
Rice terraces in Banawe
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Preservation
Efforts in the Philippines
UC students work outside the classroom with NGOs
by Donald D. Goertzen, Director of the
EAP Study Center in Manila
“It was so cold,” exclaimed Armasabille
Ermita, an EAP Philippines student from UC Davis, on her return to Manila
after a five-day outing in November to the northern Philippines. Arma and
Flip Ziofelle “Cheeky” Calumpong of UC Berkeley had negotiated the time
off from their Metro Manila based internships to visit to the cooler
northern communities of Banawe, Sagada, and Batade, where 3,000-year-old
rice terraces are carved into mountainsides of the Cordillera Range.
Citizens groups and non-governmental organizations are leading efforts to
preserve the ancient terraces and to restore those that have eroded.
Banawe and Sagada are about a 10-hour bus ride from Metro Manila and
Batade is an additional 3-hour hike from Banawe, but after seven months of
sweltering Manila heat, the trip was a welcome change.
Cheeky is interning in Manila with the
Action for Economic Reform, an economic policy research and advocacy
center. Arma interns as a lab technician and youth counselor with the
Remedios Aids Foundation.
Most EAP-Philippines students conclude
their program with a 10-week internship. Internship options are extremely
varied and have included work in health clinics, schools, museums, media,
private businesses, sports clubs, policy research and advocacy groups,
environmental organizations, and legal aid societies working with upland
or “tribal” Filipinos. Students often intern with Manila-based groups, but
some have worked outside the city. Typically, interns work under the
supervision of staffers from the host organization who evaluate their work
along with the EAP Study Center Director or a host university faculty
member.
In 2000, Glenda Macaraeg, a UC San Diego
student, taught English in a school for refugees from the Mt. Pinatubo
volcanic eruption. “The school enabled refugees to order their lives and
even recover some hope,” Glenda said. Not only did she have the chance to
teach English, but she says her Tagalog language skills “really took off.”
Another former EAP student, Cristina
Carpio (UC Santa Cruz), worked with a nongovernmental organization
providing legal assistance to tribal Filipinos, the nation’s most
marginalized population. “I know that laws can and do oppress the very
people that they are supposed to protect and govern, but I also learned
that laws can be utilized and changed so that they can work for peoples,”
Cristina said.
A few EAP students use their internship
period to conduct independent research. Architecture student Michael
Gonzales (UC Riverside) is wrapping up his year by studying traditional
housing in the Cordillera Mountains of the northern Philippines. He will
complete his project by presenting a simple design for a community center
in an urban poor resettlement area.
Although knowledge of Tagalog is a plus,
most EAP-Philippines internships do not require fluency in the language.
The Philippine Study Center works closely with students to develop the
best possible “fit” in internships.
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