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https://up.edu.ph/bugta-embracing-talaandig-ancestral-soil/ | BUGTA: Embracing Talaandig ancestral soil – University of the Philippines | BUGTA: Embracing Talaandig ancestral soil BUGTA: Embracing Talaandig ancestral soil November 23, 2023 | Written by UP Media and Public Relations Office The UP Fine Arts Gallery invites everyone to the activities related to the visiting artist program of Datu Waway Saway from November 16-24, 2023! Update: Due to the transport strike, the BUGTA SOIL PAINTING WORKSHOP is rescheduled to November 23, Thursday, from 1:00 – 5:00 PM. The Bugta Exhibition will be running from November 16-24, 2023 at the Plenary Hall of the UP Fine Arts gallery. Join us in its opening reception on November 16, 11:30 AM. ______ This is a project of the UP Diliman College of Music and College of Fine Arts, in partnership with UPCMu Department of Musicology, Department of Music Education, UP Center for Ethnomusicology, UPCFA Ceramic Studio, and the UP Fine Arts Gallery. Register for the artist talk and bead and soil painting workshop here: https://forms.gle/ZAdrkcQnpuitvv5G6 Original Post: link |
https://up.edu.ph/disarmament-nuclear-free-movements-perspectives-from-asia-and-the-pacific/ | Disarmament & Nuclear Free Movements: Perspectives from Asia and the Pacific – University of the Philippines | Disarmament & Nuclear Free Movements: Perspectives from Asia and the Pacific Disarmament & Nuclear Free Movements: Perspectives from Asia and the Pacific November 21, 2023 | Written by UP Media and Public Relations Office Political Science 182 WBD, International Politics class, in partnership with the UP Manila Political Science Program and the Office of the UP Faculty Regent will hold an online forum on Disarmament and Nuclear-Free Movements: Perspectives from Asia and the Pacific on November 22, Wednesday, 2:00 PM to 4:00 PM, with Prof. Roland Simbulan of UP Manila, and Dr. Marcus Coll from the University of Canterbury in New Zealand as speakers. The event is in celebration of the 50th anniversary of the Department of Social Sciences in the University of the Philippines Manila. Register here: link. |
https://up.edu.ph/thennow-binisaya-film-festival/ | “Then&Now” BINISAYA Film Festival – University of the Philippines | “Then&Now” BINISAYA Film Festival “Then&Now” BINISAYA Film Festival November 23, 2023 | Written by UP Media and Public Relations Office Binisaya Film Festival, a homegrown grassroots film festival in Cebu City. A flagship program of the Binisaya Movement Inc. showcasing contemporary vernacular films helmed by Cebuanos and other regional filmmakers across the Archipelago. “Then&Now” 13 years of BINISAYA Film Festival at the UPFI Film Center in cooperation with PUP Center Heritage Studies. A tribute to Teddy Co featuring: The Adlaw Adlaw Films, the best film awardees, Archipelago. Rising and the shorts of keith deligero. ~~~~~~ UPFI Film Center November-December 2023 Binisaya for UP Diliman Nov 28 Tue 2pm Biyernes Biyernes 4pm Sabado Sabado 6pm Domingo Domingo Nov 30 Thurs 2pm Lunes Lunes 4pm Martes Martes 6pm Miyerkoles Miyerkoles Dec 4 Monday 2pm Best of Binisaya set 1 6pm Huwebes Huwebes Dec 5 Tuesday 2pm Best of Binisaya set 3 4pm Archipelago Rising (Jason Tan Liwag) 6pm The Shorts of Keith Deligero ~~~~~ General admission: Php 100 Tickets are available 1 hour before screen time at the cinema entrance. The screenings are open to the public on a first-come, first-served basis. Eating and drinking are not allowed. |
https://up.edu.ph/using-dna-barcodes-against-the-wildlife-black-market/ | Using DNA barcodes against the wildlife black market – University of the Philippines | Using DNA barcodes against the wildlife black market Using DNA barcodes against the wildlife black market June 4, 2019 | Written by Andre DP Encarnacion Dr. Ian Kendrich Fontanilla, Head of the Institute of Biology’s DNA Barcoding Laboratory. Photo by Misael Bacani, UP MPRO. While recent news of giant clams (Tridacna gigas) being harvested in the disputed Scarborough Shoal drew massive outrage online, it was only the latest low point in the dark history of wildlife exploitation in the region. A poignant series of cases also happened here in 2013 and 2014, this time involving pangolins or “scaly anteaters,” which have been described as the most trafficked animals in the world. All eight species of pangolins have been declared to be at least threatened globally. The Philippine pangolin (Manis culionensis), however, has been named critically endangered. It was no surprise then that the nation recoiled in horror in 2013 when a Chinese vessel stranded in the Tubbataha marine national park was found with over 3,000 frozen pangolins on board. Barely a year later, Palawan officials confiscated even more of these from two residential buildings and a tricycle in Puerto Princesa City. While everyone feared that Palawan-endemic Philippine pangolins were the ones involved, this proved difficult to confirm visually. As pangolins are hunted primarily for their scales, which are made of keratin (the same as that found in human hair and nails) and meat, they are typically skinned after being smoked out, bludgeoned to death, and boiled beyond recognition. For justice to be served, what was needed here was a scientifically credible system to ascertain the exact pangolin species found in these shipments. Luckily, a team from the University of the Philippines Institute of Biology led by Dr. Ian Kendrich Fontanilla, Mr. Adrian Luczon and the late Dr. Perry Ong had been working to perfect such a system. The geneticists and the conservation biologist joined forces with fellow experts to pioneer a method called DNA barcoding. DNA barcoding uses the molecular fingerprint of DNA found in even processed remains to accurately determine the specific species. This is done by reading selected genes like product barcodes against a database of samples collected, to aid both science and law enforcement. Together with a close-knit group of institutions, Fontanilla is working to help this database include all endemic species in the country and be a frontline tool against illegal wildlife exploitation. Genes and Shakespeare While the country is equipped with legislation to protect local biodiversity in the form of Republic Act No. 9417, or the Wildlife Resources Conservation and Protection Act, Fontanilla explained how difficult it is to uphold this law. As in the case of the Palawan pangolins, agents of the Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR) used to rely purely on morphology, or a specimen’s appearance, to determine species in their custody. This, as we have seen, can prove unreliable. Nice Genes – Graduate students at the DNA Barcoding Laboratory work to fill up the group’s public database of barcodes. Photo by Misael Bacani, UP MPRO. It was in 2008 that Fontanilla, together with other geneticists, Dr. Jonas Quilang and Dr. Zubaida Basiao, joined forces with Ong, at that time the director of the Institute of Biology and a prominent wildlife biologist, to craft what would become their public database of DNA barcodes. A few years later, Ong approached the DENR with a proposal. “Why don’t we help each other?” Fontanilla recalled Ong proposing. “We can help you identify species at the molecular level, and you can provide us with samples.” This offer officially began the partnership between the two institutions that persists to this day. Being more focused on the molecular side as head of the Institute’s DNA Barcoding Laboratory and now the director of the Philippine Genome Center’s (PGC) Biodiversity program, Fontanilla explained that not just any gene can be used as a barcode. “You can think of the DNA of all species like the pages of Shakespeare’s books,” he said. “Now of course we can’t identify them without their titles so now we have to pick a page from each book.” This “page” or specific gene in our DNA is one that facilitates easy identification. “It’s like when you open page 5 and read Romeo’s words to Juliet, and then you know what work it is.” The copies of any collected gene are compared to the current contents of the database to find the most accurate match. “That’s what we do in DNA barcoding, we find a gene that can discriminate like that.” Powerhouse For animals, Fontanilla and his team use the gene Cytochrome c oxidase subunit I or CO1. Unlike most genes we are familiar with that are found in the cell’s nucleus, CO1 is found in mitochondria. “The mitochondria are what produce ATP (which produces energy for many cell processes); so the mutation rate there is very high,” he said. This high rate of mutation across time is what creates the variability that allows us to discriminate between even closely related species. With genes like CO1 playing the role of the perfect pages, Fontanilla and Ong joined their partners in filling up their database. This involved going out into the field to extract both tissue samples for DNA and measurements from enough animals. “As much as possible we try not to kill them,” Fontanilla said. Using the case of local bats, he illustrated the challenge of catching and releasing them unharmed for this purpose. Fontanilla explains the DNA barcoding pipeline from specimen capture to recording in the database. Photo by Misael Bacani, UP MPRO. “We had mist nets for us to catch them,” he recounted. And when they had one trapped, the group had to be very careful not to damage their wings during the extraction process. After taking its measurements (which also go into the database), the bats are carefully released by allowing them to grab onto a tree. “Ideally we get more than 5 specimens per locale,” Fontanilla said. “Because if you just base your data on one individual, what is the variability of that population for that specific gene? We need population data.” Fortunately, the mission to create a good database is now one they share with key allies. Together with the University of the Philippines Diliman and the Philippine Genome Center, universities like De La Salle University and the University of Santo Tomas, among others, have since joined them. Government agencies like the Bureau of Fisheries and Aquatic Resources (BFAR), the Department of Agriculture (DA) and the Department of Science and Technology (DOST) are now also prominent members of this barcoding effort. Always Remembered When recounting the group’s successes so far, Fontanilla fondly remembers Ong’s contributions to the barcoding cause, which lasted up to his passing last March. “It was Doc Perry who pushed for this,” he said. “Because being in the academe, we could not do this all on our own. We could not stay in our ivory towers and do research that did not have societal impact. The government is paying us to make that impact.” A digital artwork given by colleagues to the late Perry Ong’s family. It depicts Ong with some of the animals he worked with—a pangolin, a Philippine eagle, a tarsier, a rat, and a bat. Art done by Nathalie M. Gaspar. This spirit of reaching out was exemplified fully by the late College of Science dean. His establishment of their mutually beneficial partnership with the DENR paved the way for the growth of both their allies and the DNA barcoding database itself. The publication of a paper in 2016 on the pangolin case above was the first to document the effectivity of these partnerships. Using the power of DNA barcoding, Luczon and Fontanilla of the DNA Barcoding Laboratory and Ong’s Biodiversity Research Laboratory managed to determine that the 73 specimens confiscated in Puerto Princesa were indeed Philippine pangolins coming from a single locality. The 12 samples they analyzed from the Tubbataha case, on the other hand, were from the closely related Malayan pangolin (M. javanica), another critically endangered variety from Southeast Asia. While Ong is no longer around to see the future growth of the barcoding database, Fontanilla said that his collaborative spirit continues to inspire him and his colleagues. “When Dr. Perry passed on, all of our partners came together in one place to pay their respects. A sad but necessary result of that is we all met and agreed to finish the projects that we had planned together. And we do plan on finishing them all.” To access the Barcode of Life Data System, visit: http://www.boldsystems.org. |
https://up.edu.ph/shaping-the-future-of-philippine-forensics/ | Shaping the future of Philippine forensics – University of the Philippines | Shaping the future of Philippine forensics Shaping the future of Philippine forensics June 10, 2019 | Written by Andre DP Encarnacion Video by KIM Quilinguing for the UP Media and Public Relations Office. It was a biology class unlike any other. When graduate student Lorraine Joyce del Rosario took to the podium to deliver a report on the last regular day of class, one could have expected to hear a thorough rundown of foundational topics in cell biology or genetics. Instead, the polo-clad MS Biology student opened the morning with the grisly case of Beverly Allitt, an English serial murderer nicknamed the “Angel of Death.” During a 59-day period in 1991, Allitt alternated between using potassium chloride and insulin to murder four children and grievously harm six more at Grantham and Kesteven Hospital in Lincolnshire, UK. “How should we investigate this case?” del Rosario asked. The class of nine students actively pitched their ideas. Some suggested checking going through mental health records of the hospital staff, while others suggested going through hospital logs to see who had access to the drugs used in the murders. It was a highly atypical discussion to end the academic year. Then again, there are few things typical about Biology 397: Current Topics in Forensic Biology. Offered nowhere else in the country, the second-semester graduate course at the UP Institute of Biology is understood by only few, even within the University of the Philippines. The course co-convener and head of the DNA Analysis Laboratory at UP Natural Sciences Research Institute, Dr. Maria Corazon De Ungria defines Forensic Biology concisely as the application of the biological sciences in answering legal questions. Most people, however, associate the word “forensics” merely with the study of dead bodies in criminal investigations. De Ungria explained that Bio 397 tackles a far broader landscape of topics. This scope is necessary to underscore how science in all its guises can be applied to answer questions that matter to the nation and its people. A Diverse Cast Diversity has been the course’s trademark since it began in 2012. Not only does it quietly draw students from different disciplines and institutions, it also changes each year depending on their needs and interests. The primary purpose of the course is to help postgraduate students in the sciences to realize the social dimension of their disciplines, and in the seven years of its existence, Bio 397 has never repeated itself in terms of content and composition. “Dynamic” is how graduate student Rance Pavon described the experience. Coming into the course with barely any background knowledge in forensics, the BS Microbiology graduate soon found himself engrossed in lectures from experts at the cutting-edge of their respective forensic disciplines. Lorraine Joyce del Rosario and Rance Pavon, students of Bio 397 2019. Photo by Misael Bacani, UP MPRO “We had people like Dr. Raquel Fortun, currently the Chair of the Department of Pathology, UP Manila, who talked about crime scene reconstructions and the role of forensics in solving extrajudicial killings,” he said. “We had people like Atty. Jose Manguera Jose, formerly with the Office of Legal Aid in UP Diliman, who talked about the legal aspects of forensics and how DNA analysis had changed the Philippine legal system.” Other lecturers discussed pertinent topics like forensic chemistry, wildlife forensics, humanitarian work, and accurate science communication in the time of fake news. Eventually, Pavon said, students tried their own hand at discussing topics where their research interests intersected with forensics. They reported on everything, from the use of microbes in bioterrorism and how forensic botany can link places and people to crimes, to forensic Egyptology and how the study of preserved ancient remains can uncover facts that link past and present. In addition to a final exam, the course culminates in the drafting of a review paper that explores these intersections more deeply. This review paper will be submitted to one of the local journals within the University, so that the students can share their learnings with the wider academic community. Pavon who is pursuing graduate studies in microbiology, is writing about the use of innate microorganisms that reside in our bodies as a powerful tool for identification in forensic investigations. “Each person has a unique profile of microorganisms that can tell us apart from another. For example, we could use microbial profiles from human saliva samples to help us say that the saliva came from this particular person.” De Ungria considers this diversity to be a strength, but also acknowledges that differences can lead to healthy disagreements when people from various backgrounds come together. “Since we encourage students to share their thoughts, our conversations allow us to consider and accept different viewpoints. Our only running policy is to respect one another. We must agree to disagree.” Grads for Grads Bio 397 clearly encourages students to take responsibility for their own learning and this philosophy is most evident in the organization of the Forensic Science Symposium (FSS) which has become an annual event since 2014. It is organized by Bio397 students as part of their