Wednesday, March 2, 2016

MSU-IIT’s Training in Journalism resonates its Second Wave of Workshop and Lectures



          In recognizing the role of responsible journalism in the holistic development of MSU-IIT, Office of the Publication and Information advanced its second wave of Training in Journalism with a workshop in news writing, and lectures on Journalism Ethics, Review on Grammar, and Writing for Culture and Heritage on March 2-3, 2016 at the Institute Mini Theater.
          Attended by the Institute’s Writers, Editors and Students, the training has been fruitful in its first day. Engaging open forum glued everyone to think critical on issues about libellous tendencies, ethics and professionalism in student and institute publications, and good writing with good grammar as the lifeblood of every journalist.
       A Review in the Use of Prepositions and Idioms was discussed by Prof. Michelle Jeanne C. Caracut; Journalism Ethics by Prof. Maria Theresa B. Panzo and Office of the Chancellor Special Assistant Mr. Rex Ortega facilitated the News Writing workshop. Prof. Caracut and Prof. Panzo are both special assistants of the Office Publication and Information.

A Review on Grammar
    Prof. Caracut, a very dedicated mentor as introduced by a Campus Ambassador, presented the ABCD principle in Academic Writing where A is for Accuracy, B for Brevity, C for Clarity, and D for Directness. She has mentioned about having a good grammar would always lead to nowhere but good journalism.
         This session have reviewed the use of prepositions in journalistic articles and corrected common mistakes done by most journalists and writers. Prof. Caracut also discussed the Journalistic Style Characteristics, and confusions on the use of prepositional phrases and phrasal verbs.

Journalism Ethics

         Prof. Panzo, a professor from the Department of English of the Institute, came into the rostrum introducing the concept of libel as indicated in the Revised Penal Code Article 355. In accord to the code, Prof. Panzo explicated the presumption of malice and the grounds on how to qualify libellous acts. This certain topic have enflamed the curious minds of the participants.
       The Journalists code of ethics was also explained requiring every journalist to commit themselves to ethical and professional standards. To name a few of the provisions, it has the code of not committing any act of plagiarism, take unfair advantage to a fellow journalist and violate confidential information.
          Along with the discussion of Code V, Prof. Panzo has told a story about a peanut vendor she had interviewed for a feature article years ago when she was still in college. The 9-year-old vendor was the main character of her feature ‘Christmas in the eyes of a child’ which got a space in their university paper. What made the story really sad, six months after december, was the same child was the subject of her news on rape and murder having the child as the victim.

News Writing Workshop

      Having quite a number of new faces in the crowd, Mr. Rex Ortega has given first a review on Writing News. The speaker, who is a special assistant of the chancellor, enumerated the types of Publications, one being the Adversarial journalism which is considered as the fourth estate and, really the watchdog of the government and the Sunshine as the other which no negative stuffs are being written.
       In News writing, as he reminded everyone, would have nothing to do about fiction and creative writing because it deals with real life and everything must be factual.
       The workshop allowed everyone to write a news article about the workshop itself and its second task required them to write an article about the whole event.
 
       This series of workshop and a lecture is an opportunity for the Institute’s developing journalists to be advanced and become excellent in their respective crafts in the Journalism Realm. This Training in Journalism is an endeavour organized by the Institute’s dynamic Office of Publication and Information headed by Dr. Christine Godinez-Ortega.

 

















Photos are grabbed from the FB Page of Iligan Institute of Technology of the Mindanao State University.Credits is due to its source :)


Saturday, February 20, 2016

Drive your own Cars, Rotaractors- PP Ramon Dacayo: Pilipinas Rotaract Convention 2016





            “It’s time for your voice to be heard. Be an accomplice no more in your Rotarians’ Service. Drive your own cars”.

            PP Ramon Dacayo, a Rotary Coordinator from the Rotary International, coached and empowered the Rotaractors all over the Philippines to play fair in the bestowed games of Rotary’s Advocacies and Awareness during the 2016 Pilipinas Rotaract Convention at L’ Fisher Hotel, Bacolod City, Negros Occidental.

