (based on Dennis Arroyo’s field interviews) are indeed inspiring.

And because I judge a book also by its cover, design and lay-out, I must congratulate the WB team that produced the booklet. I felt good seeing the simple stories of poor and almost forgotten but determined people made to come to life on good-quality paper with elegant design (by B+C Design). (I have a fetish for beautiful books.)

Each project story in the booklet has an accompanying side bar which gives the location, the problem, the project, the cost and the grant from Kalahi and the local counterpart in percentages. The local counterpart is a challenge in itself and it taps into the people’s latent talent and generosity.

One story is told by a pastor who works in a remote community where mountain roads used to be so narrow people had to walk on them sideways lest they fall, and one at a time.

“That all changed when we built our Kalahi road,” the pastor narrates. “It opened vast opportunities for our tribe, the B’laan, long isolated in the mountains of Saranggani Province… Our farming incomes weren’t much, most of us earned less than P1,000 a month.

“At the start we were intimidated by the 16-step process—so many assemblies. To attend them, men would start hiking from their homes at 3 a.m. to reach the village hall at 8 a.m. Then later we realized that the road was not a government project. It was our project. And the real project was not the road but our empowerment.”

His postscript: “Old habits die hard. Even though the new road is six meters wide, some people still walk on it single-file out of sheer habit.”

And there is a story, told by a community volunteer in Davao del Norte, about the community’s 20-year-old dream of having a corn mill of their own. “Once our village was chosen to go ahead with the corn mill … there was so much to learn about proposing projects and keeping accounts. I had only gone up to third grade… But I did all right.

“The mill has been running for about 10 months now, and we can already see a big difference in our lives. We now have corn bran from the mill that we can feed to our animals. They are now fatter and healthier, so we get better prices for them.

“The mill itself is running well. It started out charging cheaper than in town, but eventually we decided to raise the price so that the extra money
could be used to buy a sheller and drier … and make more and higher quality corn meal. Even if we didn’t know much about managing a project before, we were forced to learn.”

A housewife from Dolores, Quezon, speaks about how her once-vulnerable village was spared from the recent devastating floods: “In my corner of Quezon, our flood control dam held up against the rush of water. We had built a truly solid wall, thanks to the Kalahi. We chose the wall because … our village is right at the foot of Mount Banahaw, and water would roar down the slopes during storms and flood our area.

“We installed pipes and used a barrier mix of boulders, stones and cement… I’m proud to say that labor was 100 percent free. The work was monetized, but the amount was used to buy food for the villagers while they worked. Everyone helped, including the children who collected stones.

“The project changed me as well. I thought I was a housewife who did not have much to offer. But with Kalahi, I got into the action.”

Empowering, indeed.

Thursday, September 30, 2010

'Major, major': Death by plastic

LIFE OR death, paper or plastic? Plastic plague, plastic horror, plastic scourge, plastic problem, plastic nightmare, plastic monster. The bad words connected with plastic are so numerous and the havoc it creates in our lives are so “major, major” so why do we still find ourselves asking one another why plastic continues to rule our lives? (Thank you, former Miss Earth Eco-Tourism, 2010 Miss Philippines and Miss Universe runner-up Venus Raj for your unforgettable “major, major.”)

There is even a saying that goes, “Plastic, like diamonds, are forever.” But the saying stops there as, unlike diamonds, they are not a girl’s or the earth’s best friend.

From the rising of the sun to its setting, we are constantly touching or holding something plastic. Just look around you now. How many things can you see that are made of plastic? The arm of the computer chair on which my arms rest as I write this piece is made of hard plastic.

And speaking of chairs and other furniture—and I must announce this now to shame those concerned—there is a chunk of a sofa with plastic upholstery that has been dumped into an open manhole along Mauban Street in Quezon City. It’s been there for several weeks and I was told that that piece of furniture was placed there to prevent students from a nearby school from falling into the hole. Oh, what thoughtfulness indeed on the part of the barangay officials. Because of their creativity, they should be delivered to the likes of hostage-taker Rolando Mendoza.

Plastic has become a major part of lives. It has many great and practical uses. It can take the place of expensive and need-to-conserve materials, such as wood and metal. Plastic can both be a blessing and a scourge.

