News
Public schools in Mountain Province take a new road to learning
“There ain’t no mountain high enough… To keep me from getting to you”
The popular lines from a ‘60’s hit song holds true for the landlocked Mountain Province.
Thanks to the advent of Information and Communications Technology
(ICT), this quaint little corner of Luzon has been brought closer to
the rest of the globe.
By bringing ICT to seven public schools in Mountain Province, Smart
Communications, Inc. (SMART), through its Smart Schools Program (SSP),
widens the horizon of both teachers and students.
In time for the opening of the new academic year, Sabangan National
High School, Banao National High School and Guinzadan National High
School, and four elementary schools—Bontoc Central School, Data
Elementary School, Bun-ayan Labbay Elementary School and Sabangan
Central School, were officially welcomed into the fold of the Smart
Schools family.
The seven new partner schools in Mountain Province recognize the
importance of keeping abreast with technological developments in this
age of globalization. “We have come to a point when and where being in
sync with the advancement of technology is by far the most essential
key to be effective and successful in our lives, careers, endeavors and
even in education,” says Principal Joel Francis Licayo of Data
Elementary School.

SMART,
represented by (rightmost) Network and Platforms Services Division
Senior Supervisor Erwin Nery and the Department of Education,
represented by Mt. Province Schools Division Superintendent Mary A.
Lang-ayan (leftmost), welcome seven public school partners into the
Smart Schools Program: (from left) Josephine Fang-asan of Bontoc
Central School (CS), Sabangan NHS Principal Marcelita Moises, Data
Elementary School Principal Joel Francis Licayo, Guinzadan NHS
Principal Patrick Aplaten, Bun-ayan-Labbay ES Principal Juan Fiaoag,
Banao NHS Head Howard Poking and Jess Chomaran of Sabangan CS.
Together with the three existing partner schools, Mountain Province
General Comprehensive High School (MPGCHS), Sagada National High School
and Sagada Central School, Mountain Province currently has 10 Smart
Schools partners, the most in any other province in the country.
The inauguration was held last May 27 at the Sabangan National High
School with no less than Sabangan’s municipal mayor, Hon. Donato L.
Danglose, gracing the ceremonies. Others in attendance were various
stakeholders, including those from the academe, local government and
parent-teacher associations.
The Smart Schools Program, launched in 2004, aims to help
revolutionize the education system in the country by integrating ICT in
basic education. Presently, there are 180 secondary partner schools and
70 elementary partner schools.
Under the program, partner schools are provided free unlimited
Internet access for an entire year by Smart Bro, the wireless broadband
service of SMART subsidiary Smart Broadband Inc. Computer laboratories
of partner schools are also converted into Teacher Learning Resource
Centers (TLRC) complete with networked computer units, webcams,
printers, copiers, scanners, routers and switch hubs.
Furthermore, pertinent online content such as educational materials,
newsletters and updates are available on the program website www.smartschools.ph for the perusal of students and teachers. Websites of partner schools are likewise hosted on the program site for free.
Through the program and school websites, SMART hopes that students
and teachers will not only be mere users of online content, but also
generators of local content as well. Last year, the company initiated
the online project Doon Po Sa Amin to encourage the schools to share what is unique about their hometowns.
Believing that educators hold the key to the successful
implementation of the project, the program also conducts ICT-related
trainings for teachers. “It’s important that teachers are empowered and
informed to make use of these available resources (the Internet). To do
this, the program is investing heavily on providing training for
teachers that range from basic computer literacy to a graduate course
on Instructional Media and Design,” states Engr. Erwin Nery, SMART
Senior Supervisor for the Network and Platforms Services Division. To
date, more than 9,000 teachers have already been trained under the
program.
To further empower the teachers, SMART launched Smart Mentors. It is
a specialized training and development program for select teachers from
SSP partner schools. The 11-month scholarship program is geared towards
training the teachers to utilize ICT in enhancing the learning
environment and improving teaching strategies.
Last April, after successfully completing the requirements for the
program, the first batch of 20 Smart Mentors earned their Master of
Arts degree in Education major in Instructional Media and Design.
Among them are Irene Bakisan, the Division ICT Coordinator, and
Virginia Batan, Head Teacher of the English Department of MPGCHS, who
are now actively spearheading a mentoring program in Mountain Province.
Together, the two Smart Mentors have already conducted formal and
informal trainings on basic computer literacy, basic ICT,
troubleshooting and computer-aided instruction in their division and
are planning to facilitate more sessions in the near future.

SMART
Mentors Irene Bakisan of Sagada NHS and Virginia Batan of Mt. Province
General Comprehensive HS (second and third from left) attend the
turnover ceremonies. With them are (from left) Joy Lapuz of Philippine
Business for Social Progress, SMART Public Affairs Community
Partnerships Manager Steph Orlino and NPSD Senior Supervisor Erwin Nery.
“We want all teachers in Mountain Province to be ICT literate within
two years so that we’ll be able to maximize the use of ICT. We
have just finished the computer troubleshooting training and the
computer-aided instruction preparation for the computer-aided
materials,” reveals Bakisan.
Equally important as training their co-teachers, is the personal
growth experienced by the mentors. As Batan aptly puts it, “Smart
Mentors has played a big role in getting me to where I am
now. It has helped me gain confidence, taught me humility
and understanding. It taught me the best strategies in reaching out to
people.”
With the dedication and determination of the two Smart Mentors,
their colleagues and the entire community, SMART is confident of the
success of the program in its seven new partner institutions. “Seeing
our partners here—I am optimistic,” opines Nery.
(Published 29 June 2009, Smart Communications, Inc.)