course deliverables. De Ungria describes organizing this symposium as a distillation of the “learning by doing” nature of the course, as well as a hands-on demonstration of how scientific inquiry works. “We first tell them to ask their own questions and then determine what questions they think their peers would also like to know about. And then the students must identify the experts who can best provide the answers to these questions, using FSS as the platform for these conversations.” Guided by De Ungria and fellow convener Dr. Ian Kendrich Fontanilla, Director of the Institute of Biology in UPD, the students manage everything, from planning the event to running it on the day itself to reporting on its conclusion. The concept of graduate students making the event their own and working to share their learnings to other graduate students, the so-called “grads for grads” further encourages the students to think beyond themselves. Students and conveners of Bio 397: (from left) Dr. Kendrich Fontanilla, Mark Raymond Vejano, Cydee Ramones, Theresa Tengco, Mark Carascal, Rance Pavon, Dr. Maria Corazon De Ungria, Ma. Greta Jacinto, Arizaldo Enriquez Castro, Lani Manahan-Suyom and Lorraine del Rosario. Photo from Dr. Maria Corazon De Ungria. Ultimately, this sense of responsibility helped the students organize a well-attended event last April 6. Among the speakers of FSS2019 were Dr. Mahar Lagmay of the UPD Resilience Institute, Atty. Theodore Te of the UP College of Law and former Supreme Court spokesperson, Dr. Francisco Datar of the UPD Department of Anthropology, Dr. Raquel Fortun, Dr. Emilia Lastica-Ternura of the UP Los Banos College of Veterinary Medicine, and Dr. Mudjekeewis Santos, Officer in Charge of the Training Division of the National Fisheries Research and Development Institute. Dr. Fontanilla also delivered a lecture on wildlife forensics in honor of the late Dean of the College of Science, Dr. Perry Ong. While the challenge of taking ownership of such an important event made them feel like giving up, both Pavon and Del Rosario now count the FSS as one of their favorite course highlights. “We were taught a lot of positive values,” Del Rosario admitted. “Patience, teamwork, and unity. Working harmoniously with your acquaintances. I think that organizing this symposium enriched us both personally, as well as academically.” Serving Society One might ask: What’s the point of this supremely holistic training? In De Ungria’s opinion, Bio 397 helps train the kind of scientists the country needs – individuals who not only lend a hand in solving national problems, but also help the general public to discover the importance of science to nation building. Dr. Maria Corazon De Ungria at the NSRI DNA Analysis Laboratory. Photo by Misael Bacani, UP MPRO. “The take-home message is that students should see the social value of science, which might not be as emphasized in other courses,” she said. De Ungria believes that in the course of the semester, students come to appreciate the forensic casework and social advocacies that form part of the extension work in laboratories like the DNA Analysis Lab at NSRI. De Ungria compares what the course has slowly built over the years with Dumbledore’s Army of the Harry Potter book series, which was a network of like-minded graduates who aim to fight evil and to support each other and the greater good. “A number of Bio 397 students have helped teach science to law students through organizations like the Innocence Project Philippines Network,” she said. This exchange of information allows both sides to work towards finding potential cases that may need further investigation via DNA evidence that was not available at the trial. “It shares this very dynamic approach of ‘learning by doing’ to the student community, in the sciences and the law, and hopefully to other disciplines in the future.” Overall, the course works to answer that age-old question: What can science offer society? De Ungria believes that science can expand the realm of possible solutions, through new discoveries. “One can have so many more creative solutions to the same problem because scientists use our ingenuity to break barriers and advance forward. And we need more scientists who are able to integrate a living social consciousness with their creativity/ingenuity in order to put excellent science at the service of society.” |
https://up.edu.ph/space-age-spine-surgery-for-filipinos/ | Space age spine surgery for Filipinos – University of the Philippines | Space age spine surgery for Filipinos Space age spine surgery for Filipinos July 3, 2019 | Written by Andre DP Encarnacion Video by KIM Quilinguing for the UP Media and Public Relations Office. Sitting in the UP College of Medicine’s Department of Anatomy, Dr. Rafael Bundoc began by explaining how a big part of his mission was to change the attitudes of Filipinos when it comes to spine surgery. Spread out in front of the orthopedic surgeon as he spoke were his tools — silver streamlined instruments of various lengths. These instruments, and how to use them, held the key to the future of his discipline in the country, Bundoc said. While he is up to the challenge, Bundoc does indeed have several minds to change. The idea of having your spine operated on is a dreadful thought for patients and doctors alike. This fear was born in the 1960s and 1970s, when spine surgeries were long, bloody affairs. “In the past it was very dangerous,” he said, “because you go down to the spine, which is a very deep part of the body. To open it up is very bloody and of course, there’s the idea that you might get paralyzed because you have your nerves there. That’s really scary.” However, Bundoc insisted that technological advances have mostly made these scary scenarios a thing of the past. In their place, we now have a set of tools and techniques that make up Minimally Invasive Spine Surgery (MISS). MISS allows doctors to get a three-dimensional view of your spinal area and the ability to operate on it directly, while leaving only a tiny incision. This not only makes surgeries more precise; it also allows patients to recuperate faster. It also dramatically reduces hospital stays for patients, and the resulting expenses. As one of the pioneers of MISS in the country, Bundoc is committed to showing both colleagues and patients that this new world is one worth discovering. And as the chair of the 5th ASEAN Minimally Invasive Spine Surgical Techniques (MISST) 2019 Congress last month, he also now wants to show the world that the Philippines can be a leader in using these techniques to improve countless lives. Five Ailments When talking of innovative surgical techniques, an obvious question might be: what conditions do they treat? Bundoc says there are five fundamental conditions that afflict humans throughout their lifetime: trauma, congenital deformities, infections, neoplasms (cancers), and degenerative conditions. Dr. Rafael Bundoc of the University of the Philippines General Hospital (UP PGH) Department of Orthopedic. Photo by Bong Arboleda, UP MPRO. Bundoc said that of these five, the most common he had encountered affecting the spine are: trauma, infections and degenerative conditions. “We see a lot of trauma now, especially now that we have so many motorcycles. We treat these minimally invasively because we don’t want to add insult to injury. You already have a massive wound and we don’t want to give you another one.” Of the infections, the most common he sees is tuberculosis of the spine. Today, with minimally invasive techniques, he and his colleagues need not split open a person’s back to drain the pus from the spine. “Now we just have to make a very small hole, and we’re able to drain the infection.” But hands down, the most common and what most people associate with spinal problems are degenerative conditions, specifically slipped discs and stenoses. “Our population is graying,” Bundoc says. “Filipinos are living longer and, as we age, we develop lots of spine problems.” For him, the thought of opening the back of an already aged person is a traumatic experience that no patient should go through. Hence, minimally invasive techniques can be both an effective and a dignified solution. Bundoc explains how the problem evolves in the case of stenosis. “You have a canal in your spine,” he says. And like most other canals in nature, the size of the channel eventually decreases as deposits build up on the bone, in this case, calcium. “Your bones and your ligaments get thicker, and when your spinal cord gets compressed, your back hurts. You can’t walk, and your lower extremities hurt.” Millimeters So how does a spine surgeon like Bundoc solve a problem like that? He walks us through a typical surgical process from beginning to end. Some models of the spine and tools used in minimally invasive spine surgery at the University of Philippines Manila’s College of Medicine. Photo by Bong Arboleda, UP MPRO. First, after the room has been sterilized and the patient’s back has been scrubbed, a radiology technologist takes a fluoroscopy, a special X-ray of the area to be operated on. After this, and once the patient has been duly anaesthetized, surgeons like Bundoc make what is called a ‘‘stab incision,’’ or a very tiny cut on the back just big enough to fit a specialized endoscope only a few millimeters in diameter. This scope is connected to a camera system that ends in a set of monitors which allow Bundoc and his colleagues to have a three-dimensional view of the pathology and its surrounding structures. By inserting other very fine instruments, like the pituitary rongeur, a surgeon can then deal with the problem, such as the removal of vertebral discs or bone spurs. “If you’re going to operate on just a small area, why not direct your attention to just that small area? So other structures can be spared.” After the surgery, there is virtually no bleeding from the tiny incision made on the patient. Typically, only a single suture is needed to close it; and for patients with good skin, Bundoc says a Band-Aid may suffice. “Then the patient lies down for around an hour to rest. Afterwards, they get up and go home.” Taking only about an hour, the surgery is a far cry from past procedures where patients needed to recuperate in the hospital for one to two weeks. “We even needed blood transfusions, maybe 1-2 bags. These days we don’t even prepare blood anymore.” Changing Minds While the marriage of engineering and medicine has allowed spine surgeons like Bundoc to perform what previous generations might call miraculous operations, it has not been easy for developing countries like the Philippines to train enough specialists to meet demand. The cost of the sugery remains the most significant barrier. Getting a complete set of tools like the ones Bundoc uses (for which he had to borrow money to acquire) can cost upward of P9 million. Moreover, getting fellowships to master the techniques requires many months of staying in developed countries like Korea, which can be too much for a young physician. Orthopedic surgeon and 5th ASEAN MISST chair Dr. Rafael Bundoc asks those who really need it to give spine surgery a chance. Photo by Bong Arboleda, UP MPRO. This is the reason Bundoc was excited about the 5th ASEAN MISST in Manila. With help from local government agencies and the North American Spine Society, the convention brought speakers from 21 countries and four continents to Manila last June 26. The primary focus of the event was mentorship. Notably, the first two days were a cadaveric workshop, where younger colleagues practiced their techniques on cadavers, ensuring that they can gain mastery there before moving on to the real thing. Watch the highlights of the 5th ASEAN MISST Congress in Manila For Bundoc, the next generation could not come any sooner. “Take Korea for example,” he said. “They have a population of 58 million, and, would you believe, around 4,000 spine surgeons. We have a population of 110 million and we only have around 140 spine surgeons. That’s not enough, we have to train more.” Bundoc noted that 70 percent of all consultations in an orthopedic or neurology clinic are for complaints of some sort of back pain. “And of that 70 percent, maybe 30 percent are candidates for surgery. That may not sound like a lot, but in a country of 110 million, that is a lot of patients.” “And that’s just for the back,” he continued. “If it gets worse, you get weakness of the legs. And how can you work, much less go around if you have weakness of the legs because of a spine problem?” Sometimes the only solution is to have an operation. “And for those who need it, MISS is heaven-sent.” To learn more about the 5th ASEAN MISST, please visit: https://5thaseanmisst.org. |
https://up.edu.ph/up-experts-call-for-more-substantial-bill-vs-fake-news/ | UP experts call for more substantial bill vs ‘fake news’ – University of the Philippines | UP experts call for more substantial bill vs ‘fake news’ UP experts call for more substantial bill vs ‘fake news’ September 23, 2019 | Written by KIM G Quilinguing UP College of Mass Communication Lecturer and Tsek.ph Editor Jake Soriano presents findings from the project’s fact checking operations. Photo by KIM Quilinguing, UP MPRO. Experts from the University of the Philippines on Friday called on lawmakers to reexamine a bill against fake news filed by Senator Vicente Sotto III. Faculty members and researchers from the College of Mass Communication said Senate Bill No. 9 assumes ‘fake news’ is a problem which only thrives on social media platforms. Under Senate Bill No. 9, persons who use the internet and social media platforms for the creation and dissemination of false information can be held liable. Known as the Act Prohibiting the Publication and Proliferation of False Content on the Philippine Internet, the proposed law will impose imprisonment and fines ranging from P300,000 to P2,000,000. While social media remains the primary mode of spreading misinformation and disinformation, the findings of the Tsek.ph team showed there were other sources and avenues for the spread of ‘fake news’ as well. A Journalism lecturer, Jake Soriano, said that data gathered by the project showed other sources of misinformation and disinformation, which included the candidates themselves while appearing on news media programs, and other public figures who also talked about the candidates. These include “their speeches, their appearances in television, in their CV’s [Curriculum Vitae], for example,” he said. From February 12, 2019 to May 31, 2019, the Tsek.ph team were able to gather and fact check 131 articles on disinformation and misinformation materials targeting candidates and political groups vying for positions in the May elections. Breakdown of ‘fake news’ materials gathered by Tsek.ph. Graphic provided by Tsek.ph. Breaking down their data further, the Tsek.ph team found Facebook to be the most favored platform in spreading misinformation and disinformation during the May elections. “Of course, Facebook is very popular in the Philippines. . . . You can access Facebook for free. There are a lot of people on Facebook,” said Soriano. Second was television, followed by other social media platforms; then websites, campaign advertisements, and even the curriculum vitae or profile of candidates. Aside from these, there are also unspecified avenues where politicians and their supporters shared false information as well. Platforms used for the dissemination of false information. Graphic provided by Tsek.ph. As for political groups, Tsek.ph data showed the Otso Diretso slate as the most targeted, followed by local candidates. Third most targeted group was the Makabayan bloc, followed by the Independent candidates for the Senate. Surveys were also the subject of misinformation and disinformation, as well as the Hugpong ng Pagbabago. The Commission on Elections was also not spared by attacks using false information. Breakdown of data on groups targeted with disinformation and misinformation. Graphic from Tsek.ph. As for individual candidates, data showed former Interior Secretary Mar Roxas and former Senator Bam Aquino as the most targeted by misinformation and disinformation materials. Old photos of Roxas were reused in criticizing his supposed election gimmicks. False information even went so far as to claim that he had left the Otso Diretso ticket. Aquino on the other hand was targeted with fake quotes, with one claiming that he said poor people deserve food scraps. UP College of Mass Communication Professor and investigative journalist Yvonne Chua talks about how ‘fake news’ can erode the public’s trust in the media. Photo by KIM Quilinguing, UP MPRO. The Makabayan bloc was also the victim of false news which claimed that the group was disqualified on the eve of the elections. The false information was found by the Tsek.ph team to have originated from accounts which claimed affinity with the Iloilo City police and supposed Philippine Army reservists based in Mindanao. The Duterte administration’s Hugpong ng Pagbabago slate was also targeted with the use of altered photos and out of context quotes, as well as fake infographics. Tsek.ph data though showed only three instances where the ticket was the target of misinformation and disinformation. As for media organizations, Investigative journalist and Journalism Professor Yvonne Chua said that Tsek.ph’s data showed ABS-CBN News as the most targeted of misinformation and disinformation content. This, she said, was worrisome, as it would not only give legitimacy to false information being peddled but also undermine the credibility of news media organizations. “It erodes trust in the media, and in this current environment; this is of no help at all,” she said. According to Chua, the declining trust in the media is both a reason and a result of ‘fake news’ gaining traction in society. “This is highly problematic because ‘fake news’ confuses what information the public ought to trust or not,” she added. And the impact of false information is felt much more when it influences the decision people make during an election. Classification of materials gathered by Tsek.ph team. Graphic from Tsek.ph. As for classifying ‘fake news’ found during the election period, Tsek.ph’s data showed 84 out of the total content they found from February to May 2019, to be false; 21 needed context; 19 were misleading; 5 were accurate. And 2 had no basis. For Journalism Professor Diosa Labiste, misinformation and disinformation materials will become part of the tool kit of candidates and political groups in the coming years. She said it would be wise to anticipate the use of ‘fake news’ in the 2022, inasmuch as they were used in the 2016 and 2019 elections. Labiste recommends fact checking initiatives like Tsek.ph not only serve as tools for those in the news media and academe, but also for ordinary citizens desiring to know accurate and factual information. For Chua, Tsek.ph serves as a showcase of what can be achieved when news organizations collaborate in the fight against ‘fake news’. Collaborations, she said, allow involved news organizations to avoid duplication of fact check stories. “By doing so, we free up journalists and resources to enable them to focus on other types of coverage,” she said. Tsek.ph was a collaborative project involving the UP Department of Journalism, UP Department of Computer Science, UP College of Law, Ateneo de Manila University, De La Salle University, Rappler, Vera Files, ABS-CBN News, Interaksyon, Radio World Broadcasting Corporation, Baguio Midland Courier, Central Luzon Television, MindaNews, Probe Productions, The Philippine Star, Philstar.com and DZUP. |