But the plastic thing we could all do without or have less and less of are plastic bags.
The clamor of environmentalists all over the world to ban or limit the use of plastic bags continues to be aired but despite decades of campaigning, they are still the “major, major” things used for carrying purchased goods.
On this first anniversary of the devastating typhoons “Ondoy” and “Pepeng,” we remember with horror the unprecedented rampaging floods that turned many parts of Luzon and Metro Manila into virtual oceans and wreaked havoc on millions of lives. Mother Nature sent a message to remind us of our long list of sins against her. One of them is our garbage, and a huge bulk of this garbage that clogged the waterways are plastic bags.

Last Monday, environmental, health and justice advocates trooped to the Senate to press the lawmakers to pass a law to control the reckless use and disposal of plastic bags and “to tame the plastic monster.”

The event coincided with the joint hearing called by the Senate committee on trade and commerce, chaired by Sen. Manny Villar, and the committee on environment and natural Resources, chaired by Sen. Juan Miguel Zubiri, to discuss bills filed by Senators Loren Legarda, Miriam Defensor-Santiago and Villar on plastic bags.

Legarda’s SB 1368 is “an act providing for a proactive approach in recycling plastic bags in stores and other retail outlets.” Santiago’s SB 1543 is “an act regulating the use of plastic grocery bags.” Villar’s SB 1103 is “an act promoting sound waste management by requiring all department stores, malls and commercial establishments to utilize reusable environment-friendly shopping bags and provide them free of charge to customers and patrons, and for other purposes.” You can access these bills on the Internet.

Sonia Mendoza of the EcoWaste Coalition’s Task Force on Plastic suggested that Legarda, Santiago and Villar should consolidate their bills into a more encompassing “Ondoy Act for Plastic Pollution Prevention and Reduction” that will “progressively cut the use of plastic bags, with time-specific target for phase-out and eventual ban, and assertively promote ecological alternatives.” Gigie Cruz, also a member of Task Force on Plastics, noted the failure of the past Congresses to adopt essential regulations on plastics.

EcoWaste recently sought out proposals regarding the plastics problem from its partner groups. Proposals came from Buklod Tao, Global Alliance for Incinerator Alternatives, Greenpeace Southeast Asia, Kinaiyahan Foundation, Miss Earth Foundation, Mother Earth Foundation, Philippine Earth Justice Center and Zero Waste Philippines.

Here are the top 12 proposals that they want included in the plastics law.

1. Ban the practice of giving free plastic bags to consumers in all commercial establishments.

2. Impose a plastic bag environmental tax or levy.

3. Prohibit the use of plastic bags (i.e., thin-film, single-use plastic bags) as banderitas (fiesta buntings).

4. Phase out and eventually ban plastic sando bags.

5. Bar the importation of plastic bags and other single-use disposables such as polystyrene food and beverage containers.

6. Require commercial establishments to offer reusable alternatives to plastic bags.

7. Direct supermarkets and other retail and wholesale shops to allow their customers to bring and use bayong (native bags) and other substitute containers for goods purchased.

8. Stipulate producer responsibility and accountability, including a mandatory take-back for used bags.

9. Reinforce the prohibition against littering, dumping and burning of plastic waste.

10. Put up livelihood programs in the countryside to support the production of bayong and other reusable bags made of native materials.

11. Provide continuing public education on the health, environmental and climate impacts of plastic bags.

12. Observe and participate in the “International Plastic Bag Free Day” every 3rd of July.

Wednesday, September 22, 2010

ML posters from the edge

ON EXHIBIT this week at the Bantayog ng mga Bayani Memorial Center are posters of the martial law era expressing protest and defiance against a cruel dictatorship. Just to remind, this week marks the 38th anniversary of the declaration of martial law which lasted 14 years (1972-1986).

We are not celebrating that ignominious chapter in our history. What we are celebrating is the courage of those who fought and fell in the night, and of those who survived and continue to keep watch over our freedoms.
If I may humbly say it, many of the posters on exhibit came from my collection which I donated to Bantayog last year. I donated 75 posters most of which date back to the late 1970s and 1980s. I kept them all these years and waited until I could find a place where they could be shared and preserved for posterity. They’re of no use if they are just tightly rolled and kept in some corner at home. Bantayog’s archives-museum is indeed the place for them.
But I am still holding on to a few more, one of which is the poster version of a huge human rights mural on canvas (tarps weren’t in use then) which shows a freedom fighter struggling to rise in defiance despite being trampled upon by military might. I remember that mural occupying the whole backdrop of the stage at the Pope Pius XII auditorium where we held a conference sometime in the early 1980s. Former Sen. Jose W. Diokno was one of the speakers at the time. I still have the photos.

