•VP Robredo takes daughters on a
bonding trip to Bohol
• Bohol teachers use gadget to
'preserve voice'
Cristopher Boncales felt nervous when he was tasked to give tour to the
country’s second highest official who visited Bohol last Wednesday.
“I was speechless because I was nervous,” he told VRS.
He admitted that he was at a loss for words when he came face-to-face with Vice
President elect Leni Robredo. He was relieved when the soft-spoken Robredo was
smiling to him asking him simple inquiries on the places they went on Bohol.
Boncales, 40, a tour guide of 22 years, has been guiding VIPs,
ambassadors and other high ranking officials to Bohol. He said it was a
privilege guiding the Robredo and her family of their Bohol countryside tour.
Vice President elect Leni Robredo listens
to tour guide Cristopher
Boncalez (blue shirt)
during their Loboc river cruise last Wednesday.
Courtesy: Liza Macalandag
|
“She was very much interested on Bohol. She was interested about the
Chocolate Hills, tarsier and Loboc River River,” said Boncales.
With only two weeks before she assumes office as the land's second
highest official, Robredo and her three daughters- Aika, Trisha at Jillian-
were visiting Bohol last Monday.
Robredo took a break from work for some quality time with her daughters.
She said her vacation was a family bonding because she missed taking care of
her daughters during her poll campaign in the last 10 months.
“Ito kasi bakayon sa mga bata. Iniwasan ko talaga magtrabaho kasi halos na-neglect ko sila halos ng 10 months. Eh, ngayon ito talaga para sa kanila,” Robredo told VRS in an interview in Loboc town.
Although Robredo was visiting Bohol thrice, it was this vacation she was
able to explore the province’s tourist attractions.
“Masaya ako..ilang beses na din akong nakapunta pero ngayon lang
yata ako makakaikot. Lahat na punta ko lahat trabaho. Ngayon lang talaga
kasama ang mga anak ko ko na bibisita sa mga must- see na mga sights dito sa
Bohol,” she said.
The family went to Oslob, Cebu for whale shark watching last
Tuesday morning. After Oslob, they went to Balicasag Island off Panglao
town for snorkelling. Balicasag Island is a known world-class diving site.
Last Wednesday, they visited the Chocolate Hills in Carmen town.
They also visited the man-made Loboc and posed with the tarsier
considered the smallest primate in the world. At 11 a.m., they had lunch
at Loboc River together with Loboc Mayor Helen Calipusan-Alaba, provincial
administrator Alfonso Ae Damalerio, Benjie Oliva and tour operator Lourdes
Sultan.
During a stopover at the end of Loboc River for a cruise, the Robredo
family joined with a local dance group which entertains the “cruisers.”
Robredo said she was not able to thank some Boholanos who voted for her
last May 9 elections. She garnered 272, 649 votes in Bohol.
“Hindi pa lahat. Babalik ako,” she said.
For Damalerio, the visit of Robredo can help boost the
tourism of Bohol. He said Robredo has recognized Bohol’s huge
potentials in making a substantial contribution to national economic growth.
“Well, she assured she will promote Bohol,” said Damalerio who
accompanied Robredo in her countryside tour.
“It was her first time to see Bohol, almost all the tourist attractions
in Bohol. When she was here it was purely campaign. Now, she saw the wealth and
wonder of Bohol,” added Damalerio.
The annual tourist arrival in Bohol is pegged at 500,000, a report from
the Bohol Tourism Office. But the figure is expected to increase to 1.7 million
per year once construction of the new P7.14-billion Bohol airport on Panglao
Island is completed.
Robredo was mobbed by supporters during her stopovers. She gamely
mingled with supporters and fans and participated in some photo opportunities.
Robredo said she has yet to talk with President-elect Rodrigo Duterte
regarding her possible appointment to the incoming Cabinet.
Duterte and Robredo will hold separate inauguration ceremonies
on June 30.
Robredo would be in Cebu City on June 28 to administer the oath of
Cebu City Mayor-elect Tomas OsmeƱa, a good friend of her husband, the
late Interior Secretary Jesse Robredo who died of plane crash in Masbate in
August 2012.
***
Teachers use gadget
to 'preserve voice'
As classes opened on Monday, Rochelle Marie Bolotaolo’s voice rises
above the usual classroom noises and distractions, such as the clatter of
students hustling through the hallway, and a noise from an on-going
construction of classroom buildings. The students can still hear her clearer.
But that's not because she's shouting rather, Bolotaolo is addressing her
students through a wireless microphone clipped to her uniform.
Bolotaolo, 33, who has been teaching at the already congested Dr. Cecilio Putong National High School (DCPNHS) for five years, uses a portable sound system (lavalier or lapel microphone), a wireless, hands-free microphone to be heard by her students.
“There is buzzing noise outside so I need to use a lapel,” said
Bolotaolo.
She said she has been using the portable sound system for four years.
She said she found it practical and effective.
"It is very effective. Aside from the microphone there is a USB I
can use for my lesson,” she said.
Without the gadget, Bolotaolo said it would be next to impossible for
her students to hear her as the noise of ongoing construction of more
classrooms in DCPNHS drowns out class lessons.
And with 50 students, Bolotaolo can’t expect to be heard clearly by
everyone in her class.
Bolotaolo’s class can be considered oversized as the ideal class size is only 45 students for high school and 35 for elementary school.
She said she had experienced fatigue before because she had to strain
her voice.
It’s the effect of lack of classrooms and more students as a result of
the K-12 program that adds more years to basic elementary and high school
education to meet international standards.
Another Grade 7 teacher, Jeanette Yenogacio, said she used the sound
system to prevent too much strain on her vocal chords.
“I should preserve my voice because I still have six sections to
handle,” Yenogacio said. The gadget, she said, helps her students,” even those
seated at the back,” to hear her.
Boloatolo and Yenogacio bought the gadgets using their own money. They,
however, don’t mind dipping into their own pockets because they know it would
be for the benefit of their students.
“I believe better sound will translate into better learning. I noticed
the students can absorb the lessons well,” said Yenogacio.
Yenogacio noticed that her students were attentive and focus on the
class.
“My students can hear me clearer and better,” she said.
Yenogacio, who was one of the teachers who used the portable sound
system, recalled that she lost her voice a couple of times and suffered several
sore throats when she was not using the gadget while teaching.
She said before none of the teachers wanted to wear the gadget. At least
seven out of 150 teachers at DCPNHS are using lapel mic.
“At first, none of us really wanted to wear mic lapel but years
after we get used to it,” she said.
While education officials had said everything is set for the start of
the school year and senior high school, perennial problems remain.
Class sizes had to be expanded and schools use one room for two or more
classes, held by shifts, to cope with lack of classrooms.
Virgilia Omictin, DCPNHS principal, said she is encouraging
teachers to use portable sound system since it is helpful.
“It can prevent teacher’s fatigue,” she said.
She also said by using the gadget, it can decrease teachers' voice
strain, increase students' attention and aid in classroom participation.
"I think it has had an impact in the classroom teaching,"
Omictin said.
DCPNHS, which has at least 5,000 students this school year, hold classes
from 6 a.m. to noon and from noon to 6 p.m. to accommodate two classes per
room.
Omictin anticipated the school population to increase by 4 or 5 percent.
Grade 11, or senior high school, classes are to be held in morning and
afternoon shifts.
In August, Omictin said two buildings with 16 classrooms would be
finished and these could ease the shortage of rooms.
“But we are K-12 ready,” quipped Omictin.
***
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