https://up.edu.ph/the-problem-with-fake-news-up-experts-speak-on-the-impact-of-disinformation-on-politics-society-and-democracy/ | The problem with fake news: UP experts speak on the impact of disinformation on politics, society and democracy – University of the Philippines | The problem with fake news: UP experts speak on the impact of disinformation on politics, society and democracy The problem with fake news: UP experts speak on the impact of disinformation on politics, society and democracy September 28, 2019 | Written by KIM G Quilinguing Video by KIM Quilinguing, UP Media and Public Relations Office “It used to be that we could have a civilized conversation about political ideas. We used to have civilized conversations about disagreements in terms of issues, in terms of values, in terms of ideologies. What makes democracy work is that we can look across the aisle and have a decent conversation.” But much has changed since the proliferation of what is commonly called fake news on social media platforms. That’s the lament of Professor Clarissa David of the College of Mass Communication of the University of the Philippines. In an interview early this year, David said that while academics try not to use the term “fake news,” it is still used in situations where they need to discuss the phenomenon because the term is widely used and understood by more people. “We try to avoid the term now because it puts together into one category many different kinds of harmful content that’s online,” she added. David said that communications or media scholars have recently categorized fake news into two types: misinformation and disinformation. According to David, misinformation is false information which is unintentionally disseminated on online platforms. “There is no propaganda intention; mostly there is no political intention,” she said. Disinformation, on the other hand, is intended to convince online users to favor a group or individual political perspective. “Disinformation is orchestrated, it’s funded, … it’s planned. In politics, it’s run by professionals,” she added. For Associate Professor Danilo Arao of the Journalism Department of the College of Mass Communication, it could be because the journalist is not able to properly gather all the information necessary for a story or properly comprehend what is gathered from different sources. “The major mistakes would have to do with crucial data. As well as analyses that would tend to disregard other aspects of the data that are gathered,” he said. A journalist, he said, must have a good understanding of the issue being reported and the materials gathered from various sources; otherwise, the reporter risks providing wrong information to his superiors and the unwitting public. Arao also said journalists who may have reported the news by mistake must be quick to admit fault and rectify their errors, especially at a time when information is disseminated at a rate faster than it used to be when news stories are were aired and published only via traditional platforms such as television, radio and newspapers. Assoc. Prof. Danilo Arao. Photo by KIM Quilinguing, UP MPRO. On the other hand, Professor Rachel Khan, former Chairperson of the Journalism Department and now Associate Dean of the College of Mass Communication, thinks misinformation can also occur if a journalist is given wrong information by his or her sources; in which case, the journalist may not know that he or she is reporting false news. With various online resources now available, Khan said journalists may be able to verify and authenticate information given to them by a source, thus reducing the possibility of publishing inaccurate or wholly false news reports. At a time when some governments frequently accuse the media of disseminating fake news, these academics see the need for the public to be informed on how fake news is generated and disseminated and how media practitioners can enhance their capacity to verify information prior to publishing or airing their news stories on TV, radio, print and online. Social media use among Filipinos in the latest report from We Are Social and Hootsuite. In recent months, the social media platform Facebook announced the deactivation of several accounts which were found to have dubious identities and activities on the platform. They said that some of the accounts were even involved in the promotion of select politicians and political interest groups. Facebook remains the social media platform accessed by the largest number of people in the country. In a recent report from We Are Social and Hootsuite, studies showed that about 76 million Filipinos out of 107.3 million have access to the Internet. About 97 percent of these netizens access Facebook, while only 54 percent use Twitter. About 96 percent watch videos on YouTube and 64 percent post photos on Instagram. The report said 63 percent of social media users in the country belong to the 17- 34 age group, with females comprising a little over half of that number. About 13 percent belong to the 35-44 age group, while about 11 percent are teenagers in the 13-17 age group. Users over 45 years old comprise only about 12.3 percent. For communication educators like Arao, David and Khan, social media plays a key role not only in the proliferation of disinformation and misinformation, but also in the fight against the spread of the same troubling phenomenon. With a doctorate in Communication Research from the University of Pennsylvania, David teaches political communication, journalism and public opinion, research methods, and mass media, government and society at the UP College of Mass Communication, where she also took up a masteral studies in Communication Research. She earned a Bachelor in Communication degree from the Ateneo de Manila University. Aside from her time in the academe, David has also worked with The World Bank, the Philippine Institute of Development Studies, the Human Development Network, the Social Weather Stations, and the Philippine Competition Commission. A frequent resource person for media organizations, David has been actively giving her insights on the impact of fake news on media and society. Several of her interviews have been made available by the online news outfit Rappler. Prof. Clarissa David, PhD. Photo by KIM Quilinguing, UP MPRO. According to David, one of the hallmarks of fake news on social media is how these supposed news stories try to agitate readers or consumers. “If it’s screaming at you. If it’s trying to rile you up. If it makes you angry, if it has curse words, if it has exclamation points, the odds of it being not disinformation are very low.” Consistently used as a format, this style is very much the opposite of what comes out on legitimate news organizations, which are supposed to avoid sensationalizing news stories. Given the consistent efforts of individuals involved in disinformation to pass their work off as legitimate news, Arao sees the identification of such stories as a challenge. “The problem with fake news is that it mimics the reportage of more established news media organizations, especially the ones that are identified with the dominant media,” he said. This mimicry of established news media organizations even goes beyond how stories are written. In some cases, these purveyors of fake news mimic websites with similar web addresses or uniform resource locators (URLs). On a list compiled on Wikipedia, they incude: “ABCnews.com.co” passing itself of as abcnews.go.com; “Bloomberg.ma” mimicking Bloomberg.com; “cnn-channel.com” for cnn.com; “aljazeeranews-tv.com” for aljazeera.com; and, “gma-tv.com” masquerading as gmanetwork.com/news. Distribution of social media users in the Philippines according to We Are Social and HootSuite. Arao said it is disturbing that a significant number of Filipinos believe stories from fake news websites and dubious social media pages. It is also troubling that there are those who actively promote and disseminate these stories as well. He said that if people start believing in fake news more than they should news from legitimate sources, they will tend to make decisions that would not be based on reliable information. “If you fall for the lies, then you tend to fall for the purveyors of such lies,” he added. Arao teaches Journalism, Media and Communication courses. Aside from teaching in his home college, he has also taught courses on global studies for the UP Center for International Studies. He is also the former Assistant Vice President for Public Affairs of the UP System and the former Director of the UP System Information Office. An advocate of alternative media, Arao is member of the Board of Editors of Bulatlat.com, as well as a columnist for the online opinion website, The Lobbyist. He was also the managing editor of the Philippine Journalism Review of the Center for Media Freedom and Responsibility and a member of the Board of Critics for the ABC 5’s Dokyu. He also headed Ibon Foundation’s research programs and was the editor-in-chief of the foundation’s publications. He is currently finishing a dissertation for his doctorate in Journalism at the Technische Universitat Ilmenau in Germany. He earned his Master of Arts in Philippine Studies degree from the De La Salle University and his Bachelor of Arts in Communication, major in Journalism, degree from UP Diliman, where he had also been news editor of the Philippine Collegian. In the recent elections, Arao, as convenor of the election watchdog, Kontra Daya, urged people to be vigilant on social media and be careful with fake news. He said some groups might resort to deception and misinformation. Recognizing how false stories online are also fueled by political beliefs and ideologies these days, Arao said people should be more discriminating about new information and stories which can be picked up online, especially if these were picked up from dubious online sources. “We cannot just accept everything, hook, line and sinker, because the problem with fake news is that it is out there, particularly in social media, along with the truth.” For Khan, the impact of disinformation on democracy particularly in the Philippines, is something which everyone must seriously consider. “The horrible thing about fake news is it undermines democracy. Especially because social media is supposed to be a platform where the ordinary citizen can have a voice.” With fake online accounts and the machinery which produces and disseminates these false stories, Khan said it is possible for legitimate concerns and problems of ordinary citizens, minority groups and various sectors to be silenced by their ideological or political rivals. She said that these groups will manipulate public opinion to favor the political, economic or ideological interests of a particular group, sector or politician. “They drown out the legitimate voices in favor of paid voices that want to skew public opinion,” she said. Prof. Rachel Khan, DPA. Photo by KIM Quilinguing, UP MPRO. Khan teaches several undergraduate and graduate courses. A former print journalist, she earned her Bachelor in Economics degree from UP Diliman and her Master of Science in Journalism degree with concentration in New Media, from Columbia University in New York, as a Fulbright scholar. She later earned her doctorate in Public Administration from the UP National College in Public Administration and Governance (NCPAG). Khan was the former deputy director of the Center for Media Freedom and Responsibility. She was a finalist in the 1998 Jaime V. Ongpin Award for Investigative Journalism for her story, “Comelec: Weighed but Found Wanting”. She was also first runner-up in the Citibank Pan-Asia Journalism Award for Business Reporting for an in-depth story on the 1995 inflation crisis. Active in the promotion of responsible journalism, she is also affiliated with the Asian Congress for Media and Communication, the Philippine Studies Association of the Philippines, and the Asian Media and Information Center. A strong advocate against online disinformation, Khan has been very active in events which discuss the impact of fake news on Philippine society and governance. In the recent elections, she was the project leader for Tsek.ph, the collaborative election initiative intended to fact check claims made by candidates. Composed of academic and media partners, Tsek.ph verified dubious statements made by candidates, their supporters and online accounts favoring or opposing specific candidates in the May elections. Their findings were published on the website and disseminated via social media accounts on Facebook and Twitter. On a personal level, Khan said that everyone can help in the fight against disinformation. “If we are going to combat fake news, we can all contribute by making sure that we do not share fake news,” she said. It was important, she added, that people verify the information they see online before disseminating it further by sharing it on social media. “For me it’s an obligation, especially these days. Don’t add to the proliferation ng fake news.” For these experts, the proliferation of disinformation online, while worrying, serves as a challenge for media scholars and practitioners to collaborate and find ways to promote media literacy and responsible journalism. It has also become an opportunity to appreciate the important role the press plays in societies like the Philippines, which remain experiments in nation-building and representative democracies. |
