Barre boys

Posted by: Doctor Medical  :  Category: Health News

MANILA, Philippine — Friends Arnulfo Andrade, Elpidio Magat, and King Magno had no interest in dancing whatsoever, much less in ballet, when they entered the School of Ballet Manila for a summer workshop. The three were practically forced by their families into it.

But some grand jetes and pirouettes later, the three boys are now considered the most promising danseurs of Ballet Manila, even winning competitions like the National Music Competitions for Young Artists (NAMCYA), and performing in shows here and abroad. Their dreams have even gone several notches higher — they want to become principal dancers, to be as successful as their idols Mikhail Baryshnikov of Russia, and Rudy de Dios of Ballet Manila!

“Noong bata ako puro laro lang naman siya sa akin. Hindi ko pa masyadong sineseryoso,” says 18-year-old Arnulfo. “Pero nung natuto na, nagpupursige na ako para makakuha ng magandang roles sa mga performances.”

For the boys
Osias Barroso, Ballet Manila artistic associate and ballet master, says there is still a big void for male ballet dancers in the country because ballet is still seen as a female art form. In fact, ballet audiences are also predominantly female, and most boys rule it out from among the serious careers.

“Going back to many years ago, parents opt to enroll only their daughters because classes are so expensive. Hindi mo na mae-enroll ‘yung lalaking anak,” Barroso explains. “Fortunately, there are more who appreciate ballet now because of what Lisa Macuja is doing. Now, we go to schools and make ballet accessible even to the slum areas, unlike before when it was accessible only to the rich and famous.”

Prior to taking ballet classes, Elpidio thought ballet was unmanly. “Pambabae ang ballet, ‘yan ang nasa isip ko dati. Pero nung nagtagal, I realized why danseurs are important, it is because ballerinas need partners,’’ he says.

Thus, in an effort to encourage boys to pursue ballet, the School of Ballet Manila launched a scholarship program for aspiring danseurs. But this tipped the balance because at present, the school has more male than female dancers. The school is thus offering scholarships for future ballerinas. Summer workshops at the School of Ballet Manila start on April 5.

Men in tights
What was ironic is that the Ballet Manila school’s very first male dancers were sons of soldiers!

Barroso recalls: “When their fathers learned that they were taking ballet classes, pinalayas sila. It was a typical reaction. Kinausap ko ‘yung mga tatay. I told them bluntly that their sons won’t turn gay because they’re dancing ballet. Pero nung nakapanood sila, ok na. The three of them became our soloists. One is now dancing in Barcelona and is married to a ballerina,” Barroso relates how danseurs continue to fight stereotypes.

To build self-esteem among the danseurs and give them solid physical training, the School of Ballet Manila holds male-only classes.

“It’s really a training for male ballet dancers. Iba kasi ang approach sa mga lalaki, mahirap. They are like athletes, and their focus are the jumps and the turns. Kasi sa lines ng lalaki, it’s graceful if you show your pose in the air. They have to strengthen their backs when they lift. While for girls, their gracefulness is shown through the movements and kapag binubuhat sila ng lalaki,” Barroso explains.

Art ambassadors
As prima ballerina Lisa Macuja’s dancing partner for 16 years, Barroso has seen danseurs come and go. He differentiates danseurs from then and now.

“During my time, since konti lang ang lalaki, they get away with everything. Walang discipline, malaki ang mga ulo, and they even resort to blackmailing to get roles. Since konti lang kami, alam nila na hindi sila maki-kick out. Very few lang ang disciplined boys. But now, with Lisa and me, aside from training them well, we also hone them to be very good human beings, to be professionals.”

But more than being a good ballet dancer, Barroso says that aspiring dancers should also be aware of another important role — as ambassadors for the arts.

“Just like any other ballet dancer, you have to love it. At the same time, we instill in them their role as Filipino artists, their love for the arts. It’s a big responsibility. And I think as these kids grow older, they will begin to understand the situation and how important the arts and their role in the society are,” he ends.

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DepEd to implement kindergarten summer program

Posted by: Doctor Medical  :  Category: Health News

MANILA, Philippine — To ensure that all incoming Grade 1 pupils have developed the necessary learning skills, the Department of Education (DepEd) will implement an eight-week Kindergarten Summer Program (KSP) in all schools nat ionwide f rom April 11 to June 3.

“When young children are better prepared on the ways of school life, they develop a positive attitude towards schooling. They value learning more, strive to excel, and are more likely to finish basic education. This is what we want our young children to develop through KSP,” said Education Secretary Armin Luistro.

Studies reveal that early schooling positively affects students’ completion of elementary and secondary education.