But where is that mural? Was it hastily destroyed after the conference? Was it too big to keep? That painting was rendered in a somewhat cubist style and was very dramatic. On display at the Bantayog exhibit are several smaller murals but that huge one is not there.

If many of the posters on exhibit bear the words “from Ceres” written in bold, it’s because I wanted to be sure that, if for some reason they got into the wrong hands, I would be able to claim them back. But I am pleased to say now that the Bantayog museum is properly managed and there is no reason to fear that archival materials would suffer neglect.


As I said, I still have a few more pieces of memorabilia and stuff for the archives. Among them are cassette tapes of prison and protest songs. I have a set (Ibong Malaya I and II) recorded in a music studio, but I also have the set that was recorded in the bathroom of the Bicutan detention with a guitar gently weeping. (In my player now… “Masdan mo ang piitan, Alambreng tinik…Ito ang kasangkapan ng mga manlulupig…”

Being a member of a human rights group during the martial law years, I was among those who often visited Bicutan detainees who would regale us with songs and amaze us with their exquisite art works and dainty cards. And so one day I dared ask the detainees if they could record the songs for me. Voila, when I visited again the two cassette tapes were there waiting for me. The songs were sung by several male detainees with the accompaniment of a trusty guitar and recorded in the prison bathroom.

I had given a duplicate set to the Task Force Detainees of the Philippines (TFDP) in 1999 according to my notes. I hope they have digitalized them. I was happy to learn that a good friend in the human rights movement (a former detainee who was tortured) and a writer, too, has bought an audio machine that could digitalize vinyl records and cassette recordings. She has offered to digitalize some of my stuff.

Bold, defiant, daring posters began appearing in the protest movement of the early 1980 and more came out after the assassination of Sen. Benigno Aquino Jr. in 1983. This was a sign that more and more Filipinos from many sectors had begun to find courage to denounce the Marcos regime.

During the early years of martial law, it was deemed too dangerous to put up posters and carry streamers. “Subversive” messages were mostly conveyed through underground means. But as the repression worsened, more and more citizens joined the ranks of those actively opposing the dictatorship. They found courage and began to create posters that gave expression to their desire for freedom.

Many protest posters came from church and human rights groups such as TFDP and the National Secretariat for Social Action and their regional counterparts. Labor groups, women’s groups, students’ organizations and indigenous communities also came out with their own specific demands and concerns. Many posters, leaflets, flyers and publications cried out for the release of political detainees and to condemn illegal arrests and summary executions. ASSO, PCA, PCO—abbreviations for dreaded arrest orders—were denounced.

“Free all political detainees!” was the constant cry of the families and friends of those behind bars. Children of the detainees would hold posters and banners to air their plea. They even succeeded in getting Pope John Paul II’s representative to visit their parents in detention. That was during the Pope’s 1981 visit when Marcos announced that he had “lifted” martial rule. I remember there was a detainee’s child named Free-all.

At the Bantayog gathering last Monday emceed by Ed and Girlie de la Torre, human rights advocates took turns sharing their experiences through songs, readings, dance and floral offerings. I had goose bumps while listening to old songs, among them, Jess Santiago’s “Halina” and “Martsa ng Bayan.” And then there was the heart-rending song about a militarized mountain village “Wala nang tao sa Santa Filomena” (written by Joey Ayala I was told) with that haunting line about the langaylangayan (Asiatic swallow).

Ah, memories.

Wednesday, September 15, 2010

The latest on hunger, MDGs

Philippine Daily Inquirer/OPINION/by Ma. Ceres P. Doyo
WEBCAST LAST Tuesday afternoon from Rome was the presentation of the latest figures on world hunger by the Food and Agricultural Organization (FAO) of the United Nations. You could watch the webcast and get the latest data by logging on to http://www.fao.org/webcast/. It’s like being there at the press conference yourself.

And while you are at your computer, you might as well sign the “Petition to End Hunger” (www.1billion.org) which shows famous actor Jeremy Irons blowing a whistle, fuming and telling you to be “mad as hell.” It’s a great way to connect.
The release of the FAO figures came in advance of the UN Millennium Development Goal (MDG) Summit in New York next week, which President Aquino will be attending, and the publication of FAO’s annual flagship report, “The State of World Food Insecurity,” (SOFI) which is due in October.
Here’s the lowdown from FAO.