https://up.edu.ph/safeguarding-our-institutional-heritage/ | Safeguarding Our Institutional Heritage – University of the Philippines | Safeguarding Our Institutional Heritage Safeguarding Our Institutional Heritage November 19, 2019 | Written by Andre DP Encarnacion A time capsule, a bridge between past and present. Visit any UP campus and such a description might come close to embodying UP’s place in Philippine history. Everything, from the structures to the discourses taking place within them, was shaped by some of the most profound ideas ever thought of. In the case of UP Diliman, there is probably no other place that embodies this role of being a memory keeper as the University Archives. Located in a nondescript place on the third floor of the Main Library, the Archives contains some of the most timeless pieces bearing the University’s cultural heritage. University Archives Head Librarian Eimee Rhea Lagrama. Photo by Misael Bacani, UP MPRO. “We are, to coin a term, the memory keeper of our University,” said Archives Head Librarian Eimee Rhea Lagrama. “What we have here are materials—paper-based for now—with cultural heritage, research, informational and historical value.” As one might imagine of a place that contains everything, from a National Artist’s handwritten notes to the theses and dissertations of UP students, the protection of sensitive information is a pressing and constant priority. Sadly, even for a University that prides itself on its history, not many know about the contents of the Archives and, consequently, what to make of the information found therein. So what kind of information does the Archives section contain, and what are the right steps to protect them? Four sections What might appear as a unitary section is actually divided into four. According to Lagrama they are: (a) the bindery/preservation section; (b) the UPiana (containing all UP publications) section; (c) University records; and, (d) the personal papers section. Inclusion in any of these is determined by the permanent value a document gains through the course of the University’s transactions, in addition to its specification under Republic Act No. 9470 or the National Archives Act. Many visitors associate the Archives with either University records or the personal papers section. What distinguishes the two? According to Lagrama, University records are defined strictly as comprising of documents that are part of regular transactions (e.g., leave forms). Personal papers, on the other hand, are explicit products of UP-associated persons, be they faculty, administrators or notable alumni. “I’ll give the example of Guillermo Tolentino,” Lagrama said. “He has personal papers with us. What exactly? Biographical information, legal documents. I think the death certificate is there, school records. Some of his drafts are also there.” Sensitive and confidential While Tolentino has long since passed, his case makes it easy to imagine how sensitive or confidential information might be included in the Archives relating to living people. Lagrama admits that there are some personal papers and University records that contain information that cannot be accessed by just anyone. One basis they have for allowing access to personal papers is the actual donor’s request. “We have donors who do not want specific parts of their collections opened while they are alive. I also remember that we have a collection where even the owner’s passport was with us. Although he is long gone, we decided that for passports and other personal documents, we need to look if they are covered by data privacy and err on the side of caution.” For University records, Lagrama and her staff are careful, especially when legal documents are included for cases still being disputed. “Usually they are related to the law or, for example, to cases filed against students and facylty. These are documents that we can’t just grant access to and we are very strict about that.” Specific measures Lagrama said that it might be a good idea to review their current collection to meet the University’s data privacy needs since, while the concept of data privacy is fairly new, their office has been collecting UP’s documents since it was founded in 1974. Personal collections as well as scholarly products might contain information that could prove risky to either their owners or research participants. Luckily, at least for theses and dissertations, there exists Memorandum No. FRN 15-XXX issued in 2015 by UP Diliman Vice Chancellor for Research and Development (OVCRD) Fidel Nemenzo. The Memorandum provides guidelines to mark their titles as containing: I: a patentable/registrable innovation; P: content that the author intends to publish personally; or, C: confidential information from a third party. For studies marked as above, Lagrama said that the Archives gives the authors an embargo period of one year, which is renewable, to either publish, patent or delete the information in question before their work is made publicly available. Thankfully, Lagrama noted that in many of the colleges, students do avail of, and even extend, the embargo period if necessary. She also added that there are current plans to extend the initial embargo to three or five years. For now, students can easily request for an extension when the time is up. Photo by Jonathan M. Madrid, UP MPRO. Institutional memory Lagrama said the primary importance of a University Archives is, recalling George Santayana, to protect the history that helps people in the here-and-now to avoid repeating its mistakes. As the UP Main Library currently undergoes renovation, however, she and her colleagues hope to start a project focused explicitly on the future. Lagrama believes that before the data privacy policy can be effectively exercised, offices in government should be well-versed in effective records management practices. It makes sense that before we protect the information we have, we should have a records retention and disposition schedule that helps everyone know what documents they should be keeping, who can access them, and how long they should be kept. Armed with an instrument that she helped design with one of her graduate students, Lagrama hopes to use the time available to her and her colleagues to strengthen record-keeping practices across UP. Guiding others towards a better future is, of course, part of what makes the University Archives a beloved reflection of what UP stands for. Lagrama says, “Having this institutional memory instills in you a sense of identity. It gives you a better sense of who you are as a UP student and Filipino citizen, and at the same time of why we are here and where we are going.” Get your FREE copy of the UP Forum magazine now. Please send an email to upforum@up.edu.ph or visit the UP Media and Public Relations Office at Room 6B, Fonacier Hall, Magsaysay Avenue, UP Diliman, Quezon City. You may access the digital copy here. Published on: Nov 19, 2019 |
https://up.edu.ph/up-and-dost-asti-engineers-prototype-set-top-box-to-help-bridge-educations-digital-divide/ | UP and DOST-ASTI engineers prototype set-top box to help bridge education’s digital divide – University of the Philippines | UP and DOST-ASTI engineers prototype set-top box to help bridge education’s digital divide UP and DOST-ASTI engineers prototype set-top box to help bridge education’s digital divide December 9, 2020 | Written by Andre DP Encarnacion Video by KIM Quilinguing, UP MPRO It would be safe to think, when skimming through recent news articles of his activities, that Dr. Joel Joseph Marciano, Jr.’s sights are set intently on space. While space does certainly preoccupy most of his thoughts as the director of the Philippine Space Agency (PhilSA), a good number of his advocacies are much closer to earth. Indeed, together with his fellow UP experts and engineers, the 26-year veteran faculty member at UP Diliman’s Electrical and Electronics Engineering Institute (EEEI) has his eyes set on a problem—the country’s digital divide that continues to be a thorn in the side of those whose efforts are on providing quality virtual education. Dr. Joel Joseph Marciano, Jr., director of the Philippine Space Agency (PhilSA), explains during an interview the possibilities of the set-top box for the country’s educational sector. Photo by Jun Madrid, UPMPRO. “Everybody is aware of the challenges we are facing in terms of delivering education to the people,” Marciano said. “Our young people need to get back to school—but they can’t. We need to deal with the lack of connectivity.” According to Marciano, to fully realize the country’s goal to meet every student’s distance learning needs, it is necessary for the internet to be pervasive, which it currently is not. “How then do we deliver education and services if the Internet is still not that ubiquitous, many people are still unconnected, and there are communities that are still left unserved?” As a complementary measure, Marciano and colleagues from the Department of Science and Technology’s Advanced Science and Technology Institute (DOST-ASTI), where he previously served as Director prior to moving to the PhilSA, are looking into adapting an emerging technology to reach the places that the Internet currently cannot. While some television networks have explored the possibilities of digital TV in providing quality entertainment to more people, they believe that the same medium can be maximized to serve the needs of students and teachers. The powers of digital In the Full Anechoic Chamber at the heart of the UP EEEI’s ULyS3ES building, Marciano’s small group of like-minded engineers demonstrate a prototype of what some TV networks have brought into a considerable number of our households: the set-top box. This device, which allows analogue televisions to receive digital broadcasts, has traditionally been used to provide exclusive programming from digital-only channels. As experts in wireless communication, however, Marciano and a team of engineers led by Mr. Calvin Artemies Hilario of the DOST-ASTI, are confident that these devices can do much more. There are inherent advantages for TV broadcast to go digital, which can be leveraged for educational applications. Marciano mentions a few. First is the fact that digital signals can be more robust. Unlike analogue TV broadcast, which is similar to traditional AM and FM radio, information in digital broadcasts is converted into ‘bits’ or binary digits, which can be more readily processed by computers. These bits can be computed on and stored to make the broadcast system more efficient and reliable. “If your house is far away from the broadcast station, the signal that reaches you can be very weak and therefore prone to errors or distortion.” Marciano says. “The very nature of digital information means that computers can detect errors in the transmissions and also apply corrections to them.” Explaining the concept of the noise floor, or the threshold below which a communication signal cannot normally be picked up, he says that digital signals, even when badly degraded or noisy, can be fitted with protections that assure reliable reception. Mr. Calvin Artemies Hilrario and Mr. Jean Jay Quitayen (sitting in front of the PC), both from the Solutions and Services Engineering Division of the DOST-ASTI, test the ability of the set-up box—the black gadget in the upper right corner of the cardboard box—to receive digital broadcast signals. Photo by Celeste Llaneta, UPMPRO. Another distinct advantage is the way digital TV can send much more content than its analogue counterpart over the same channel. In the Philippines, TV stations broadcast over designated radio frequencies assigned by regulators and the width of this channel is 6 MegaHertz (or 6,000,000 Hz). This “bandwidth”, Marciano explains, is “analogous to the lanes in a road or highway and more efficient systems would be able to offer higher capacity, such as by handling more traffic or support higher speeds, for the same width of road”. Using digital TV, a broadcaster can send multiple content simultaneously in one 6Mhz-wide channel, as opposed to only one content in the analogue TV system. “If you are a digital TV station, you can accommodate up to six different content at the same time over one 6 MHz channel,” adds Mr. Hilario. “Whereas in analogue systems you would need six separate channels, which is inefficient.” Anyone familiar with digital broadcasts also knows that audio and video can be more robustly represented in digital format. This means that potential students can access better quality images, which can come in handy in some areas of study. In the Full Anechoic Chamber located in the UP ULyS3ES lobby, Mr. Calvin Artemies Hilario of the Solutions and Services Engineering Division of the DOST-Advanced Science and Technology Institute (ASTI) tests the prototype of the set-top box attached to a PC. The device allows analogue television to receive interactive digital broadcasts. Photo by Jun Madrid, UPMPRO. Datacasting and education The possibility of sending supplemental information apart from the original audio and video broadcast content is the key that Marciano and his colleagues think can be a game-changer for Philippine higher education. In broadcasting parlance that function is called ‘datacasting’, and while foreign countries already use it, for example, to provide real-time sports data and information on-screen running in parallel with an actual game, it can be used to provide an element of interactivity that the traditionally unidirectional TV medium has been lacking when used for learning. “Now imagine interacting with your TV via your remote,” he adds. Other countries, Marciano notes, already do this for channels like TV shopping, where you can use your remote to interact and purchase via your set-top box. “So, set-top boxes can be two-way. This is prevalent in cable TV systems, but not in free-to-air broadcast.” he notes. Marciano thinks educators can take advantage of datacasting and the possible return-path to create more interaction with students. The following diagram illustrates their current implementation, where datacasting is used to encode and “multiplex” text, files and other interactive content in the TV programming along with a return path that provides the means for obtaining feedback. For Marciano and his team, these features enable TV broadcast to deliver even richer information, foremost with distance education in mind. Datacasting serves as an additional “pipe” for digital information that enriches TV broadcast content for education. Diagram from Dr. Marciano and Mr. Hilario. He explains that the return path can be implemented in the set-top box by building basic capability such as SMS, for example. “In this return path, the data you’re sending back is really not that heavy,” he said, citing multiple choice questions and daily checkups as some things that can be responded to by students and transmitted back directly. “So, you are no longer just running a video. You can pick a time to send a question like, ‘are you ok?’ or some other questions that they can answer optionally.” “With or without the Internet, we can also try to reach our audience via free-to-air digital TV. Digital information can reach them in one hop; we just have to be able to concentrate the content in one place—the TV station. It does not replace the Internet, but it can bridge and augment,” says Marciano. “And while TV has been used in education for a long time, let us not forget the features that digital TV has like datacasting that can enrich the experience of those watching your content. For educators, the challenge is to devise and construct content that takes advantage of that capability.” Dr. Marciano during the testing of the set-up box protoype. Photo by Jun Madrid, UP MPRO. Content need not always be synchronous, too. According to Marciano, their prototype also aims to take advantage of the fact that through datacasting, a broadcaster can transparently send other content in the background while the main TV program is being played. Some materials do not have to be consumed right away and can be stored in the set-top box to be accessed afterwards. “For education, datacasting can also provide a path for sending digital information to learners outside of what is being displayed immediately onscreen. It can come with advisories like, ‘after watching this broadcast, open this.’ Then you can press a special button in the remote and it will access other information in your set-top box and run it. So, it can be a file that can be displayed, or it can be a website or a form where you can answer a quiz, or additional offline video materials they can watch. That’s possible and we demonstrate it in our implementation.” Depending on how they are made, set-top boxes can also come with recording features for broadcast programs and lectures. “You can store them in the hard drives of set-top boxes,” Marciano stresses. Depending on the size of the hard drive included in the box, students can run back lectures to review and check at their own leisure. “In our implementation, the box is practically a small computer with a built-in TV receiver and uses TV screen as a monitor. We can connect a keyboard and mouse to replace the remote control.” An educator’s task While highlighting the advantages of such a medium for education nationwide, Marciano is quick to note that it should be educators who must take up the challenge of creating content that will maximize the capabilities of digital TV. “We’re more on the technology platform side,” he says. “We can tell them what the limits are, what they are able to do, and how to possibly implement the reverse channel going back.” The rest, he said, is up to a teacher’s needs and creativity. Marciano also believes there is potential for digital TV to complement not just purely pedagogical pursuits but to support more general university functions. “For example, we wake up at 4 in the morning to bad weather and we are not sure if we should suspend classes,” he notes. “The decision perhaps becomes easier because we don’t need our students to physically come to the classroom, though that may be ideal.” The little “mahiwagang” black box that can go a long way in helping educate Filipinos. Photo by Celeste Llaneta, UPMPRO. Therefore, digital TV can serve as a far-reaching back-up system to keep classes on track in times of bad weather or many other sorts of disruptions. “Just tell everybody that there is a protocol in place that we may resort to when classes are suspended.” Hopefully, we would not have to deal with disruptive conditions of such scale, but if classes do need to be suspended, “it’s not going to be a difficult decision because of interventions like these.” Marciano and his colleagues make it clear that they are not endorsing digital TV per se as a standard. “It is fundamentally about leveraging and innovating on the technology options we have at the moment. In areas where connectivity is unavailable, let us see what other available technologies like digital TV and satellites can do to bridge the gap,” he says. “These interventions are part of efforts to enable community networks to flourish in unserved areas in the country, which involves ensuring proper management and productive use of TV and radio frequencies. At the PhilSA, we support these initiatives through our space missions, specifically on measuring radio spectrum utilization, developing radio payloads and promoting communication satellites.” Overall, as with all innovations, it will take an ecosystem to make the most out of it. Educators and broadcasters alike will have to work with engineers and policymakers to make it happen. Long has the country wrestled with the realities of making connections in an archipelago of more than 7,000 islands. “With every island we have to lay down submarine cables, as we are connected either through wireless links or cables under the sea.” Digital TV could be another tool in UP’s growing arsenal to accomplish its mandate and provide education to more people than ever before. “Let us say that UP in Miag-ao has a TV station, then you can extend the reach of that campus beyond the classroom, its teachers and students. How about the surrounding communities? You can reach them as well.” |