Through KSP, DepEd is set to strengthen its campaign towards achieving the Education For All (EFA) goal by catering to prospective Grade 1 entrants who did not go through preschool. EFA 2015 Plan of Action cites that attaining success in the first grade encourages children to complete elementary education.

To yield more EFA benefits, DepEd- Bureau of Elementary Education (BEE) continues to expand and intensify the Early Childhood Care and Development (ECCD) for children ages three to five years old.

BEE has implemented the preschool program since 1970. However, as of 2010, only 79 percent of the 2.4 million kindergarten children from both public and private schools had been reached. This shows the low readiness level of Grade 1 children and the high incidence of nonreaders and drop outs prevailing until Grade 3.

Kindergarten teachers
Permanent kindergarten teachers and those who were hired under the DepEd subsidized kindergarten program will handle the kindergarten summer classes (KSCs) which shall have a minimum of 20 and a maximum of 25 enrollees.

In cases where the prospective enrollees are located in remote barangays, an itinerant teacher shall be assigned to handle classes in two adjacent barangays, with each class having at least eight enrollees.

All implementing schools shall use the enriched eight-week kindergarten summer program curriculum. Instructional materials that include manipulative toys, songs in CD format, big books and storybooks distributed by the BEE shall be used.

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All set for college

Posted by: Doctor Medical  :  Category: Health News

MANILA, Philippine — When college doors open next school year for Laukya Reddy and Royce Pacibe, the two Fountain International School (FIS) students will stand in good stead, thanks to the academic powerhouse experience imbued in them.

For Reddy, FIS’ strong academic tradition is what drew her parents to enroll her in FIS after they arrived from India. “Of all the schools that we inquired at, FIS is the only school that has two subjects focused on Math and Science per year level,” Reddy says.

Reddy also had to confront something else: studying in an international school. After all, it was her first time to be in a multi-cultural classroom. She had expected to have a hard time, be jeered at but on her first day at school- none of her worst expectations occurred. She was already comfortable with her classroom, teachers and classmates.

On the other hand, the outstanding education is something that Royce Pacibe can attest to. Pacibe was one of the two FIS students that won gold and bronze medals in Physics international competitions in Turkey, Bosnia Herzegovina and Georgia. As a scholar, Pacibe resides in the FIS dormitory, where the FIS culture of openness continues.

“It doesn’ t matter whether you’re Filipino or not. People here are warm and tolerant. They accept everyone for what they are, regardless of culture and nationality,” he says.

Studying in FIS has provided students such as Reddy and Pacibe the opportunity to learn about other cultures, and develop a global perspective which they
needed in this 21st century setting. As Reddy says, “Before I was not really keen on taking new things, exploring but after studying in FIS, if there’s a challenge, I’m the first to say ‘let me try it’. I’m thankful for FIS for giving the push to do better.”

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Binay is P.W.U. commencement speaker

Posted by: Doctor Medical  :  Category: Health News

MANILA, Philippine — Vice President Jejomar Binay will be the speaker at the 88th commencement exercises of the Philippine Women’s University on April 2, 8 a.m. at the Plenary Hall of the Philippine International Convention Center in Pasay City.

Binay will also receive the Conrado Benitez Heritage Award for his humanitarian efforts and excellent record as Mayor of Makati. Board chairperson Dr. Helena Z Benitez will hand the award. Vice president for Academic Affairs Dr. Vivien Talisayon will present the candidates for graduation from the Manila and Quezon City campuses.

Leading the 650 graduates are magna cum laude Hanna Chua, an Underwood scholar from the School of Music, first honorable mention Alfredo Morecho, Jr. from the School Hospitality Management, and Chessa Yutankin, a Communication Arts graduate and an Underwood scholar.

Celebrity candidates for graduation this school year are TV host and Ambassador of the Arts Boy Abunda (MA in Communication Arts) and movie/tv actress Carmi Martin (Bachelor of Fine Arts in Advertising).

Bongbong seeks student-friendly payment scheme
Senator Ferdinand “Bongbong” Marcos, Jr. recently asked Malacanang to execute a student-friendly repayment scheme to ensure success of “study now-pay later” programs of the government.

Marcos emphasized that the government, through the Department of Education (DepEd), should know by now the pitfalls of the student loan program and be able to avoid them by crafting a better “repayment scheme that is both efficient and workable whereby students would not be saddled by payment obligations long after
graduation.”

Marcos said that the DepEd should carefully study the feasibility of the measures as well as analyze successful models all over the world.

He noted the experience in some schools in England and in the United States, whereby students could not timely meet their loan obligations to their schools, such that their delinquencies extended even after they have graduated.