The bad news is that the latest estimate of the number of people who will suffer chronic hunger this year is a staggering 925 million.

The good news is that it is 98 million down from 1.023 billion in 2009. This is a 9.6 percent decline, mostly in Asia. But FAO and WFP are not happy with this and said that the number of hungry people in the world still “remains unacceptably high” despite the gains that pushed the figure below 1 billion.

Lamented FAO director-general Jacques Diouf, “But with a child dying every six seconds because of undernourishment related problems, hunger remains the world’s largest tragedy and scandal. This is absolutely unacceptable.”

And so it goes without saying that the first MDG, which is “eradicate extreme poverty and hunger,” would be difficult to achieve. Diouf warned that the continuing high global hunger level “makes it extremely difficult to achieve not only the first MDG but also the rest of the MDGs.”

Hereabouts last week, Mr. Aquino told a multi-sectoral Stakeholders’ Step-Up Campaign Forum on the Philippines’ MDGs that he was not giving up on meeting the 2015 target date for the MDGs. He sounded optimistic despite the National Economic and Development Authority’s (Neda) grim report that said the country might miss many of the MDGs, including cutting poverty by half.

Here are the eight MDGs that nations all over the world have been working on since 2000.

Eradicate extreme poverty and hunger

Achieve universal primary education

Promote gender equality and empower women

Reduce child mortality

Improve maternal health

Combat HIV/AIDS, malaria and other diseases

Ensure environmental sustainability

Develop a global partnership for development.

It is worth noting that many countries, including some of the poorest, are moving forward toward the goals. This is proof, one UN report said, that setting bold, collective goals yields results. But it also pointed out that improvements in the lives of the poor have been slow and some hard-won gains were eroded by climate change, food and economic crises.

The 2010 lower global hunger number, the FAO report said, resulted largely from renewed economic growth expected this year, particularly in developing countries, and the drop in food prices since mid-2008. The recent increase in food prices is now threatening the further reduction of hunger.

But one must see beyond figures. There is a problem, and it is a structural one, FAO said. How explain the fact that historically, the number of undernourished continued to increase even in periods of high growth and relatively low prices? FAO concluded that economic growth, while essential, will not be sufficient to eliminate hunger within an acceptable period of time.

The success stories—and they do exist in Africa, Asia and Latin America—must be replicated and multiplied.

Other key findings in the FAO report: Two-thirds of the world’s undernourished live in just seven countries—Bangladesh, China, Congo, Ethiopia, India, Indonesia and Pakistan. Here in Asia, Myanmar and Vietnam are reported to have achieved MDG1 and China is close to doing so.

What about the Philippines? A Neda press statement said that “the country is lagging behind.”

The three major areas that the country must focus on, Neda said, is poverty reduction, education and maternal health. Efforts should also be focused on improving the performance of boys in basic education, as well as reducing the cases of HIV/AIDS.

The report was optimistic in meeting the targets on reducing child mortality, promoting women empowerment, reversing the incidence of malaria and TB and providing access to sanitary toilets.

And so, what more to do in the next five years?

Among the recommendations is the need to sustain the high economic growth experienced this year, and for this to be shared by the poor. Neda said: “The economy needs to attract local and foreign investments to spur economic growth. To do this, physical infrastructure has to be improved, water and power have to be made available at competitive rates, and more transparent systems in doing businesses need to be established.”

Localizing MDGs is key. Neda has come out with 10 province-specific reports on Agusan del Norte, Agusan del Sur, Batangas, Biliran, Camarines Norte, Eastern Samar, Marinduque, Romblon, Sarangani and Siquijor.

The Philippines’ fourth progress report will be presented at the High Level Plenary Meeting on the MDGs in New York on Sept. 20 to 22, which President Aquino will attend.

We have five years to go…

* * *

I will be at the International Book Fair at SMX at 3 p.m. today for book signing of “Bituin and the Big Flood/Si Bituin at ang Malaking Baha” (Anvil 2010), an illustrated story book I dedicate to the children who lost their lives during the typhoons “Ondoy” and “Pepeng” and to the children who survived.