https://up.edu.ph/cone-snails-from-lethal-killers-to-medical-marvels/ | Cone snails: From lethal killers to medical marvels – University of the Philippines | Cone snails: From lethal killers to medical marvels Cone snails: From lethal killers to medical marvels April 25, 2022 | Written by Franco Gargantiel and Celeste Llaneta Ms. Iris Bea Ramiro, UP Chemistry alumna, and researcher at the University of Copenhagen, is out in the waters of Cebu in search of the cone snails that are at the center of her research. Photo courtesy of Ms. Ramiro. Who could imagine that something as small as cone snails, popular among shell collectors and tropical-themed jewelry makers for their intricately colored shells, is the key to a substantial medical breakthrough waiting to be unlocked? Perhaps it is fitting that a young Filipino scientist, Iris Bea Ramiro, is next in line to reveal the biomedical potentials in these venomous sea snails commonly found in Philippine reefs and waters. Ramiro, a UP College of Science alumna, a researcher at the UP Marine Science Institute (MSI), and now a Ph.D. student and researcher at the University of Copenhagen Department of Biomedical Sciences in Denmark, is following in the footsteps of other internationally renowned Filipino scientists and UP alumni. Read the full paper here. A cone snail sitting in an aquarium. Photo courtesy of Ms. Ramiro. From toxin to medicine Conus rolani, one of the two species of Asprella cone snails Ms. Ramiro studied. Photo courtesy of Ms. Ramiro. Over the past decades, scientists have reported that the toxins produced by cone snails (family Conidae) contain a unique component called conotoxins, which generate new kinds of painkillers and drugs to treat disease. But scientists have barely scratched the surface when it comes to exploring the biomedical potentials of the planet’s marine life, and the research continues. Ramiro and her team conducted their study off the coast of Sogod, Cebu Province. They observed a deep water species of fish-hunting cone snails of the Asprella clade using a hunting method known as “ambush-and-assess.” This method involves the snail stinging its prey with its venom and waiting between one to three hours for its target to become sluggish and unable to counterattack, after which the snail moves in to finish the job. The method differed from the more widespread “taser-and-tether” technique, where cone snails use toxins to electrocute their prey rapidly; and the “net-hunting” strategy, where cone snails release venom into the water to knock the target insensible. The hours-long wait between the first strike to having a meal in the “ambush-and-assess” method struck Ramiro as unusual, leading her to investigate further by focusing on two species of Asprella cone snails, the Conus rolani and Conus neocostatus. “No one in our lab was working on it at that time,” she said in the press release published by the University of Utah press. “I was just looking to identify any small peptide (chain of amino acids) from the venom of C. rolani that had unusual or interesting activity in mice.” She discovered that the toxins Asprella cone snails use contain a peptide called Consomatin Ro1, which closely resembles the neuropeptide hormone somatostatin. Humans naturally produce somatostatin, which inhibits growth hormone secretion and cell production. It may be a possible treatment for cancer, diabetes, pain and inflammation, and endocrine disorders. Consomatin Ro1 resembles a drug analog or copy of somatostatin called octreotide, currently available under the brand name Sandostatin. Ramiro at work. Photo courtesy of Ms. Ramiro. The critical difference is that Consomatin Ro1 is slow acting. Unlike human-produced somatostatin, which has only a half-life of one to three minutes, and octreotide, which has a half-life of 90 minutes after intravenous infusion, Consomatin Ro1 has a much longer half-life of more than 158 hours or more than six and a half days. (During a test involving Consomatin Ro1 in a plasma stability assay, somatostatin’s half-life was five and a half hours.) The peptide from Asprella cone snails can stick around much longer than somatostatin. On top of that, Consomatin Ro1 also functions the same way as somatostatin does. The human body has five somatostatin receptor subtypes that this peptide binds to activate its powers of hormone and cell growth inhibition. So far, Consomatin Ro1 appears to bind strongly to somatostatin receptor subtypes 1and 4, making it an effective compound. “It has the potential to become a lead for pain treatment because two of those human receptors that the Consomatin targets are involved in pain. So that’s what we pursued and found it works,” Ramiro told Inverse Science writer Elana Spivack. Sea snail-based neuropharmacology Ramiro’s research builds upon the ever-growing field of neuropharmacology revolving around predatory sea snails, which scientists have described as “medical marvels”. The key figures in this field include: University of Utah Distinguished Professor Dr. Baldomero M. Olivera, who earned his BS Chemistry degree from UP and was given an honorary Doctor of Science degree by his alma mater in 2008 in recognition of his accomplishments in marine drug research; and, Dr. Gisela P. Concepcion, UP MSI Professor Emeritus and former UP Vice President for Academic Affairs. Dr. Concepcion, who led the UP MSI Marine Natural Products (MNP) Laboratory until her retirement, continued the research collaboration with Dr. Olivera, which started with her mentor, National Scientist, and UP MSI Professor Emeritus Lourdes J. Cruz, in the 1970s. Dr. Concepcion served as Ramiro’s MS thesis adviser. Later, while researching Asprella cone snails, Ramiro went to the University of Utah to consult with Dr. Olivera. UP Professor Emerita Gisela Padilla Concepcion and Ms. Ramiro during the dinner celebrating Ms. Ramiro’s graduation in 2017 after completing her MS degree. Photo courtesy of Ms. Ramiro. “For many years now, I have been building the Conoidean research capability of the UP MSI MNPLab by collaborating with Dr. Olivera,” Dr. Concepcion said in an interview with the UP MPRO. “Our research assistants and graduate students have been trained in his lab at the University of Utah, and we have succeeded in establishing critical technologies such as snail taxonomy, venom extraction, biochemical isolation, purification, characterization of peptides, peptide sequence determination, chemical synthesis and folding, and animal-, cell- and receptor-based neuroactivity testing. All of these are required to undertake snail venom research.” The DOST’s Philippine Council for Health Research and Development has long since recognized the value of this research field for the country. It supports the UP MSI’s PharmaSeas Program, followed by the Marine Drug Discovery and Development Program. This support has enabled UP MSI scientists and researchers to publish their discoveries in international journals. Dr. Concepcion names at least four examples of UP MSI studies conducted by graduate students and research assistants she mentored on the peptides produced by various species of sea snails with potential application as painkillers. As for Ramiro’s discovery of the compound in Asprella cone snails’ venom and its potential, Dr. Concepcion said they have already applied for an Invention Disclosure Incentive (IDI) from the Technology Transfer and Business Development Office of both UP Diliman and the UP System. Although the evaluation process takes time, both Ramiro and Dr. Concepcion noted the possibility of UP partnering with a private company to produce and market the drug. “We can chemically synthesize sufficient peptide quantities for proof-of-concept studies in an animal pain model,” Dr. Concepcion said. Press on and persevere Ramiro grew up in Bohol, where anglers know how to find and catch the venomous cone snails. In an interview with the UP MPRO, she said she received encouragement and support while UP MSI’s MNP Lab was acquiring the equipment to do biochemical characterization of the peptides in the venom, which made for a bit of a slow start. Ramiro and her fellow UP MSI lab teammates during the same graduation dinner in 2017. Photo courtesy of Ms. Ramiro. “I think UP has come a long way with new equipment and expertise helping fast-track some of our research,” she said. “I also had excellent lab mates, and we had good teamwork in the field and the lab. We supported each other with the different tasks.” She also experienced good teamwork as a researcher at the University of Copenhagen. “We are fortunate to receive support and guidance from different research groups as we (my current lab) started experiments in this area.” Nevertheless, the drudgework of scientific research is the same whether it is done in UP or elsewhere. “Sometimes experiments do not work. One tries the next week again,” Ramiro said philosophically. What keeps her going despite the failed experiments? “Thinking of the ‘why,’ the project’s goal, then aiming for it. Persevering through failures and having fun while doing it.” Ramiro credits UP for equipping its students with the knowledge and fostering an environment where students are “encouraged to explore and learn from others, not just within the university but even collaborators outside UP. I think UP is well connected with other universities in the Philippines and abroad,” Ramiro noted. The adventures of a young Pinoy scientist in Copenhagen, Denmark. Photo courtesy of Ms. Ramiro. And as for the young Filipino researchers and graduate students, Ramiro encourages them to press on and persevere. “Experiments may not work the first time—or the nth time—but one has to try again. Learn as much as you can from others. I learned a lot from discussions with professors, lab mates and colleagues, and our collaborators.” Then she added: “And as I learned from my recent class, have fun!” Fascinated by the secret biomedical powers of cone snails and other Philippine marine animals? Learn more in these three educational videos by TVUP: Dr. Ronie Calugay of the UP Baguio Biology Department on “Conotoxins” Dr. Gisela Concepcion on “Marine Organisms from the Philippines” Dr. Lourdes Cruz, “From Killer Snails to Biodiversity” |
https://up.edu.ph/filipino-voters-were-engulfed-in-relentless-stream-of-disinformation/ | Filipino voters were engulfed in relentless stream of disinformation – University of the Philippines | Filipino voters were engulfed in relentless stream of disinformation Filipino voters were engulfed in relentless stream of disinformation May 11, 2022 | Written by Yvonne T. Chua, Maria Diosa Labiste and Felipe Jose Gonzales. Filipino voters headed to the polls on Monday after months of being engulfed in a relentless and widening stream of falsehoods spewed out in multiple formats and platforms that is unprecedented in the country’s history. Tsek.ph’s second and latest analysis tracked a high volume of multipronged and multiplatform attacks on selected targets using traditional media and communities of sharers on social media to circulate posts and false narratives. It closely resembles what U.S.-based think tank Rand Corp. calls the “firehose of falsehood” strategy that is marked by “high numbers of channels and messages and a shameless willingness to disseminate partial truths or outright fictions.” The strategy is also characterized by an outpouring of rapid, repetitive and indiscriminate topics coming from a volume of sources. Tsek.Ph partners noted that they have many times encountered the same false claims that have previously fact-checked, even long before the election season opened. An extension project of the UP Office of the Vice President of Public Affairs and coordinated by the UP Journalism Department, Tsek.ph is a collaborative fact-checking initiative of 34 partners from academe, media and civil society for the May 9 elections. Apart from the University of the Philippines, it is also supported by Google News Initiative, Rakuten Viber, Meta, Meedan and the Embassy of Canada. Tsek.ph’s first analysis released on Feb. 25 covered around 200 fact checks published from November 2021 to early February, shortly before the campaign period kicked off on Feb. 8. The second analysis covers 685 fact checks published until the end of April, or nine days before the elections. The firehose strategy of disinformation, which was already observed beginning February, is even more pronounced in the succeeding weeks as if disinformation operations were on a last-ditch effort before election day. Most Targeted Candidates Leni Robredo and Ferdinand Marcos Jr. remain the primary targets of disinformation in the presidential race as are their running mates Francis Pangilinan and Sara Duterte in the vice presidential contest. The focus on the two tandems is significant because it reflects high political polarization. What is even more significant is how supporters of the Marcos-Duterte tandem have succeeded in further boosting narratives in their favor through an increase in the volume of negative messages against Robredo. As of April 30, 92% of fact checks about Marcos were false or misleading information in his favor. The proportion of debunked false claims praising Duterte was even higher at 95%. On the other hand, 96% of disinformation targeting Robredo was negative. Pangilinan consistently received negative messaging among the fact-checked claims since November. Negative messaging refers to claims that malign their targets while positive messaging denotes claims praising their targets. Both positive and negative messaging convey sentiments ranging from approval, support, contempt and ridicule, to attempts to deny and justify wrongdoing. The issues on competence and character were mainly raised against Robredo and hardly against Marcos. For example, Robredo’s relief assistance for typhoon victims, her anti-poverty project, and her stint as public interest lawyer were derided. She was also accused of bribing people to attend her rallies. Marcos, meanwhile, received credit for things he had little or nothing to do with, including bills and laws, while incredulous claims padded his personal and political performance. Targeting Institutions An array of false claims have targeted noncandidates and institutions associated with the candidates. For example, the late dictator Ferdinand Marcos Sr., his widow Imelda and daughter Imee were featured overwhelmingly in a positive light. Three-fourths of the claims intended for President Rodrigo Duterte were also positive. Mention of these noncandidates was intended to boost the Marcos-Duterte tandem as they are supposed to bask on their fathers’ achievements and legacies. The negative messaging that the media received partly stemmed from complaints of Marcos Jr.’s camp that their sorties were either ignored or not wholly reported by the media. The fact checks on the Commission on Elections were the claims about possible cheating and poll irregularities, some of which were blamed on Robredo, even without basis. The claims obviously came from the camp of Marcos, as they often recalled his defeat in the vice presidential race in 2016. The fact checks since February saw the proliferation of information that tends to sow confusion in the conduct of voting which could undermine the results of the election. These claims include a scenario of chaos with a Robredo victory. The false claims against the Comelec in the 2016 election and the foregoing scenario in Monday’s elections unite around the theme of stolen elections, which Marcos Jr. and his supporters have been spouting on social media. The Catholic Church, whose bishops, clergy and lay organizations have endorsed Robredo and Pangilinan, may have been less targeted than the media, but the messaging was entirely negative. However, other religious organizations that support Marcos and Duterte were mostly spared from disinformation attacks. The inclusion of Comelec, media and the Catholic Church as targets of disinformation is telling. If the public has little confidence in these institutions, the electoral process would be less credible because these institutions play crucial roles on election day. The attacks on the Aquino family also remain unabated. A TikTok video slammed the decision of Marcos’ successor, President Corazon Aquino, to mothball the Bataan Nuclear Power Plant as a case of putting politics first before the country’s welfare. The truth, however, is that Aquino decided against the operation of the nuclear power plant for public health and safety reasons as well as the fraud and corruption charges that plagued the project. The accomplishments of Aquino and her son, President Benigno Aquino III, were also downplayed. Critics accused them of only erecting monuments in their supposed combined term of more than 30 years. However, the Aquinos, who separately served six years each as president, have had many economic accomplishments. By discrediting the Aquinos, the false claims try to project the dictator Marcos and his son as the better leaders. Crowd Sizes and Endorsements The crowd-drawing capacity of Robredo-Pangilinan in their rallies has been subject to disinformation. The claims doubted the credibility of crowd estimates of the rallies, which often run into tens of thousands and presented through aerial drone shots. Supporters of Marcos and Duterte were skeptical about the reliability of drone photography whereas supporters of Robredo and Pangilinan embraced the technology that shows the growth of their grassroots backers. Endorsements are among the political