5 awards exemplify Caloy’s attributes

FIVE Boholanos who help perpetuate the memory of Bohol’s most illustrious son and former Philippine President Carlos P.
Garcia (CPG) earn recognition during the 114th CPG Day, November 4.

Chosen to exemplify the attributes of the Boholano president who was best known as a teacher, poet, orator, lawyer,
statesman, sports enthusiast and guerilla leader, this year’s CPG Awardees were for public service, education, arts and
sports.

Provincial Administrator Alfonso Damalerio said an award for statesmanship was supposed to be handed out, but the
committee couldn’t find time to screen potential awardees.

Boholano president Garcia was schooled in Bohol, Cebu, Silliman University in Negros Oriental and the Philippine Law
School where he passed the bar among the top.

Despite the distinction, Garcia opted to be a teacher first rather than practicing law.

He then threw his hat into politics and rose until peaking at the country’s top political power seat.

114 years after his birth, Boholanos unite to commemorate the man who has popularized the patriotic Filipino First Policy
and an Austerity Program that allowed government to save its scant resources.

To facilitate the easy memory of the man, Boholanos who have excelled in different but distinctive fields of endeavor reap
the CPG awards.

EDUCATION
Boholanos and Ramon Magsaysay Awardees Christopher and Ma. Victoria Bernido earned their CPG award their
innovative implementation of the Dynamic Learning program.

The equivalent of the Nobel Prize for Asia, the Ramon Magsaysay Foundation heaped praises to the Bernidos for opting to
leave their lofty national posts to bring the much-needed change in the country’s education system.

The couple developed an efficient learning and teaching method via a student centered learning system, where teaching
focuses on student activity rather than on traditional classroom lectures.

Sources said that the set-up is 70% student activity–30% lecture/discussion, and usually national experts do the majority
of the lectures via video, and the students learn independently, because each activity is provided with a clear, learning
target.

Students also understand lessons on their own by reading the concept notes and exercises in their portfolio of works
which act as their schoolwork documentation.

The Bernidos are also nationally acclaimed physicists and academicians having been assigned top positions at the
country’s premier state university.

PUBLIC SERVICE

The Local Civil Registrar of Loboc town here has been this year’s Presidential Lingkod Bayan Awardee, after a search by
the Civil Service Commission (CSC).

Teodosia Bernaldez earned the annual national CSC recognition for outstanding public official and employees for their
work performance in 2010 last September.

The Lingkod Bayan is notably the country’s Nobel Prize for public service.

Bernaldez beat Governor Erico Aumentado to the position as the former was also nominated in his capacity as Bohol top
public servant.

Bernaldez won together with six other public officials and employees from across the country who were nominated to the
prestigious search for this year.

ARTS
CPG awardee for the Arts is multi-awarded artist and cultural impresario Lutgardo Labad.

A recent winner in the Aliw 2010 Awards, Labad romped with the Best Stage Director for a Philippine Educational Theater
Association play billed “Post Office” and as a musical composer for the zarsuela “Baler sa Puso Ko.”

The Aliw awards, one that recognizes the best in live entertainment is the latest addition to Labad’s personal
achievements.

He took three FAMAS Awards, and the Best Film Scores each for Manunuri Award of the Film Academy of the Philippines,
Manila Film Festival, Metro Manila Film Festival and the Golden Screen.

Aside from those, Labad has been cited nationally and internationally for his theater work and cultural advocacy.

SPORTS
Best known as a child chess wonder from Bohol, Jedara Docena has piled her victories in a heap while pulling the
limelight for Bohol in the world of chess.

A native of Antequera, Docena impressed the country with a top ranking finish in the National Chess Championships two
categories in 2006.

Docena showed her competitive form at previous Visayas Regional Athletic Association (CVIRAA) Meets in Dumaguete
City 2003, Danao City, 2004, Tagbilaran City, 2006, the Nat’l Age-Group Chess Championship for Asia in Mandaluyong,
May 2004 and in the National Open Women’s Division in Cebu City, 2005.

She toppled equally competent chessers at the Palarong Pambansa in Naga City, May 2006, while ranking 3rd in the
National Batang Pinoy, Puerto Princesa City, 2002.

Her skill amazed international chess aficionados when she topped 40 rivals in the ASEAN Age-Group Chess Championship
in Vietnam in 2004 and placed 7th in the Asian Championships in Singapore.

MUSIC
Failing to forget a popular Boholano novelty songs writer, lyricist, composer and performer, this year’s committee also
handed a posthumous award to Roman Tesorio Villame, popularly known as Yoyoy.

A native of Calape Bohol, Yoyoy has won the hearts and hit the tickle bone of the Filipinos with his witty parodies and
social commentaries of the Filipino society, all in music.

A gifted musician, drive and son of a fisherman, Yoyoy has a whole gamut of experience to put into his novelty songs.
(racPIABOhol)

Education crisis?- Not if country listened to CPG

DECADES of neglect has caused a chronic illness to the country’s education system, one that may
have never happened if the country listened to former President Carlos P. Garcia half a century ago.

In fact, according to Education Secretary Bro. Armin Luistro, the Boholano president has seen
the “education crisis” and called for changes to heal the problem.

As early as 1959, Garcia has called for a review of the government’s financing program for the
elementary and secondary schools to make it sustainable.

The year before that, the Boholano teacher, orator, poet, lawyer and public servant, apparently felt
the problem and suggested reforms.

He accordingly called for a full day instruction for primary education and lobbied for reduced size of
classes from 60 to 40.

That same year, the poor man from Sitio Luy-a, Barangay san Roque has called for the use of
vernacular instruction on the first two years in the elementary, Luistro, who was the keynote speaker
during the 114th Carlos P. Garcia Day in Bohol enumerated the reforms proposed by the most
illustrious Boholano son.

Apart from a living a distinctive life as politician, and statesmanship who helped prop up the precursor
Association of South East Asian Nations in the South East Asian Treaty Organization, Luistro said
he believes that the Garcia’s first two years as a public school teacher at the Bohol Provincial High
School has shaped his personality.

Luistro sees the two years of his (CPG) life as the most critical as his being a teacher in the public
school had in him the greatest impact on how he was to cover his government after he would
assume the country’s top seat after the death of President Ramon Magsaysay.

CPG made a lasting impression on how to care for our brother Filipinos, Luistro intoned, not after
reminding Boholanos of the Filipino First Policy and the Austerity program he played to the hilt.

“Every President leaves a lasting legacy, he left his by enunciating the Filipino First Policy.”

And when we see the government urging for the public-private sector partnership being frontloaded
by the 2oth century Aquino Administration, as early as 1961, the private-public sector partnership has
already been used by Garcia to help the public schools, Luistro said. (racPIABohol)