Wednesday, September 8, 2010

Take it from the Bernidos

LAST WEEK I wrote a series of page 1 feature stories on the 2010 Ramon Magsaysay (RM) awardees, the Filipino awardees among them. But space was never enough for more that need to be said about them. And so I write again about husband and wife Christopher Bernido and Ma. Victoria Carpio-Bernido who introduced an innovative way of teaching the sciences, physics particularly, in the remote town of Jagna in Bohol.
The RM Award Foundation honored the Bernidos for “their purposeful commitment to both science and nation, ensuring innovative, low-cost and effective basic education even under Philippine conditions of great scarcity and daunting poverty.”
Chris and Marivic, both with doctoral degrees in physics, left their teaching jobs at the University of the Philippines in 1999 to run a small school, the Central Visayan Institute Foundation (CVIF), in Bohol.

It was not easy in the beginning. Marivic quotes Saints Bernard of Clairvaux and John of the Cross to explain how she grappled with difficulties in the beginning and entered the “dark night of the soul.” But as the psalmist says, joy comes in the morning.

After 11 years of running CVIF, the Bernidos can now look back and say with authority that poverty and scarcity are not barriers to quality education. They say that schools usually point to three major problems, namely, lack of qualified teachers, lack of textbooks and lack of science lab equipment. The usual remedy? More scholarships and training workshops for teachers, buy more textbooks and buy more equipment. Plus grants and loans from domestic and foreign donors.

How I wish more teachers could get copies of the lecture the Bernidos delivered two days after the awards were given. The lecture is titled “Poverty and Scarcity are No Barriers to Quality Education.” Here are excerpts.

The Bernidos’ solution to the teacher problem: “Rethink the role of the teacher in the learning process, and institute a program that would not be strongly dependent on teacher qualification, ability and personality, but at the same time should foster the professional development of the teacher. This we implemented through the parallel classes scheme and activity-based features of the CVIF Dynamic Learning Program (DLP).

“From the CVIF DLP experience, we also derived the strategy for the ‘Learning Physics as One Nation’ (LPON) project. The project answers the question: Can high school students learn essential Physics topics effectively even if their classroom teacher has little or no Physics training? An assessment of the project after the pilot year of implementation indicates a positive response to this question.

“At present the LPON materials have been made available to over 200 private schools in all regions of the Philippines. These include a specially designed Physics Essentials Portfolio of 239 learning activities to be independently accomplished by students during one school year, and associated 18 DVD volumes of video lectures by national educators. The materials are designed such that a command team can monitor student progress, and address questions from the field through e-mail, mobile phone text messages, Skype and fast courier services. The LPON prototype bypasses the need for qualified teachers and yet effectively prepares the students for college-level physics.

Solution to the textbook problem: “For public schools, pick a select team of experts that could conceptualize and design concise Learning Activities to be accomplished by students in class. As in the CVIF DLP, only one copy per class is needed since the students will copy by hand the material from the board or from the screen.”

Solution to the science lab problem: “Being theoretical physicists, we believe that, at the high school level, there is no need for expensive lab equipment to be able to learn scientific processes and methods of analysis. For example, the simple pendulum could be used to demonstrate the scientific method of experimentation, analysis and inference-making. Our solution: Strategically select cheap and simple experimental set-ups that demonstrate fundamental principles of science.”

The Bernidos add that, interestingly, the National Research Council of the United States released in 2006 the comprehensive “America’s Lab Report” that questioned, among other things, the benefits derived from the usual science lab education that has been implemented since the turn of the 20th century.

Have their solutions worked? For their school, the CVIF, the Bernidos say that they have seen a marked increase in proficiency levels of their students, especially in Science, Math and Reading and Comprehension. This is seen from their performance in college admission tests and the national Career Assessment Examination.

“Continuing to raise the bar,” the Bernidos add, “we have started to benchmark with international Scholastic Aptitude Test score ranges. We have stepped into the lower bounds of SAT scores in Mathematics for admission in good American universities. However, improvement is still needed in other areas.”

CVIF is not just about physics. The Bernidos imbue their close to 500 students with love for theater, music and literature. There is time for Bach and the lives of saints and heroes.

“Indeed poverty and scarcity have bestowed a wealth of insights that we continue to benefit from,” the Bernidos say, even as they approach with excitement a field that holds promises for education—neurosciences. “With deeper understanding of how the brain really works, we are expecting a profound transformation of educational systems and institutions within the early part of the present century.”#

Wednesday, September 1, 2010

Women in cirisis negotiations

WE. ARE. SORRY. 