tactics to win over votes and they involve celebrities, political figures, powerful groups and pop culture icons. Endorsements are meant to create public opinion and media events. However, this show of support for candidates became a source of disinformation. For example, claims that American pop star Beyonce and K-Pop BTS and supporting Marcos were tagged false. So were claims of support for Marcos Jr. from President Duterte, Mar Roxas and Robredo. A newspaper also inaccurately reported that 90% of governors support Marcos. Red-tagging/Red-baiting Red-tagging is a form of disinformation that alleges a connection between some candidates and the clandestine Communist Party of the Philippines – New People’s Army (CPP-NPA) that is fighting the government for more than fifty years. While unfounded, red-baiting continues to be an issue against Robredo and Pangilinan. Claims that Robredo and Pangilinan were advised by CPP-NPA founder Jose Maria Sison and that Robredo’s daughter Aika and Pangilinan’s wife, Sharon Cuneta, confirmed such connection were among those debunked by fact checkers. Robredo has challenged the red-baiting tactics at the time when her sorties and rallies were drawing huge crowds and had benefited from endorsements from various political groups, including those that were also red-tagged. Red-tagging the Robredo-Pangilinan tandem is meant to demonize their group by presenting them as undesirable and evil. The demonization could widen political polarization and prevent the undecided voters from considering the tandem because they are falsely associated with the insurgents. Many of the visual forms of red-tagging were not subjected to fact checks because they offer conjectures and expressed resentment, which are framed to outwit verification. Agents of Disinformation The sources and agents of claims that were fact-checked as either disinformation (false information intended to cause harm) and misinformation (erroneous and inaccurate information) are most social media users with partisan views. Candidates contributed 12% percent of the total claims in the form of statements given at debates, press conferences, rallies and other public gatherings. Facebook is the primary platform used for political campaigning, but at the same time it is also where most false claims are conspicuously found. However, disinformation over Facebook is interlinked with those of other social media platforms. This means that Facebook either functions as the source or a repeater of inaccurate claims. TikTok, a younger platform, now plays a crucial role in pushing false or misleading election-related claims. In Tsek.ph’s February analysis, only 7% of the fact-checked claims came from the video-sharing app. Its share has climbed to 13% in the latest analysis and is tied in second spot with YouTube after Facebook. Crossposting has also risen, with 29% of fact-checked claims now appearing in two or more platforms. The ease with which false or misleading claims can range the social media platforms has helped increase the audience’s chances of encountering disinformation, especially so when many of the claims were repeated claims or variations of the same. The repeated false claims continue to elicit interaction from social media users because either they support such views or their familiarity with those views led to their eventual acceptance. Photos are still the most popular forms of political messaging on social media (42% of fact-checked claims), but claims contained in video have grown and account for 40% in the latest analysis compared to 32% in February. Coordinated Behavior Agents of disinformation do not operate in relative isolation. They attract people to join networks of disinformation that function as spreaders of large volume of false content. Coordinated behavior was observed in the number of groups that share a single false claim, giving the impression that the claim has multiple sources. This would make the claim appear believable because of the sheer interest conveyed by various sources. Available data show that three in five fact-checked claims circulated in more than 50 Facebook pages and groups. A big majority (84%) of the claims generated total interactions (likes, shares, comments) exceeding 1,000. For example, a video of a priest’s homily spliced together with clips of Marcos Jr.’s campaign rallies to make it seem he was speaking in favor of the former senator elicited more than 5.1 million interactions, making it among the top five claims with the most interactions. Among the rampant claims that were fact-checked were those that insinuate that Marcos Jr. might lose again by cheating. His supporters have echoed his statement that he lost to Robredo in 2016 because he was cheated despite a Supreme Court ruling dismissing his allegation. Up to the eve of the elections, the claim of a repeat of the 2016 election cheating circulates on social media, suggesting that the certainty of Marcos’ victory could be thwarted by electoral fraud blamed on Robredo. The insinuation of poll irregularities could cast doubts on the integrity of Comelec and the electoral system. This feature story was contributed by Tsek.ph. It is written by Yvonne T. Chua, Maria Diosa Labiste and Felipe Jose Gonzales. |
https://up.edu.ph/connecting-the-unconnected-it-takes-a-village-to-build-a-bayanihanet/ | Connecting the unconnected: It takes a village to build a Bayanihanet – University of the Philippines | Connecting the unconnected: It takes a village to build a Bayanihanet Connecting the unconnected: It takes a village to build a Bayanihanet August 11, 2021 | Written by Dr. Roel Ocampo On August 4, 2021, in the middle of an afternoon of unsettled weather and a silently raging pandemic, a small team from a project named CONNECT—Cable Operators Neutral Network Exchange for Community Transformation, rushed to beat the National Capital Region’s impending lockdown just two days away. With an imperceptible click of one end of a cable, an indicator lit up, signaling the completion of a 24,000-meter optical path on which two wavelengths of light each transported 1 billion bits per second in opposite directions inside a single glass fiber around the size of a strand of human hair. There were no high-fives, not in this era of health protocols and distancing. Just a feeling of relief, because that same link had refused to work two days earlier due to fussy equipment. The barangay hall along Laguna Lake in Binangonan, Rizal, was finally online. The CONNECT team at Barangay Kalinawan. Photo by Karisse Villanueva, CONNECT project staff According to the residents of Barangay Kalinawan (population: 2,062), a mere 30 kilometers southeast of Quezon City, they had never enjoyed permanent high-speed connectivity before. Several entities had surveyed the area over the years with the intention of erecting telecommunications towers, but none of those efforts eventually translated into continuous and pervasive Internet connectivity for residents. Getting Kalinawan online is part of the community networks component of the CONNECT project. But what do community networks have to do with a project whose title includes “cable operators” and a “neutral network exchange”? There are several hundred cable TV operators in the country and they’re everywhere, some in areas where you can’t get a good mobile signal, much less decent 4G Internet connectivity on your phone. The smaller, local ones tend to build closer relationships with their subscribers in much the same way you are more likely to know the owner of your suking tindahan than even catch a glimpse of the owners of SM Megamall. Some operators even still go house-to-house to collect subscription payments, or at least they used to, before the pandemic hit. Map showing location of Barangay Kalinawan. The ties that bind small cable operators to their subscriber base are not only business or social relationships. They are also literally physically linked together. Cable operators, whether small, medium or large, all have this in common: physical connectivity to their subscribers. Having infrastructure and subscribers even in areas where telco-based Internet connectivity is poor make cable operators a promising strategic force in bridging the digital divide. The rise in popularity of online video services, the precipitous drop in traditional cable TV subscriptions, and the surge in demand for general Internet service especially during the pandemic—all these mean that cable operators, especially the small- and medium-sized ones, need to quickly transform business models and technical capabilities and shift to providing Internet access and other services on top of it. There is both a push and pull for it. This is one aspect of the “community transformation” in the CONNECT project title. CONNECT Project connecting a fishing village to the internet. Photo by Karisse Villanueva, CONNECT project staff The other aspect of “community transformation” has to do with residential communities themselves. Instead of depending solely on commercial service providers to set up telecommunications facilities and infrastructure, ordinary citizens can set up, operate and manage their own local community networks. This model has been used with varying degrees of success all over the world, such as in Central and South America, Europe, and even in the US. One very successful example is guifi.net, which has around 37,000 active nodes mostly in Catalonia, Spain and in nearby areas. Such an approach is certainly worth considering in the Philippines. A local community network in itself can provide many things, such as much needed local communications during a pandemic. In Kalinawan, teachers who need to keep printing and distributing course materials and modules eagerly await, if not press for their elementary school to get connected next. A community network can be used to support local CCTV for peace and order needs, or to integrate sensors for disaster resilience, smart farming, or environmental protection. Local networks do not automatically provide Internet access, but make it easier and cost-effective for commercial providers to come in and open new markets where they have no infrastructure. More importantly, it will allow cable operators, especially the small- and medium-sized ones with limited capex funds, to easily sell Internet access either in bulk, or individually to residents by riding on top of (and consequently paying back for the use of) the local community-owned infrastructure. Either way, both sides win. Community transformation. Telmarc Cable has set its sights not only on the transformation of the cable TV business, but on the sector’s role in transforming communities and society as well. Photo by Karisse Villanueva, CONNECT project staff We first met with cable TV operator and CONNECT partner Telmarc Corporation sometime in 2016, after having been introduced by Engr. Alfonso ‘Tito’ Aliga Jr of the UP Engineering R&D Foundation, Inc. Our conversations with Telmarc CEO Edgardo Paynor and his sons Tyrone and Kevin soon turned to stimulating discussions on ideas like enabling teacher-sharing by interconnecting K-12 schools. We quickly brought in DOST’s Advanced Science and Technology Institute (ASTI), a longtime collaborator that operates the national research and education network PREGINET, as well as collaborators from the Central Luzon State University (CLSU), with whom we worked in an earlier DOST PCIEERD-funded community networks research program called Bayanihanets. After an unsuccessful grant application with another funding organization and subsequent rethinking of our approach, our group applied to the 2nd Call for Proposals for the Asi@Connect Project in November 2017. Asi@Connect is funded by the European Union and Asian partners, and managed by the TEIN Cooperation Center in Seoul, Korea. In February 2018, we were informed that our application was accepted, and in January 2019 the project officially commenced. Installing the network. Photo by Karisse Villanueva, CONNECT project staff More than two years later, and with the significant added burden of moving things forward in the midst of a crippling pandemic, CONNECT’s more tangible deliverables have begun to emerge. Two days before the Kalinawan link activation, we turned up the “neutral network exchange” component of the project at the Telmarc operations center in Taytay, Rizal. More technically known as an Internet exchange point (IXP), this aims to promote local interconnectivity and data exchange between cable TV operators by offering an open and neutral ‘meeting point’ for their respective networks. To draw an analogy: an IXP is like having either a service road or common intersection directly connecting multiple gated subdivisions. You don’t need to traverse the expressway and pay toll fees just to get to a neighboring subdivision. Local traffic stays local. Having an IXP for cable operators will not only dramatically reduce the time it takes for traffic from one cable operator to get to the next (the ‘end-to-end delay’), but it will also translate to financial savings by avoiding the use of expensive international links. As an added bonus, the CONNECT IXP in Telmarc can also serve as a “feeder point” where Internet bandwidth can be supplied to an interconnected community network such as the nascent one in Kalinawan. CONNECT’s IXP is an effort co-led by a cable operator for cable operators, but it is by no means for the exclusive use of the sector. Any Internet service provider or network operator, even community network operators, should be able to join in the future. Nor is it the first for the cable industry. The Philippine Cable and Telecommunications Association operates its own IXP, called the PCTA IX. We believe that CONNECT’s IXP is not a competing effort but rather a complementary one. More IXP locations will mean that it will be easier and cheaper for even small and medium network operators to physically connect and join. As a rough analogy, it’s like having more domestic airports with direct flights in between so that you’re more likely to be close to an airport on average, and you’re likely to get a direct flight to your desired destination. CONNECT’s IXP also tries to bring in new technologies and architectural concepts for Internet exchanges. It uses software-defined networking (SDN) and artificial intelligence as technology components for the next generation of IXPs. This is where some of the more advanced research contributions and resources from CONNECT and other initiatives like the CHED-funded PCARI Scalable Community Access Networks (SCAN) and PCARI PRIME programs are poured in; and it is also where our partners CLSU and ASTI are also heavily involved. In early 2019 we set up the Science City of Munoz Internet Exchange or SCIMIX, an experimental IXP facility located in the CLSU campus in Munoz, Nueva Ecija. SCIMIX is primarily aimed at interconnecting R&D and educational institutions in the area with network operators including local cable operators. Experimental components and approaches planned for the CONNECT IXP in Telmarc undergo real-world testing first in SCIMIX. Currently, SCIMIX interconnects the Central Luzon State University, the Philippine Carabao Center, and the Philippine Center for Postharvest Development and Mechanization. We hope to soon interconnect the Philippine Rice Research Institute, the DOST Provincial S&T Center, and Munoz Cable. A 2 Gbps link provided by PREGINET interconnects SCIMIX with PhOpenIX, the official government IXP, in Quezon City. Inception. Initial meeting of SCIMIX stakeholders in August 2018. Photo from Dr. Roel Ocampo. Even after two years of work, Kalinawan is still just the beginning. There are four other barangays we are committed to connect either within or outside the formal duration of the CONNECT project. Sustainability is of course a major concern. To be optimistic, we’ve already received expressions of interest from civic organizations to help with expansion and sustainability, and to explore the possibility of organizing users into registered cooperatives. We will also be seeking support not only from research or developmental grant opportunities, but also from government programs like DICT’s Free WiFi initiative. We would be more than happy to propagate the Free WiFi “signal” (SSID) on around 100 more publicly-accessible WiFi access points to be deployed under CONNECT. Balancing act. John Robert Mendoza, ASTI Senior Science Research Specialist and PhD candidate at UP Diliman, maintains his balance as he installs network cabling. CONNECT will engage, enable and empower communities to set up local networks, but ultimately the communities will have to own, operate, govern, and sustain the infrastructure and services. The nature and degree of CONNECT’s involvement in this process is a balancing act we continue to study and learn. Photo by Karisse Villanueva, CONNECT project staff Ultimately, sustainability will depend on the communities themselves. An IXP is only an IXP if you have active and connected members who use, benefit from, and govern it. A community network by definition has to be cooperatively owned, used, operated and governed by the community itself. These were among ideas put forward in 2016 by then PhD student and now colleague Isabel Montes-Austria, who theorized that local community networks could leverage the bayanihan social tradition, as well as in Nobel Laureate Elinor Ostrom’s guiding principles for the management of commons. That work, supported by DOST PCIEERD, ended in 2017 but continues to guide our work today not only with community networks but in IXP design. At a conference in Brazil back in 2016, after I presented some of our work on how local bayanihanets might be designed and operated, Roger Baig Viñas of guifi.net came up to me and said: “Concepts like common pool resources and Ostrom, these seem to be very clear to you. You are building your system based on it. . . . It took us years to figure it out.” Five years later, we’re not really sure about things being very clear to us, but we’re willing to try, fail, learn, and build. We have no illusions of building all of these ourselves. Our mission is to engage, enable and empower. Community networks should be by the community, for the community. Like the task of raising a child in the African proverb: it will take a village to build a bayanihanet. Kalinawan is now online. Photo by Roel Ocampo, UPDEEI. The Asi@Connect Project is funded by the European Union and Asian partners, and is managed by the TEIN Cooperation Center (TEIN*CC) based in Seoul, Korea. More information may be found at the Asia@sConnect website. Authored by Dr. Roel Ocampo, a faculty member at the UPD Electrical and Electronics Engineering Institute, and the Principal Investigator of the Asi@Connect-supported CONNECT project |