            According to this equally vibrant advocate, rotaractors who are empowered have the knowledge and ability to lead. It was not always that rotaractors received input like this considering that everyone are too damn busy for many important things which was why it was overwhelming to get to hear someone from the same frequency and degree of enthusiasm in service in a plenary session.
Service
            PP Dacayo in letting the crowd of rotaractors discover the meaning of ‘priceless gift: True Service”, introduced the concept of service marketing- an endeavour of promotion in economic activities.
            After World War, a revitalizing history of the Philippines, there were only Three (3) working economic sectors- the manufacture, agriculture and service. During that time Manufacturing Companies boomed and, in fact, comprises somewhat the total GDP of the country; And there is a need to feed the people which made Agriculture never gone out of the picture; lastly, the service, which made the balance.
            Surprisingly, the Service Sector ranked 1st and rated 57% in 2013 report as there was the rise of call center agencies, BPO and other customer services all over the market.
            It was also quite funny and mind blowing when he joked with a picture projected on the screen which shows one customer with a bank teller having a pen leashed at the front desk. People trusted banks for safekeeping their hard-earned money, but these banks can hardly trust you out with the use of their pens.
            The kind of service presented above carries a price tag just like anything else. But in rotary, it does not require anything in return.
            So, what then is Rotary Service to a Rotaractor? He answered by presenting the 1st public service of Rotary which was rooted in vocational service, a toilet, by the Rotary Club of Chicago, which was originally institutionalized not for service but to fellowship. Every rotaract club is encouraged to have its substantial projects and Rotarians do not want to undermine that. Then, PP Dacayo, enumerated services that Rotaractors may indulge in, Rehabilitation and Painting, Proper Hand Washing, Mentoring, Football, Bowling and Golfing Management, and the list goes on.

Priceless Gift: True Service
            Being priceless is having a value beyond all price; invaluable. For entrepreneurs, a customer’s need is always an opportunity to earn but for rotaractors, a community’s need is always an opportunity to serve and help.
            The meaning of True Service, as he revealed before he ended his speech, is when you give something to a person whom you do not know and yet you give.
ProCon 2016

            This 5th National Convention of Rotaractors was very blessed to have PP Ramon Dacayo who gave meaning and challenge to the Rotaractors. Everyone is a gift to the world. What will make rotaractors precious gifts is when it give its time and attention. The world needs more time and attention. The world needs more Rotaractors.


Sunday, February 7, 2016

Archbishop Ledesma inspires Region X Youth Hours 2016

Photo Credits to Judge Jerlie Luis-Requerme

1963 National Awardee of the Ten Outstanding Students of the Philippines, Archbishop Antonio J Ledesma, SJDD, opens and unfastens the intimidated potency of student leaders in its role of practicing intercultural dialogue in Mindanao during the Region X Youth Hours 2016 on February 6 held at Performing Arts Theater, Mindanao University of Science and Technology.

The Archbishop emboldens the selected youth to deepen its sense of leadership by giving reverence to the different cultural expressions to the Tri-people of Mindanao. He also made mention about how joining religious services of your fellows is a form of appreciation and respect to their religion and its doctrines; that it is what we need now.

Moreover, he raised how the issue of BBL (Bangsamoro Basic Law) advanced a lot of expectation of those involved and eventually became a source of disappointment when it was not favoured by the Philippine congress.