The hearing revealed that the Philippines is no stranger to the phenomenon in the Western countries, since, according to the DepEd, student loan programs presently in use in the Philippines have a dismal repayment rate of zero percent although the rate has recently improved to four percent.

C.E.U.-P.A.C.E. sets Cariology and Aesthetic Dentistry training
The Centro Escolar University Professional and Continuing Education will hold the Cariology and Aesthetic Dentistry Training starting on April 6 to June 8.

The training program, in partnership with the School of Dentistry, includes a lecture- seminar and the didactic application in advanced esthetic dentistry. It includes topics on dental caries – incipient, moderate, sever, cervical caries, preventive dentistry, restorative treatment using direct and indirect composite resins, porcelain, post and core build-up, and other aesthetic options like bleaching, incisal lengthening (crown extension procedures) and diastema closure. The course also includes oral photography for evaluation and presentation of clinical cases.

For inquiries, call PACE at 735-6861 to 71 loc. 337 or e-mail ceupace@yahoo.com.

Science educators hold confab
The Association of Science Teachers and Educators of the Philippines, Inc. (ASTEP) will hold its 7th National Convention on April 14, 15 and 16 at the Bohol Plaza Resort in Panglao Island, Bohol.

Anchored on the theme “ASTEP on the go: Weaving Science and Culture – Experiencing Bohol” the convention aims to relate science teaching with the culture and tradition of the community; and design engaging, interactive and effective classroom activities that will facilitate integration of science and culture and demonstrate transfer of learning.

The confab includes a seminar-workshop and a one-day educational tour. It is open to Science and AP teachers, subject area coordinators, academic supervisors, and administrators.

For inquiries, call ASTEP president Elma Pedregosa at 0905-2943727 or email astep_2003@yahoo.com.

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13-year-old kart driver appeals doping ban

Posted by: Doctor Medical  :  Category: Health News

GENEVA (AP) – Branded a doping cheat at age 13, a kart driver is appealing a two-year ban to the Court of Arbitration for Sport.

Igor Walilko of Poland is scheduled to give evidence at the Lausanne-based court on Thursday when his lawyers challenge the ban imposed by motor sport’s governing body, the FIA.

Walilko was 12 when he tested positive for the banned stimulant nikethamide after an international kart race in Germany last July. It was the driver’s first doping test.

Walilko’s lawyer Michael Lehner tells The Associated Press the case is “very difficult” for the teenager, who was a national junior champion.

“He was very famous in Poland and, one day after, he was a criminal child,” Lehner said in a telephone interview. “He has good chances to go to a career in motor sport, and now with a two-year ban it’s finished.”

The FIA did not respond to requests for comment on the case.

According to Walilko’s website, he began riding motocross bikes at 4 and followed his father, Rafal, into the sport.

In 2007, Walilko started competitive racing in karts — the same route taken by Michael Schumacher and Lewis Hamilton on their road to become Formula One world champions.

“He has a lot of talent,” Lehner said. “The father pushed him, this is normal in sport, but the father doesn’t push him in doping.”

Walilko won the Polish junior title in 2009. He competed in Germany last season, piloting 125cc engines in KF3 class races. At the Ampfing circuit on July 18, he finished second in a 24-lap race, reaching speeds of 55 mph.

German organizers took a urine sample after the race, and it showed traces of nikethamide. The World Anti-Doping Agency classifies nikethamide as a specified substance that allows for explanations of accidental use — if an athlete proves how it was consumed.

“A 12-year-old boy is not able to remember what he eats the whole day,” Lehner said. “Maybe he gets it from some friends, we don’t know.”

The World Anti-Doping Code states that cases “involving a minor shall be considered a particularly serious violation,” but also points out that “certainly youth and lack of experience are relevant factors to be assessed.”

The FIA anti-doping panel looked at Walilko’s case in Paris last October before imposing the two-year ban.

“Yes, he knows doping is forbidden … (but) for a 12-year-old child it’s not easy to understand complicated rules,” said Lehner, a specialist in sports doping cases.

However, WADA said it studied the case and accepted the FIA’s verdict.

“WADA reviewed the sanction … and has decided not to exercise its independent right of appeal to the CAS, as it is in compliance with the World Anti-Doping Code,” it said in a statement to the AP.

The CAS panel is expected to give its ruling within the next few weeks.

Lehner said he would argue that Walilko was below the age of criminal liability in Poland, with the Youth Olympic Games closed to athletes younger than 14.

“For more than 14 years old, OK, you can use the rules but not the maximum (two years),” he said. “For a child, you should not have the possibility to punish him.”

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