News
SMART sponsors attendance of SWEEP schools at Tony Blair forum
[March 25, 2009/MANILA] Presidents and top
officials of colleges and universities under the Smart Wireless
Engineering Education Program (SWEEP) were among the privileged
audience as guests of Smart Communications, Inc. (SMART) at this year’s
Ateneo-MVP Center Sesquicentennial Leadership Forum which featured no
less than Tony Blair as guest speaker.
Blair, a world figure recognized for his achievements as the former
Prime Minister of Great Britain and Northern Ireland and now the
special envoy to the Middle East, shared his views and experiences on
the topic “The Leader as Nation-Builder in a Time of Globalization”.
It was a unique learning opportunity for the 24 school heads
representing SWEEP partner schools from all over the country as they
listened to Blair emphasize the need for countries to form alliances
and work together in the face of global challenges like the environment
and security.
At the school level, there should also be cooperation among
universities, according to Baldomero C. Estenzo, Executive Vice
Chancellor and Dean of the College of Law of the University of
Cebu-Main.
“No nation or person, no matter how powerful, can solve problems
without the cooperation of everyone,” he says. UC is one of SMART’s
active partners in the Visayas and the first Cebu school to enter the
finals of the SWEEP Innovation and Excellence Awards, SMART’s annual
search for the best wireless applications developed by partner schools
nationwide.
Mr. Blair also issued a reminder that for the era of globalization
to work, we need to be educated about the world and respect the
differences among its people.
“One important thing that I would like to bring back to my school is
the idea of Mr. Blair when he said that the objective is to have a
better idea of the ideas of others,” says Gloria G. Fuentes, Assistant
Vice Chancellor of the University of St. La Salle Bacolod. “As a
school administrator, what is important is you learn to listen and put
yourself in the place of others. That way, it’s not just the
interest of one but the interest of all.”
USLS is the first SWEEP school that has signed on for phase 2 of the
program, renewing the partnership for another five years to expose its
faculty and students to broadband and other emerging wireless
technologies and avail of the full benefits of industry learning.
The school heads also picked up on Mr. Blair’s belief that politics
is about public service, something that can be applied in the school
setting.
“As the leader at the center of an academic community my role is
public service and nothing more. I put everything above my
personal preference and my primary concern is the welfare of the
constituents and the university,” says Abdurrahman Tondog Canacan,
Chancellor of Mindanao State University in General Santos City.
MSU General Santos is a newcomer to the SWEEP partnership, having
signed on just last year, but the school is part of the prestigious
state university system that encompasses seven autonomous campuses in
the southern Philippines. With a relatively young ECE department that
produced its first batch of graduates just this year, MSU General
Santos looks to the program to help the institution produce
industry-ready graduates.
Fr. Sixto Mataro Bitangjol,
President of the University of Negros Occidental – Recoletos (UNO-R),
acknowledges that management without being too spiritual is necessary
and in fact doable. “It is taking into consideration other religions,’
he says.
UNO-R is one of the pioneering SWEEP schools in the Visayas and an
active participant in SMART’s community service initiatives like tree
planting.
But what also left an impression was Tony Blair’s referral to the
practice of politics, where more talk is often done than work even if
“politics is all about public service.”
“Less talk and more work is something that we have been practicing
at Fullbright College,” says Executive VP and Chancellor Eleutherius L.
Edualino. The institution is the only SWEEP school in Palawan and
an invaluable partner in helping train public school teachers in ICT
technologies under sister education program Smart Schools.
“This is the reason why our school’s performance is
exceptional. We are confident enough that with this practice and
the support we get from SMART we can continue to apply the key points
mentioned by Mr. Blair,” he adds.
The sponsored attendance of the school heads is part of SMART’s
efforts to open opportunities for growth and development to the
stakeholders of SWEEP partner schools. This is in addition to the
support it provides to help raise the level of technology and
engineering education in the country through the SWEEP industry-academe
partnership program.
(Published 30 March 2009, Smart Communications, Inc.)