The Philippine Star

PHINMA makes lives better through education

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“My success as a teacher is not met until all my students are provided with the opportunit­y to succeed,” shared Desiree CendañaPer­reras, an Informatio­n Technology professor at the PHINMA University of Pangasinan. An educator since 2007, Cendaña-Perreras is just one of the 1,674 faculty supporting more than 74,000 strong student population of PHINMA Education.

Since acquiring Araullo University in 2004, PHINMA Education’s mission to make lives better through education has seen it expand to five other locations across the Philippine­s and two more in Southeast Asia. For this rapidly growing network serving low-income students, student success is linked to teacher developmen­t. One of PHINMA Education’s programs for teachers is the

Active Learning (AL) Lab.

AL is an instructio­nal approach where students actively participat­e in their own learning. They apply knowledge and practice skills, and then study and reflect on their progress and efforts. With their teachers as facilitato­rs, students learn through independen­t and collaborat­ive activities and feedback from their teachers and peers.

PHINMA Education’s AL Lab helps its teachers grow as AL teachers. It provides an environmen­t to learn and practice effective teaching strategies and techniques. It features an AL crash course, an AL toolkit with suggested teaching strategies and resource links, additional training modules, and a coaching program.

“The goal of the AL Lab is to help each teacher become an Active Learning teacher.

The vision is that in every learning session in our schools, students are trying things out, reflecting on feedback and lessons learned, and practising their skills,” said PHINMA Education’s chief academics officer Francis Larios.

Teacher developmen­t at PHINMA Education also includes support in pursuing further studies and exposure to training programs outside their respective universiti­es. This helps ensure they provide students with knowledge and skills that are up to date. Cendaña-Perreras, for example, earned her master’s degree in Informatio­n Studies at the Nanyang Technologi­cal University in Singapore with help from PHINMA Education.

“The achievemen­ts of our students and our schools are mainly a product of our employees working hard for our mission, and our students taking responsibi­lity for their own learning,” Larios said.

Since 2014, PHINMA Education has produced 93 board topnotcher­s and 22,287 licensed profession­al graduates.

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