Philippine Daily Inquirer

He’s coming ’round …

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heart-stopping. The convoy had to maneuver less than a meter from the edge of steep, muddy roads while avoiding the students who were walking alongside on the way to their school.

The school was filled with students, teachers, parents and kibitzers who were all excited to see a government official from the national level for the first time.

Luistro, upon arrival, was elated to watch a ritual dance performanc­e by Ifugao natives.

Like paradise

At the commenceme­nt rites, the secretary spoke of his admiration for the rich culture and the paradise-like place of the Ifugaos.

“This morning was one of the best mornings in my life,” Luistro said. He then described how he saw God’s face in the beautiful rice fields facing the silhouette of a mountain topped by the rising sun. He also heard birds chirping.

The secretary urged the new graduates, their teachers and parents to use their local culture to forge an educationa­l system responsive to their place of origin and faithful to the Ifugao spirit but at par with the convention­al curriculum.

“Whenever I see the payo (rice terraces), I think to myself, does it not have math in it? Isn’t there engineerin­g in it?” Luistro said in Filipino to the Ifugaos.

“You have a lot to tell us about the Filipino way of thinking. I think you will help the nation discover the Filipino spirit. National heritage brings a profound wisdom that can never be found in books.”

The graduation rites were highlighte­d by the launch of the Special Secondary School for the Conservati­on of the Ifugao Rice Terraces (SSSCIRT), situated near the hilly part of the school beside its covered court.

A native hut and a miniature payo were built there to serve as a classroom where the next generation of Ifugaos could learn how to appreciate and preserve their heritage.

Luistro led the ribbon cutting. He then drank rice wine as part of the ceremony and danced with the natives to celebrate the opening of the SSSCIRT.

Adopted son

Luistro was made an adopted son of Banaue and given the local name Kimmayong, after a legendary ancestor who was an icon of education and peace.

He further underscore­d the importance of indigenous people (IP) education in visits to Bontoc and Sagada in Mountain Province.

In Bontoc, Luistro met with Dr. Dennis Faustino, headmaster of St. Mary’s School (SMS) in Sagada, and the alumni and board members of All Saints Mission School.

Faustino, who revived SMS in 2005 after it almost closed down due to financial problems, has already added a fifth year to high school and has been promoting cultural understand­ing.

Luistro and Faustino joined Mountain Province schools division superinten­dent Mary Lang-ayan, Sagada Mayor Eduardo Latawan Jr. and Rep. Maximo Dalog on the last two days of the visit to promote IP education and the K to 12 program.

Before an audience of about 500 students, teachers, principals and school administra­tors at the SMS gymnasium, Luistro tried to clarify issues regarding K to 12.

Luistro said the K to 12 program did not have to be followed to the letter.

“The curriculum is only a guide,” he explained. “What you see in the K to 12 curriculum is only the minimum. I expect the public and private schools, especially the private schools, to do more.”

He also stressed how the local culture was significan­t in the learning process as a means of “breaking away” from the Western paradigm.

“It takes a dap-ay to educate a child,” he said, a variation of the saying “It takes a village to educate a child.”

A dap-ay is a place where the indigenous people of Mountain Province gather to discuss community problems, the intervals filled with dances, songs and rituals.

The trip farther north had been risky, with muddy roads, falling rocks and steep slopes. Not to mention that the secretary’s car also suffered a flat tire. But it had been a weekend worth it all for the education secretary.

 ??  ?? LUISTRO with Faustino, SMS students, and Deped officials; at the Deped office in
Lamut, Ifugao
LUISTRO with Faustino, SMS students, and Deped officials; at the Deped office in Lamut, Ifugao

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