the Weekly Sillimanian - july 17, 2013

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110 years TOWARDS A PROGRESSIVE CAMPUS PRESS | VOL. LXXXVI NO. 01 | WEDNESDAY, 17 JULY 2013

ALL HANDS ON DECK. M/Y Esperanza, a ship operated by Greenpeace, docked at the Dumaguete City pier last July 12 to seek support for their environmental conservation advocacy. Greenpeace is a non-government international organization that aims to protect our oceans and inform people of issues climate change. PHOTO BY Nelly May Dableo

‘Field trips should be a learning tool’ —Garcia By Nova Veraley V. Grafe and Princess T. Abellon

THE MORATORIUM ON field trips that the Commission on Higher Education (CHED) imposed last school year concerning the bus accident in Tuba, Benguet, which claimed the lives of several students and faculty members from Marinduque State College (MSC), has made the Silliman University administration to take-up some actions regarding the university’s

field trip policy. Mark Raygan Garcia, director of the Office of Information and Publications, the university is not prohibiting fieldtrips. “The policy of the university is that [fieldtrips] have to be part of the academic curriculum,” he said. The moratorium by CHED last school year was in effect to review the policy on fieldtrips particularly by public schools. “But, what the university did was to take the initiative to also review

its own policy. Again, we cannot just say yes to all requests for our students to go on a field trip,” Garcia cleared out. Garcia also added that the university has to take some considerations on whether a field trip should be approved or not. Fieldtrips have to be a part of the academic curriculum, the venues must be safe and parents must be made aware of the budget. Starting this school year, field trips that will be approved by the university

will have to be incorporated into the academic curriculum. Students from the different colleges in the university should be made aware of the field trip, not only when they’re enrolling, but also in their syllabus and curriculum. “You need to secure a permit from the Office of Student Services and that permit would be endorsed by your dean and then forwarded to the office of the Vice President for the Academic Affairs,” Garcia explained.

“We used to have the UCLEW as a jampacked week of activities. This time, we changed it to UCLEM because we had to distribute the various programs and events considering that students have longer class hours from Tuesday to Friday,” Rogen Alcantara, USLC Program Coordinator, said. He added that the plan on having a longer celebration for the UCLEM has long been discussed in their regular meetings. USLC wanted to provide more opportunities for Sillimanians to strengthen their faith. However, it was only this year that the plan was implemented. “At least they now have a longer

period for reflection,” Alcantara said. Among the more popular in the line-up of activities is the Galilean Fellowship where students are welcomed into the homes of faculty and staff members and alumni for group reflections. All-Dormitory Commitment and Dedication Fellowship will cap the celebration on July 29. Apart from the said change, USLC launched the “Prayer Hotline Project” last July 8. This initiative of the USLC, Student Government and the Silliman University Church Youth Ministry is aimed at providing better access to spiritual counseling or a support group. ~

CHOOSING JESUS. Atty. Mikhail Lee Maxino dean of the College of Law delivers his message to students from selected colleges during the UCLEM midweek service last July 10. This year’s theme is “Jesus Christ the chief cornerstone”.

SU Launches Christian Life Emphasis Month By Katrin Anne A. Arcala

CONSISTENT WITH THE university’s five-day week scheme where Mondays are reserved for outside-class learning activities, the University Spiritual Life Council (USLC) now dedicated an entire month for faith-nurturing activities instead of just a week. A series of activities is lined up for July for the first semester. The celebration is guided by the theme “Jesus Christ, the Chief Cornerstone”. It began last July 7 with the Commissioning Worship and Communion Service at the Silliman University Church.

The university’s policy on field trips has been practiced in the past. This school year a new requirement for field trips was incorporated explicitly in the curriculum. “Because it’s for [the students] advantage, it’s really to help the students and their parents budget their funds at the start of the school year, because we don’t like field trips to be a leisure thing. Field trips should primarily be a learning facility, a learning tool,” Garcia stressed. ~

Students, teachers voice Storms cause 99% damage of Apo feedback on new school Island corals day format By Jelanie Rose T. Elvinia

WITH SILLIMAN UNIVERSITY embracing a new school day format starting this school year, its constituents have been throwing feedback, something the university considers as healthy. The Picture The “5-Day Week Scheme” is a new school day format that is broken down into two: one day (Monday) to be spent for related learning activities and four days to be spent for class. Traditional class hours spread across five days are now lumped into four days. Office of Information and Publications Director, Mark Raygan Garcia, said that the plan on having the new format had been in discussion at least a school year ago among the deans and academic administrators of the university. Garcia said that the scheme involves: the same course curriculum, the same approach to the delivery of

course content and the same number of class hours required to finish a course; the same number of academic days in a school year, teachers and place of learning. He added that scheduling is done to ensure that the students in the School of Basic Education hold classes over the same period which is 7:30AM to 5PM and College classes are scheduled to ensure that they are mostly done by 7PM, as before. Garcia also cited advantages of having the scheme: minimizing unnecessary expenses on days when students travel to campus only for a subject or two and utilizing Monday as a replacement class day in case classes during the other four days are suspended due to unexpected events such as typhoons or special holidays. The Inside Story The new scheduling in the university has garnered a mix of reactions. Antonio Vincoy Jr., a senior student taking continued on page 4

By Samantha L. Colinco

STRONG TYPHOONS IN the last two years contributed to the 99 percent damage of the coral cover in Apo Island, marine experts said. Dr. Aileen Maypa, a researcher at the Coastal Conservation and Education Foundation, said that before the typhoons, corals in Apo covered 75 percent of the sea floor, but now only 0.63 percent is left. “Corals have a highly complex environment. When we lose the coral cover, we lose the reef, then the habitat and then the fish,” she added. Maypa along with other marine and environmental experts announced their findings last July 12 after a reef check of the marine sanctuary condition in Apo Island. The inspection was assisted by international environmental organization, Greenpeace, which docked its ship MY Esperanza (Spanish word for “hope”) in

Dumaguete last July 9. Dr. Janet Estacion, a researcher at Silliman University Institute of Environmental and Marine Sciences said that worsening storms in the province is a sign of climate change. “Fisherfolk in the Philippines become more marginalized as the marine ecosystems they depend on are destroyed and fish migration pattern gets less predictable,” she added. Greenpeace Southeast Asia representative, Mark Dia, said that in the past 10 years alone, temperature rise due to too much carbon in the atmosphere has come to point where “it is difficult to imagine that this could be reversed.” He cited recent reports by the World Bank projecting extreme weather events to be more severe in Southeast Asia in the coming decades. By 2050, increased water temperatures will severely affect fish catch that in the Philippines. It is

predicted to decrease by 50 percent, the report said. Dia added that the oceans have especially borne the brunt of climate change because the waters absorb a lot of carbon from the atmosphere causing the oceans to be very acidic. “When the water becomes too acidic, coral reefs, squids, clams and some planktons, do not survive,” he said. “We are looking at severe stress not only in our ecosystem but in the food chain in the marine environment.” Dia added that everyone needs to do something to save the ocean because “we are all dependent on it. Remember, every breath we take today comes from the ocean.” Greenpeace’s MY Esperanza is in the Philippines for the “Ocean Defender Tour of Southeast Asia 2013.” It aims to promote the beauty of the Philippine seas, to expose the destruction of its oceans and to call for urgent government action to save local waters from crisis. ~


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