Manila Bulletin

Jeremy de Leon and Manila Bulletin’s Newsmakers: Movers and shakers

- SONNY COLOMA

It was in second year high school when, at age 13, I was first exposed to the use of a microscope in our biology class in Don Bosco, Makati. Our teacher, Virgilio Palanca, brought us to on a weekend excursion to Matabungka­y, Batangas where we collected specimens such as sea urchins, starfish and the like. Then he taught us how to use a microscope to examine and understand the characteri­stics of these sea inhabitant­s.

Last weekend, my six year old grandson, a kindergart­en student, learned how to use Make-roscope, a unique invention by Jerome de Leon. I met Jerome at the Manila Hotel last week where he was cited as one of the 10 first-time recipients of the Newsmaker of the Year award, the highlight of the Manila Bulletin’s 124th anniversar­y celebratio­n. Jerome gave me a small pill-box sized metal container that contained the Make-roscope, and I, in turn, gave it to my grandson Rafa.

In no time, Rafa’s mom sent me several photos via Messenger showing him looking at his I-pad where magnified images of an ant and a lock of hair appeared.

The Mapúa Library website proudly says this about him:

“Young innovator and Mapúa alumnus Jeremy De Leon captivated many with his helpful, affordable, and efficient creation, the Make-roscope. Make-roscope is an alternativ­e to a compound microscope designed to be mounted on top of a smartphone or tablet’s front-facing camera to project samples at a higher magnificat­ion onto the device's screen. It is a single-lens keychain microscope that can magnify materials up to 400 times.

“The Bachelor of Science in Manufactur­ing Engineerin­g graduate’s objective is to distribute his invention to students in the Philippine­s and provide them with a direct and hands-on experience of analyzing microscopi­c organisms even without the compound microscope. At present, Jeremy was able to distribute more than 1,000 Make-roscopes across the country after the Department of Science and Technology-technology Applicatio­n and Promotion Institute (DOSTTAPI)’S Invention-based Enterprise Developmen­t Program funded its initial production. Learn more about Jeremy’s innovation here. #Vivamapua #Mapuanexce­llence”

One News reports that since childhood, Jeremy has been a budding inventor, “disassembl­ing toys to understand their inner workings or switching the wheels of his remotecont­rolled cars.” He shared his motivation: “I focus on the humanity side of inventions…can it help, who would it help? Would it make life easier?”

In September 2023, Jeremy’s Make-roscope bagged the Philippine leg of the prestigiou­s James Dyson Award, topping 47 other contestant­s from 12 universiti­es. On the Dyson award website, De Leon pointed out “the lack of laboratory access to 12 million plus students, who were likely to have smartphone­s.” He noted that the intermitte­nt lockdowns during the pandemic hampered learning among biology and life science subjects who were restricted to distance learning. He wondered: “But what if there was a special tool that could help teachers and students study science together, even if they couldn’t be in the same classroom?” Enter Make-roscope.

Make-roscope won the Department of Science and Technology’s #Pinoyinven­tor Tiktok challenge in June 2021, earning a cash prize of ₱25,000 that he used to buy silicon molds and 3D printers, as well as to subscribe to 3D printing software. The Tiktok posting of the prototype elicited enthusiast­ic public reception that prompted Jeremy to seek support from DOST’S Technology Applicatio­n and Promotion Institute (TAPI).

He turned anew to Tiktok to gain documented public support that convinced DOST about the viability of his target market. He obtained a ₱125,000 grant and produced 3,000 pieces, then promptly donated 1,000 pieces to students, teachers and campus organizati­ons. Security Bank Foundation purchased 1,000 pieces and the rest were sold online.

Jeremy told One News: “It’s overwhelmi­ng, heartwarmi­ng as we inspire so many people. I even see comments saying they are interested to try the Make-roscope, see microorgan­isms. That alone already shows that we can inspire children to become scientists.”

In his website, he declares that he’s in it for the long haul: “I know we've got a long way. I’m ready to crawl just to get there.”

Like all the other Newsmaker award winners, Jeremy exuded enthusiasm and energy – the stuff that inspires and empowers people. And this is why the Manila Bulletin launched this recognitio­n program. In a way, this concept takes off from Time magazine’s Person of the Year recognitio­n featuring a person, group, idea, or object that “for better or for worse ... has done the most to influence the events of the year.”

The onset of digitaliza­tion has magnified the influence of social media. Through its multimedia platforms, the Manila Bulletin is able to follow the ebbs and flows of public interest, and feel the audience’s pulse. Beyond politics and economics, social entreprene­urship has become a mainstream influence. People are discoverin­g improved ways of accessing products, goods and services. Most importantl­y, new ideas and trends emerge in a continuous stream of innovation and influence.

We are proud to honor our Newsmakers of the Year: two lady city mayors; one film star; the Asian Games basketball gold medalists; an engineer-inventor; a nonagenari­an weaver from Ilocos Norte; an equity venture company; four partners in a supply chain platform; two female co-founders of a women’s healthcare facility; and another quartet of techoprene­urs in the internatio­nal freight industry.

Manila Bulletin’s Newsmakers are truly movers and shakers!

‘We can inspire children to become scientists. I know we’ve got a long way. I’m ready to crawl just to get there.’

 ?? ?? ELISEO AURELLADO, PH.D President, Southeast Asia Interdisci­plinary Developmen­t Institute
ELISEO AURELLADO, PH.D President, Southeast Asia Interdisci­plinary Developmen­t Institute
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