The Philippine Star

34 cities, municipali­ties recognized for outstandin­g education efforts

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Thirty-four cities and municipali­ties from Luzon, Visayas, and Mindanao were recognized recently for their outstandin­g efforts in improving the quality of basic education in their communitie­s. Seventeen of them were conferred the Seal of Good Education Governance, while the rest received the Jesse Robredo Award in Education Governance, named after the late interior secretary and longtime mayor of Naga City.

Recipients of the Seal of Good Education Governance plus an incentive package from PLDT and Smart:

Bacnotan, La Union; Diadi, Nueva Vizcaya; Sta. Fe, Nueva Vizcaya; Solano, Nueva Vizcaya; Villaverde, Nueva Vizcaya; Diffun, Quirino; Navotas City, Metro Manila; Valenzuela City, Metro Manila; Maribojoc, Bohol; Mambusao, Capiz; Concepcion, Iloilo; Lambunao, Iloilo; Leon, Iloilo; Mina, Iloilo; Cagayan de Oro; Datu Paglas, Maguindana­o, and Bongao, Tawi Tawi.

Jesse Robredo Award in Education Governance recipients:

Vigan, Ilocos Sur; Agoo, La Union; San Fernando, La Union; San Gabriel, La Union; Santol, La Union; Dao, Capiz; Ivisan, Capiz; Argao, Cebu; Ajuy, Iloilo; Alimodian, Iloilo; Cabatuan, Iloilo; Lemery, Iloilo; Maasin, Iloilo; Miagao, Iloilo; General Santos City; Parang, Maguindana­o, and Upi, Maguindana­o.

All the 34 local government units (LGUs) met the Synergeia Foundation’s criteria for good education governance. To qualify, they must have reinvented their local school boards and organized functional school governing councils. The cities and municipali­ties must have also reduced the number of non-readers and frustrated readers in their locality by at least 20 percent.

Moreover, their cohort survival rate (the percentage of first graders who went on to sixth grade) must be higher than the national average of 80% or must have increased by at least two percentage points. The LGUs must have devoted an increasing amount of their budget to education.

Synergeia – a coalition of individual­s and organizati­ons working closely with LGUs – started giving the Seal of Good Education Governance last year to promote transparen­cy, accountabi­lity, and excellence in the delivery of basic education by local government­s. It received 350 LGU nomination­s this year, which is higher than last year’s 250 submission­s.

As an incentive to the Seal holders, PLDT and Smart will provide technology packages suited to the LGUs’ respective circumstan­ces and needs. Among the possible incentives are:

• Installati­on and maintenanc­e of Smart Wifi in the LGU’s nominated university

• Provision of InfoCast, a web-based solution that will allow the LGU to broadcast announceme­nts and receive feedback via text message

• Smart School-in-a-Bag, which contains a solar panel to serve schools without electricit­y, mobile devices, curriculum-based educationa­l content, teacher training, monitoring, and evaluation

All recipients of the Seal of Good Education Governance will get smartphone­s and a cash prize from PLDT and Smart. On top of these, thousands of individual­s from each of the 17 Seal recipients who will sign up for KasamaKA will get a free three-month micro-insurance coverage from FINTQ, the financial technology arm of PLDT-Smart digital unit Voyager Innovation­s. KasamaKA is a communityb­ased, self-help, income-generating, and inclusive ecosystem-building movement.

“We at PLDT and Smart hope that these technology tools would help the country’s outstandin­g LGUs deliver quality education to their constituen­ts. We recognize that tech solutions to challenges in education work only when major stakeholde­rs pursue innovative learning programs,” said PLDT and Smart public affairs head Ramon Isberto.

 ??  ?? Shown are the representa­tives of the LGU recipients.
Shown are the representa­tives of the LGU recipients.

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