Everybody in the hall was inspired to make peace happens starting from the grass roots. As leaders of the community, one should learn to be sensitive and become peace builders. It is because of ignorance, prejudice and jealous that there is conflict. He ended his speech saying “If we learn to understand the deep context of where we are, then we can have the elusive peace in Mindanao”.


 
msu-iit student leaders

Friday, January 29, 2016

NCCA’s Literatour Journeys Mindanao







The literatour voyage has arrived in Mindanao on January 29, 2016 at the Mindanao State University- Iligan Institute of Technology, the premier and leading University in the Southern Philippines. The second leg of literatour showcased the transcreated Poem on the legend of Maria Cristina Falls by Dr. Christine Godinez-Ortega performed by the most-traveled and world-renowned Integrated Performing Arts Guild literally in front of the magnificent Iligan City’s pride and glory, the Maria Cristina Falls.
In the flock of literature and folklore enthusiasts at MSU-IIT Minitheater- experts, professors and students from different institutions of Mindanao- Dr. Ortega, the project chairman, welcomed everyone with a challenge that faces attending events like this should not be recurring. The literature of Mindanao have long been appreciated by us coming from this the same discipline.
                Dr. Alawi, in a forum after the 1st session of Dr. Hope Sabanpan-Yu (University of San Carlos) suggested that other professions should be knowledgeable as much as we are (referring to the attending participants) for they are, in fact, hostile to our own folklore.
                Literary big fishes in Southern Philippines were tourist guides having their own study and literary inclinations as their platforms. Among the resource speakers who graced the foremost parts of the Program were Dr. Hope Sabanpan-Yu on Indigenous Literature; Ms. Mikha Marahombsar Alawi on Transcreation of the Darangen to Manga; Dr. Ednairah Pambangan Esmail on Adaptation of Select Darangen Texts for Use as Grade III Instructional Materials; and Dr. Steven Patrick Fernandez on Appropriating and Transcreating Indigenous Expressions for Show.

Indigenous Literature
                Dr. Hope Sabanpan-Yu on Indigenous Literature quoted  Paul Ricoeur that ‘It is in telling own stories that we give ourselves an identity” in her engaging discussion about folklore and how the expressions in ecological perspective are shared and sustained which eventually become communal and a tradition that we need.
                Dr. Yu encouraged us to do not read and interpret folklore in a bare vacuum. One should read it eco-critically and should ask the question, what attitudes are revealed?
                Two (2) issues were raised in the climax of her discussion, (1) Do our “Zoos” serve the environmental purpose having glass barriers as mediators between the audience and the caged animals?, (2) how the popular carving of names in trees is an explicit evidence of human dominance over nature. The latter can mean a small action for us, but that is surprisingly a big thing that we should bear in mind. She also further discussed how the concept of Wilderness can be imbibed from waterfalls and, of course, the concepts of freedom and restriction in dams or reservoirs.

Transcreation and Darangen
                Transcreation, now largely used anywhere in the Philippines, cannot be found in Dictionaries. This term is popularized by the genius playwright, Dr. Fernandez which was, according to him, borrowed from India and originally used as a marketing instrument. He started his short but substantial discussion saying that we will understand whatever he will say through and by our distinct nurturing. Our creative expressions and our own aesthetics are part of our collective unconscious.
                He continued teasing the audience about concepts and categories which were largely western. Questions were; is there a dance? Or do we have a dance? Are those royal individuals? (Pointing at the projected scene of a performance) and many more mind-blowing teases. A challenge, again, was posed for us- start liberalizing our minds and try to break conventional paradigms. Dr. Fernandez also emphasized the difference of a stage performance from the original which is naturally authentic, that the original is beautiful when it is for the good of the community while a staged performance is beautiful when it is well crafted.
                Moreover, Dr. Esmail and Ms. Alawi presented the fruits of their passion, determination and hardwork. They transcreate selected Epic of Darangen texts for modern use and can even be a great source of entertainment among the young people of today. Their endeavour is an explicit benefit to the language arts, values education and to the K to 12 fulfillment. It is indeed rich of possibilities and opportunities for the teacher and her charges. Why Darangen? For one, we can claim that it is undoubtedly ours and has a repository of the value and belief system of the ancestors of the meranaos.

                Voyagers of this Literatour were surely enlightened and stirred along its fast-sailing cruise. There was a tempest of new concepts and ideas which have caused the confusion. Confusion is part of the learning process. Everyone is admitted that there are still a lot to learn about, that Mindanao has a vast and rich body of literature and folklore. The voyage has rested for now.