But let us not grovel. We must be humble and admit mistakes, inefficiencies and stupid thoughtlessness. We must take it on the chin as a people, but we must not grovel on the ground. Let us show in concrete that we want to make things right but we must not allow anyone to walk all over us. Hate statements and tit-for-tat accusations that hark back to wrongs committed in the distant past will not help heal wounds.

That is my two cents on the aftermath of the botched Aug. 23 hostage crisis that ended in the death of eight Hong Kong tourists and a Filipino hostage taker.

There has been a hurricane of morning-after opinions and analyses, a lot of blame throwing, mea culpas, prayers, acts of reparation, expressions of sympathy from all sides. But the fact remains: there is no name for the pain of the families who lost loved ones in the tragedy that happened on our soil.

In my desire to know more about hostage crises, I surfed the Internet and found an article written by Sergeant Kevin Curreri in The Journal for Women and Policing published by the Australasia Council of Women and Policing. The title of the article is “Women and Crisis Negotations.” Curreri is the state negotiator training officer of the Queensland Police Service.

Curreri writes that in the 1970s the New York Police Department developed the idea of hostage negotiations by using detectives who had the “gift of gab” to deal with hostage takers. Negotiators are persons who deal with persons described as “being in crisis,” which refers not just to hostage takers but to suicidal ones as well. (In the Philippines we’ve had lots of the latter climbing on billboard structures.) And so the words “crisis negotiation” have replaced “hostage negotiation.”

In Queensland, Curreri says, invitations for applications for the negotiators’ course are made about every two years. Applicants are short-listed based on experience, referrals and demonstrated aptitude. They are then psychometrically profiled and interviewed by the occupational psychologist of the police’s Negotiator Training Team. Their communication ability during stress are assessed.

Curreri says that at one time, when calls for applications were made, 179 applied. Only 15 were chosen. They attended a four-week, live-in course to train in the negotiation process and then were sent to the field to work with experienced negotiators for 12 months.

There are several basic principles that a negotiator should bear in mind. One is that the negotiator’s basic function is to modify another person’s behavior through verbal communication. To do this, the negotiator must gain influence over the subject.

There are two types of influence: the hierarchical and the personal. Hierarchical refers to a person exerting influence by his or her standing in society. Personal is more difficult and takes time.

Active listening and demonstration of empathy are keys to influence. “We attempt to show the subjects that we have heard not only what they are saying, but how they feel about the situation they are in. We then attempt to demonstrate … that we are trying to understand what it must be like to be in their shoes. Demonstration of empathy assists in establishing rapport or trust.”

Once rapport has been established it becomes easier for the negotiator to exert personal influence on and modify the subject’s behavior. Curreri emphasizes that employing negotiation techniques instead of automatically resorting to a tactical resolution significantly reduces the chances of injury to persons and minimizes civil liability. However he recognizes that not every incident will result in a peacefully negotiated end.

Still, negotiators could assist the tactical teams in gathering intelligence and maneuvering the subject to a position most conducive to a tactical resolution. I think Curreri means the application of force.

Curreri thinks more women should be involved in crisis negotiations. There are diverse communication styles and practices in the two gender groups, among them conversational skills. Women, Curreri says, tend to approach sharing information, listening, making decisions and handling conflicts and disagreements differently than men do. He cites Deborah Tannen who suggests in her book “You Just Don’t Understand” that men enjoy giving info as a way to show expertise while women like sharing info to build relationships. Men do “report talk” while women do “rapport talk.”

Women share information to help others gain the same level of knowledge as they have, equalize the playing field and build rapport. Tannen says that men frequently interrupt and compete for airtime while women wait to speak until others are heard. There.

Curreri adds that women can use a subject’s gender biases to achieve a result. Women could be seen as less threatening and thus lower a subject’s defenses. As in, “It’s okay to be afraid. I promise I won’t hurt you.”

But Curreri points out that there are certain occasions when women negotiating may be counterproductive because of cultural and religious biases. “We must recognize that as negotiators our goal is to achieve behavioral change in the subject person through verbal communication.” In some cases, where women may be the cause of a subject’s problems (as in the case of heart-broken male suicidals who hold their kids hostage), women negotiators would not be the best choice.

But there are many incidents when women may be able to exert influence, personally or hierarchically. In the case of hostage taker and dismissed cop Rolando Mendoza, the intervention of his brother and fellow cop worsened the situation.

Would his mother or wife have done better?