https://up.edu.ph/pagtatapos-2023/ | Pagtatapos 2023 – University of the Philippines | Pagtatapos 2023 It’s time for the UP Class of 2023! The month of July signals the start of graduation season for a majority of the University of the Philippines (UP) System. Grad photos have been taken. Outfits already chosen. The UP sablay ready to be draped over the right shoulder and later shifted to the left. This year, UP commencement exercises will kick off at both the northernmost and southernmost constituent universities (CUs).UP Baguio and UP Mindanao will get the ball rolling on July 18. UP Visayas then picks it up on July 20 with the ceremony at its Miagao campus. UP Cebu will make it a back-to-back affair by holding its graduation ceremony on July 21. Fast forward to July 25 and it will be UP Tacloban College’s turn—its first as a newly-elevated autonomous unit under the Office of the President. Five days later, July 30, UP Diliman and its trademark sunflower blooms take center stage. Then it will be festive at the foothills of Mt. Makiling with the UP Los Baños graduation on August 5. Closing the series is the CU with the campus where the University began. UP Manila will hold its commencement exercises on August 7. Details on each CU graduation below. Please visit this page for updates. The graduating class of 2019 of the University of the Philippines Baguio light up candles for the Ritwal ng Pagtatanglaw. This unique tradition goes back the 1960s when UP Baguio was an arts and sciences college of UP Diliman. Photo by Misael Bacani, UP MPRO. UP Mindanao – July 18 University of the Philippines Mindanao was the first to hold its graduation rites among the UP System constituent universities this year. The CU held its ceremonies on July 18, Tuesday, at 7:00 AM. This was held at the Atrium of the Administration Building, UP Mindanao campus, Mintal, Davao City. This was the 25th Commencement Exercises for UP Min. The Guest Speaker for this year was UP alumnus and the President and General Manager of Bounty Agro Ventures, Inc., Mr. Ronald Mascariñas. Meluzvia Marie Amora, Bachelor of Science in Food Technology, summa cum laude, will delivered the response of the graduates in her valedictory speech. Click here to view the highlights video of the UP Mindanao Commencement Exercises UP Baguio – July 18 University of the Philippines Baguio also held its graduation ceremonies on July 18, but at 3:00 in the afternoon. It was held at the Cordillera Convention Hall, Baguio Country Club, Baguio City. This year’s graduating class was composed of 440 undergraduate and doctorate candidates for graduation from three colleges. The attendees included graduates for Academic Year 2021-2022, and first and second semester of Academic Year 2022-2023. Among this year’s graduating class were 271 honor graduates and one graduating as summa cum laude. Jef Mitzel B. Paran, Bachelor of Arts in Social Sciences 2023, summa cum laude, delivered the valedictory address. National Scientist Dr. Lourdes J. Cruz was this year’s Commencement Speaker. Click here to view the highlights video of the UP Baguio Commencement Exercises UP Visayas – July 20 University of the Philippines Visayas held its 44th Commencement Exercises on July 20, Thursday, at 8:00 AM, at the UP Visayas Miagao Campus. The graduating class was composed of 779 candidates—744 from UPV Iloilo and 35 from UPV Tacloban College. The batch was led by three who are graduating summa cum laude; 100, magna cum laude; and 297 cum laude. Former Department of Education Undersecretary, Dr. Dina Joana S. Ocampo, was this year’s Commencement Speaker. Mary Manuelita B. Tan, Bachelor of Science in Public Health, summa cum laude, delivered a response on behalf of the graduating class. The other summa cum laude graduates of UP Visayas are Stephen Caro H. Areño, who is earning a Bachelor of Science in Applied Mathematics, and Benreo Rex N. Rembulat, Bachelor of Science in Applied Mathematics. Click here to view the highlights video of the UP Visayas Commencement Exercises Wearing their Sablay, graduating students in UP Los Baños cheer their fellow Iskolar ng Bayan during the 2019 Commencement Exercises. The Sablay is the official academic costume of the University, worn only by graduates in formal academic functions. Photo by Jonathan Madrid, UP MPRO. UP Cebu – July 21 University of the Philippines Cebu held its graduation rites on July 21, Friday, 3:30 PM at the UP Cebu Campus Grounds, Cebu City. This was UP Cebu’s 84th Commencement Exercises. Leading this year’s graduating class was Edsel Suhayon Codoy, who earned a Bachelor of Science in Computer Science, summa cum laude. He gave the valedictory address. He is the second student to have received the summa cum laude honor since UP Cebu became a UP constituent university in 2016 UP Cebu’s Commencement Speaker was former Vice President of the Republic of the Philippines and UP alumna, Atty. Maria Leonor “Leni” Robredo. Click here to view the highlights video of the UP Cebu Commencement Exercises UP Tacloban – July 25 The UP System’s sole autonomous college, University of the Philippines Tacloban College, held its 45th Commencement Exercises on July 25, Tuesday, 3:43 PM, at the UP Tacloban AS Grounds. This year’s graduating class was composed of 303 total graduates for Academic Year 2022-2023, with 34 for the first semester and 268 for the second semester. One hundred and seventy-eight students graduated with honors, with 13 graduating magna cum laude and 165 cum laude. Click here to view the highlights video of the UP Tacloban Commencement Exercises UP Diliman – July 30 Meanwhile in Quezon City, University of the Philippines Diliman held its graduation rites on July 30, Sunday, 7:00 AM at the UPD Amphitheater. This was UP Diliman’s 112th Commencement Exercises. The Commencement Speaker for this year is UP President Angelo A. Jimenez, who is a labor lawyer and authority on global worker migration. Representing the Class of 2023, Jessie Malibiran, Jr., Bachelor of Arts in Political Science (BA-MA Honors Program), talked about living up to the University’s motto of Honor and Excellence in everyday life. Click here to watch UP President Angelo A. Jimenez’s speech to the graduates of UP Diliman UP Los Baños – August 5 University of the Philippines Los Baños held its 51st Commencement Exercises on August 5, 4:00 PM, at the UPLB Copeland Gymnasium, UPLB Campus, Los Baños, Laguna. National Economic and Development Authority Secretary Arsenio Balisacan, a UPLB alumnus, was commencement speaker, who used his life and career experience to impart a lesson to the graduating class. Jenel Justo, BS Computer Science summa cum laude, was UPLB Class of 2023 valedictorian. Click here to view the highlights video of the UP Los Baños Commencement Exercises UP Manila – August 7 The University of the Philippines Manila held its 114th Commencement Exercises on 7 August 2023, Monday, 7:00 AM. With the theme, “Talino, Galing, at Puso Tungo sa Kalusugang Pangkalahatan”, Dr. Carmencita D. Padilla, professor and Chancellor of UP Manila, served as commencement speaker. She conveyed ten important lessons based on her experiences as a pediatrician, geneticist, and proponent and pioneer of the country’s newborn screening program and the Philippine Genome Center. Mr. Ivanne Joepert A. Idorot, the summa cum laude from BS Biology, delivered the valedictory address on behalf of Class 2023. Click here to view the highlights video of the UP Manila Commencement Exercises UP Open University – December 16 With its graduation scheduled for December 16, 2023, the University of the Philippines Open University will be the last constituent university of the UP System to hold its commencement exercises. The sunflowers bloom in anticipation of the graduation season in UP Diliman, Quezon City. The planting and blossoming of the flowers have become part of the traditions of the University. Photo by Jonathan Madrid, UP MPRO. |
https://up.edu.ph/advisory-on-up-video-conferencing-tools/ | Advisory on UP Video Conferencing Tools – University of the Philippines | Advisory on UP Video Conferencing Tools Advisory on UP Video Conferencing Tools June 30, 2023 | Written by UP Media and Public Relations Office The University of the Philippines System has encountered some challenges in procuring the renewal of the video conferencing platform. However, the UP System Procurement Office (UPPO) is continuously working on the options for the possible continuation of the platform. Following the advice of the Information Technology Development Center (ITDC), here are various alternative free and available video conferencing tools that may be used: Google Meet (with a maximum meeting duration of 24 hours) MS Teams (with a maximum meeting duration of 24 hours) Webex (with a maximum meeting duration of 40 minutes) We encourage our constituents to explore the above-mentioned options while waiting for the next announcements. Thank you for your continued support. Office of the Vice President for Academic Affairs UP Information Technology Development Center UP Procurement Office |
https://up.edu.ph/renewal-of-video-conferencing-services-at-the-university-of-the-philippines-system/ | Renewal of Video Conferencing Services at the University of the Philippines System – University of the Philippines | Renewal of Video Conferencing Services at the University of the Philippines System Renewal of Video Conferencing Services at the University of the Philippines System July 7, 2023 | Written by UP Media and Public Relations Office The University of the Philippines System is pleased to announce the renewal of our video conferencing services through the System Procurement unit. This decision is based on the end-user request of the Office of the Vice President for Academic Affairs (OVPAA), along with the consensus reached by the Presidential Advisory Committee in consultation with the OVPAA, the Office of the Vice President for Development (OVPD) / Information Technology Development Center (ITDC), and the System’s Digital Transformation Adviser. We have chosen to renew our service contract with Zoom Communications, our current videocon provider, to ensure the continuity of our video conferencing services. The contract term for this renewal will be for nine months, from July 8, 2023, until April 8, 2024. This duration will complete the standard 1-year contract after the recent 3-month extension. We strongly encourage all university community members to continue using the video conferencing platform to its full potential. Please take advantage of all the functions and features it offers to ensure uninterrupted communication and collaboration for both educational and administrative purposes. By renewing our commitment to video conferencing services, we aim to provide a seamless and efficient virtual environment that supports the needs of our academic community. UP users are still advised to use alternative video conferencing tools, such as Google Meet, MS Teams, and Webex. To know more about these alternatives, please click this link: https://bit.ly/VideoConTools If you need further assistance, please file a support ticket with the UP System ICT Support at https://ictsupport.up.edu.ph/ We appreciate your cooperation, and we look forward to a productive and successful academic year. Office of the Vice President for Academic Affairs UP Information Technology Development Center UP Procurement Office |
https://up.edu.ph/up-moves-up-in-qs-world-university-rankings/ | UP moves up in QS World University Rankings – University of the Philippines | UP moves up in QS World University Rankings UP moves up in QS World University Rankings June 28, 2023 | Written by Jo. Florendo B. Lontoc The University of the Philippines (UP) is steadily climbing in the roster of the world’s best universities, according to the London-based Quacquarelli Symonds (QS) World University Rankings. UP has gone from the top 44 percent universities in the 2016 rankings to the top 27 percent in the 2024 rankings. Data from the latest QS World rankings shows that with outstanding scores in terms of its reputation among employers and global academics, and employment outcomes of its graduates, UP also moved up in rankings from 412th out of qualified 1,422 institutions in the 2023 rankings to 404th out of 1,503 qualified institutions in the 2024 rankings. Source: QS World University Rankings 2024: University of the Philippines factfile Being in the top 27 percent means that UP has surpassed more than 73 percent of all the ranked institutions. In the rankings of the previous year, it surpassed 71 percent. In the Philippines, UP remains the number one institution, surpassing four others in terms of “academic reputation”, “employer reputation”, “faculty-student ratio”, “international research network”, and “sustainability”. Source: QS World University Rankings 2024: University of the Philippines factfile “Employer reputation is our strongest indicator this year,” the UP Office of the Vice President for Academic Affairs said. “Employer reputation evaluates the perceptions of global employers, through a survey, on which institutions are providing the most job-ready graduates” Among world universities, UP ranked 136th in employer reputation, 57 places higher than in the previous rankings. In terms of a new indicator, employment outcomes or the impact of graduates in their chosen fields, UP is ranked 213th. UP also rose 12 places in academic reputation, now ranking 250th. Source: QS World University Rankings 2024: University of the Philippines factfile UP also placed high, 370th, in another new indicator: sustainability or the social and environmental impact of universities as centers of education and research. Still above median in the new indicator of international research network, UP ranked 685th. Source: QS World University Rankings 2024: University of the Philippines factfile The University Philippines System is composed of eight constituent universities and one autonomous college located in 17 campuses throughout the whole country. With more than 50,000 students, 6,000 faculty members, and close to 10,000 administrative, research, extension, and professional staff, UP offers 563 undergraduate and graduate programs. Recognizing recent shifts of universities from the traditional priorities of academic institutions, the QS World University Rankings this year adopted a new methodology which they believe will highlight what they perceive as “the changing needs and expectations of students, society and globe.” The 2024 QS World University Rankings ranks universities through nine “performance lenses” with corresponding weights: (1) academic reputation, 30 percent; (2) citations per faculty, 20 percent; (3) employer reputation, 15 percent; (4) employer outcomes, 5 percent; (5) faculty-student ratio, 10 percent; (6) international faculty, 5 percent; (7) international research network, 5 percent; (8) international students, 5 percent; and (9) sustainability, 5 percent. Source: QS World University Rankings 2024: University of the Philippines factfile Additional reference: institutional press release provided by QS for UP |
https://up.edu.ph/update-on-google-workspace-storage-utilization/ | Update on Google Workspace Storage Utilization – University of the Philippines | Update on Google Workspace Storage Utilization Update on Google Workspace Storage Utilization July 17, 2023 | Written by UP Media and Public Relations Office The University has received numerous requests to reconsider the setting of the maximum storage capacity for each user under the Google Workspace for Education (GWE) subscription. The University is suspending, until further notice, the implementation of the maximum Google storage capacity as previously announced. The UP community can be assured that there is no danger that their files will be lost after the previously set cutoff date of July 15, 2023. The University will work on how to address the storage utilization properly. Rest assured that we will inform all community members of any development regarding this matter. |
