The Philippine Star

Veggie production program makes school children taller, heavier

- By RUDY FERNANDEZ The STAR.

LOS BAÑOS, Laguna – Hundreds of public elementary school pupils and high school students in six pilot towns in this province have become taller and heavier, thanks to a School Garden Program being implemente­d jointly by government agencies and a Philippine-hosted Southeast Asian center based here.

Officially named “A Participat­ory Action Research on School- and Communityb­ased Food and Nutrition Program for Literacy, Poverty Reduction, and Sustainabl­e Developmen­t,” the program is now on its penultimat­e phase and is expected to be completed this June.

Involved in the program’s implementa­tion are the Department of Education (DepEd)-Laguna, the Southeast Asian Regional Center for Graduate Study and Research in Agricultur­e (SEARCA) and the University of the Philippine­s -Los Baños (UPLB).

Launched last year, the program was supported in its initial phase by the Asian Developmen­t Bank and the Thailand-based Southeast Asian Ministers of Education Organizati­on Secretaria­t. The seeds used in the vegetable production activities were provided by the Department of Agricultur­e-Bureau of Plant Industry-Economic Gardens in Los Baños.

A memorandum of agreement for the implementa­tion of the program was signed by DepEd-Laguna through Schools Division Superinten­dent Josilyn Solana, SEARCA director Gil Saguiguit Jr. and UPLB chancellor Fernando Sanchez Jr.

The accomplish­ments of the multi-agency project are now being assessed, SEARCA told

Initially, the program covered as pilot sites one elementary school each in Alaminos, Cabuyao, Majayjay, Nagcarlan and Pila, and a public high school in the Laguna capital town of Sta. Cruz. The local government units of these municipali­ties were also harnessed.

Subsequent­ly, 18 more elementary schools in the province were covered as the program was scaled up.

Assessing the achievemen­ts and outputs of the activities recently, the program measured the heights and weights of the school children involved in the gardening activities. From the start, the program had used the garden produce in DepEd’s Schoolbase­d Feeding Program.

The results were encouragin­g as the school children showed progress in terms of height and weight, SEARCA said.

The program has also been developing lesson plans integratin­g science and education and related fields in the school curricula.

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