https://up.edu.ph/work-and-class-suspensions-for-the-national-capital-region-on-july-24work-and-class-suspensions-for-the-national-capital-region-on-july-247367-2/ | Work and class suspensions for the National Capital Region on July 24 – University of the Philippines | Work and class suspensions for the National Capital Region on July 24 Work and class suspensions for the National Capital Region on July 24 July 22, 2023 | Written by UP Media and Public Relations Office Malacañang suspends work and classes for July 24, Monday, in the National Capital Region. The suspension is in anticipation of the probable effects of Typhoon ‘Egay’ and the scheduled 72-hour transport strike. Please read the full memorandum below, as shared by the Presidential Communications Office. 𝐏𝐁𝐁𝐌 𝐬𝐮𝐬𝐩𝐞𝐧𝐝𝐬 𝐜𝐥𝐚𝐬𝐬𝐞𝐬, 𝐠𝐨𝐯’𝐭 𝐰𝐨𝐫𝐤 𝐢𝐧 𝐍𝐂𝐑 𝐝𝐮𝐞 𝐭𝐨 𝐭𝐲𝐩𝐡𝐨𝐨𝐧 𝐄𝐠𝐚𝐲, 𝐭𝐫𝐚𝐧𝐬𝐩𝐨𝐫𝐭 𝐬𝐭𝐫𝐢𝐤𝐞 𝐨𝐧 𝐌𝐨𝐧𝐝𝐚𝐲 To ensure the safety of the public from the effects of typhoon ‘Egay’ and to alleviate the effects of the scheduled 72-hour transport strike, President Ferdinand R. Marcos Jr. has approved the suspension of classes and work in the National Capital Region (NCR) on Monday. “In view of the forecasted inclement weather brought about by Typhoon ‘Egay’ and the scheduled seventy-two (72)-hour transport strike in Metro Manila, work in government offices and classes in public schools at all levels in the National Capital Region are hereby suspended on 24 July 2023,” a memorandum circular dated July 21 and signed by Executive Secretary Lucas Bersamin stated. Executive Secretary Bersamin, however, clarified that government agencies that are involved in the delivery of basic and health services, preparedness/response to disasters and calamities, and/or the performance of other vital services shall continue with their operations and render the necessary services. The Executive Secretary also clarified that the suspension of work for private companies and classes in private schools is left to the discretion of their respective heads. *[PND]* Source: Presidential Communications Office on Facebook |
https://up.edu.ph/all-in-accordance-with-the-law-up-refutes-coas-claim-of-questionable-investment-undertaking/ | All in accordance with the law – UP refutes COA’s claim of “questionable investment undertaking” – University of the Philippines | All in accordance with the law – UP refutes COA’s claim of “questionable investment undertaking” All in accordance with the law – UP refutes COA’s claim of “questionable investment undertaking” July 27, 2023 | Written by UP Media and Public Relations Office The University of the Philippines (UP) has refuted the Commission on Audit’s (COA) claim that UP allegedly made questionable investment undertakings totaling P15.055 billion by citing the principle of fiscal autonomy granted to the national university under Republic Act 9500 or the UP Charter of 2008. In response to the COA’s claims, as stated in an article published by The Philippine Star on July 25, 2023, UP Vice President for Planning and Finance Iryn Balmores said that funds received by the University, such as through the 2022 General Appropriations Act, are utilized for intended projects and purposes. In cases where the funds are received prior to the time that required disbursements for the University’s projects, programs, and activities need to be made, the University places them in short-term placements as part of good stewardship of funds and as a way to ensure that these funds are made readily available at the time these are required to be disbursed. Moreover, all income earned from such investments is also used for or in support of educational purposes. This practice, Balmores stressed, is well in accordance with RA 9500, particularly with Section 24, which deals with managing the national university’s funds. Sec. 24 (c), in fact, states: “The independent trust committee shall provide the Board with direction on appropriate investments with the view to preserving the value of funds while allowing the University to earn a reasonable return thereon.” “Based on Section 24 of RA 9500, the University crafted an Investment Policy Statement approved by the UP Board of Regents (BOR) on 29 April 2015,” Balmores said. She added that the 2022 COA audit report cited in the Star article recognizes that most investment placements of the University are short-term in nature, that is, with a maturity period of less than one-year maturity, and that these are in the form of government bonds and securities and high-yield short term time deposits. None of these funds are placed in speculative investments. Aside from being one-sided, “the article made it sound that the funds were placed in time deposits without any regard to the intended purpose of the funds,” Balmores said. “This is incorrect because investing the funds in short-term placements is not equivalent to using the funds.” Balmores clarified matters concerning the UP constituent units in the Philippine Star article—UP Diliman, UP Mindanao, UP Manila, and UP Baguio. She said that UP Diliman would comply with the COA recommendation. Steps to review and update existing UP Diliman investment policies will likewise be recommended to address the concerns of the COA. The UP Mindanao Investment and Income Committee (IIC) has identified the utilization of these reprogrammed and trust funds and have consulted with the UP System IIC concerning the revision of its investment policies and guidelines. The UP Manila IIC has agreed to adhere to the provision that investments should not be placed for more than two years. Moreover, its Budget Office will also submit a consolidated proposal on utilizing the funds for UP Manila. Finally, UP Baguio’s IIC mirrors the activities of the UP System IIC. It is incorrect to say that UP Baguio had no established policy and definite rules and regulations to follow in their investment activities. “We wish to reiterate that the intention of placing portions of the fund in short-term investments is to obtain modest yet safe income from these funds while the payments for the intended projects are yet to be made. Once payments for these projects need to be settled, the funds are readily available,” Balmores said. “We respectfully disagree with the COA’s statement that there is a lack of transparency in the placement of these funds as these placements have gone through proper and complete documentation and approval.” |
https://up.edu.ph/up-president-angelo-jimenez-named-up-diliman-class-of-2023-commencement-speaker/ | UP President Angelo Jimenez named UP Diliman Class of 2023 Commencement speaker – University of the Philippines | UP President Angelo Jimenez named UP Diliman Class of 2023 Commencement speaker UP President Angelo Jimenez named UP Diliman Class of 2023 Commencement speaker July 28, 2023 | Written by UP Media and Public Relations Office Despite inclement weather conditions, the annual sunflowers continue to bloom along University Avenue in time for the University of the Philippines (UP) Diliman’s 112th General Commencement Exercises on Sunday, 30 July, at 7:00 in the morning, at the UP Amphitheater behind Quezon Hall. UP’s 22nd President, Angelo A. Jimenez, will grace the event as UP Diliman Class of 2023’s commencement speaker. The theme for UP Diliman’s 112th commencement exercises, “Tayog,” symbolizes the bright and promising future awaiting the members of UP Diliman Class of 2023 in their professional and personal lives as well as in their service to their communities. Like the famous sunflowers that are a traditional feature of UP Diliman’s graduation season, the theme of “Tayog” also symbolizes how the over 4,000 UPD students graduating this year will continue to turn toward UP’s principles of honor, excellence, courage, and compassion in service to the nation. Of the 4,478 total number of UP Diliman graduates for Academic Year 2022-2023—both from the undergraduate graduate levels—2,243 will be graduating with honors: 742 cum laude, 1,196 magna cum laude, and 305 summa cum laude. These figures are based on data supplied by the UPD Office of the University Registrar as of 28 July 2023. Representing his class as a valedictory speaker and expounding on what “Tayog” means for the UP Diliman Class of 2023 is Jessie “Jeman” S. Malibiran, Jr., who will be graduating with a Bachelor of Arts – Master of Arts Honors in Political Science, summa cum laude. Malibiran is graduating with a general weighted average of 1.187. University of the Philippines President Angelo A. Jimenez. Photo by Misael Bacani, UP MPRO. This year’s commencement speaker, UP President Jimenez, is a labor lawyer and a respected authority on global worker migration whose work has contributed to the establishment of the Philippines’ new Department of Migrant Workers, as well as the labor migration regulatory framework in countries in Asia, Africa, and the Middle East. A former Deputy Administrator of the Overseas Workers Welfare Administration, Jimenez’s expertise and experience in the field of migrant worker welfare have brought him to different parts of the world. He served as Labor Attaché in Japan, Kuwait, and Iraq. Former President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo awarded him citations for ensuring the safety of Filipino workers during the Israel-Lebanon conflict and for rescuing a Filipino hostage held in Iraq. His understanding of the factors that have led to the Filipino diaspora is the product of his education and experiences in Butuan, Agusan del Norte, where he was born and raised, and in UP Diliman, where he obtained both his Bachelor of Laws and Bachelor of Arts (Sociology) degrees. As a law student at UP Diliman, he was an Associate Editor of the Philippine Collegian and President of the College Editors Guild of the Philippines. He was also elected Chairperson of the University Student Council and, in 1992, was appointed Student Regent to the UP Board of Regents (BOR) by the late President Corazon C. Aquino. He later rejoined the BOR when he was appointed Regent by former President Rodrigo R. Duterte in 2016, during which he also served concurrently as Trustee of the UP Foundation, Inc. He earned his Master in Public Management degree from the Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy under the National University of Singapore (NUS). President Jimenez was also a Lee Kuan Yew Fellow of the Harvard Kennedy School of Government. A son of Mindanao, Jimenez believes that the Philippines’ premier state university must be a hub for transformational change and that engaging communities and helping solve real-world problems should be a part of the UP academic experience. Ultimately, the goal is for UP to become a global university that asks the consequential questions of our time and, acting locally, strives to address the serious issues confronting the country and the world. Watch the livestream of the 112th General Commencement Exercises of UP Diliman on Sunday, 30 July 2023, 7:00 AM at the UP Diliman official website and UPD YouTube channel. Watch the teaser trailer for the event below. |
https://up.edu.ph/official-statement-on-google-workspace-storage-utilization/ | Official Statement on Google Workspace Storage Utilization – University of the Philippines | Official Statement on Google Workspace Storage Utilization Official Statement on Google Workspace Storage Utilization July 15, 2023 | Written by UP Media and Public Relations Office A study of data supplied by the UP ITDC indicates that the current Google Workspace storage utilization of the entire UP System is 4.3. Petabyte (PB). The UP administration has decided that UP will subscribe to shared storage space of 5.0 PB across all Google Workspace platforms for the UP community for the next renewal of the 3-year contract with Google. UP System officials will renew UP’s agreement with Google with consideration given to anticipated growth, hence 5.0 PB for this year, 5.5 PB for the second year, and 6.0 PB for the third year. The key point in the decision of UP officials is the priority given to procuring enough storage space for the University. Hence, the UP community can be assured that there is no danger that their files will be lost after the previously set cutoff date of July 29, 2023. We are suspending the storage cap until we can approve a rational use data storage limit for our community. |
https://up.edu.ph/up-to-lead-the-way-in-improving-the-quality-of-education-in-other-sucs-says-jimenez/ | UP to lead the way in improving the quality of education in other SUCs, says Jimenez – University of the Philippines | UP to lead the way in improving the quality of education in other SUCs, says Jimenez UP to lead the way in improving the quality of education in other SUCs, says Jimenez August 1, 2023 | Written by UP Media and Public Relations Office University of the Philippines President Angelo A. Jimenez delivering his Commencement Address to the graduating class of UP Diliman on July 30, at the Quezon Hall, UP Diliman, Quezon City. Photo by Abraham Arboleda, UP MPRO. Addressing the graduating class of the University of the Philippines (UP) Diliman, University of the Philippines (UP) President Angelo “Jijil” Jimenez announced that UP would lead efforts to democratize access to quality tertiary education by helping improve the quality of education in other SUCs. In his commencement address, delivered on 30 July via a video recording due to inclement weather, Jimenez pointed out that “as the national university, we are mandated under Republic Act 9500, the law revising the UP Charter, to lead in higher education.” The labor lawyer reminded the UPD Class of 2023 that of the 114 state universities and colleges (SUCs) in the country, UP gets 20% of the national budget for higher education. “We all know there is a huge gap overall between the quality of UP education and the rest of the SUCs. No other public tertiary educational institution in the Philippines has ever landed among the top 1000 in global rankings,” lamented Jimenez. The UP President said it is paradoxical “that access to our university, which we love to call the University of the People, is very difficult for the people.” “I believe in democratic access to UP education. And I believe that is best done by helping improve the quality of education in other SUCs.” Jimenez said this would be more equitable as a student would not have to go to UP to access a UP-level education. “At the same time,” said the Butuan native, “we can review the UPCAT and our equity-excellence formulas to give our disadvantaged a better fighting chance.” Read UP President Jimenez’s speech in full. UP, the Commission on Higher Education (CHED), and other SUCs are set to hold the first UP-SUC Summit on Excellence and Equity in Public Higher Education on September 15. The summit aims to achieve the following objectives: (1) to discuss strategies for overcoming challenges in establishing and maintaining linkages between universities; (2) to promote sharing best practices and innovative approaches in academic, research, and public service collaboration; (3) to identify opportunities for graduate education, student and faculty exchange, joint research, and sharing of educational resources and other academic and research activities; and (4) to establish a framework for sustainable and effective collaboration between UP, CHED, and other SUCs by signing an undertaking or a Memorandum of Understanding that outlines the key points of agreement among the participants. |
https://up.edu.ph/looking-for-some-live-orchestra-music-upso-delivers/ | Looking for some live orchestra music? UPSO delivers – University of the Philippines | Looking for some live orchestra music? UPSO delivers Looking for some live orchestra music? UPSO delivers August 4, 2023 | Written by UP Media and Public Relations Office This August 18, 6 pm at the University of the Philippines (UP) Theater in Diliman, catch the UP Symphony Orchestra’s latest live concert, SYMPHONIC RIDES! UP College of Music Assistant Professor Kevin Castelo. (Photo from UPSO) The program includes Tchaikovsky’s Symphony No. 5, Jonathan Domingo’s “Mga Musika” and “Tagpo sa Tinubuang Lupa”, and works by Adams and Kraft. The concert promses to be an evening of exciting and fiery music that will sweep audiences off their feet (and seats). The concert will feature Kevin Julius D. Castelo on timpani as a soloist. Castelo graduated with a Bachelor’s degree in Music, major in Percussion at the University of the Philippines, and finished his Master of Music program in Percussion Performance at the Jacobs School of Music, Indiana University. He was also a member of the Asian Youth Orchestra from 2012-2015 and 2017. The group performed in various concert halls in Asia, the US, and Europe. Kevin is Assistant Professor at the UP College of Music. He is also the new Artistic Director of the FEU Drum and Bugle Corps. In addition, Kevin is the Principal Percussionist of the UPS; and he has been playing with the Philippine Philharmonic Orchestra and the Manila Symphony Orchestra as an extra percussionist. A portion of the concert proceeds will be donated to the UP College of Music Alumni Association’s Musikalinga scholarship program. Established in 2018, Musikalinga assists financially underprivileged but gifted students with a living allowance as they work toward their diplomas. It also provides financial assistance during recital and the student practicum culminating program, access to the rehearsal venue, and travel subsidies. Musikalinga has supported more than 80 students to date. Each ticket is a direct contribution toward keeping the music of our country playing not only for one night but for the next generation. Each ticket ensures the nurturing of another musician and the hope in their future contribution to nation-building through arts and culture. SYMPHONIC RIDES will be at the UP Theater on August 18, Friday at 6pm. Tickets are priced at Php1,000 and Php800, with a 50% discount for students, seniors, and PWDs. Children 6 years old and below can watch for free. Tickets are available at http://bit.ly/upsosymphonicrides Established by the Board of Regents during its 1337th meeting on August 30, 2018, UPSO serves as the official system-wide orchestra of the University of the Philippines, supported by the UP System Fund and hosted by the UP College of Music. Its main functions are as a repertory orchestra for musicians, a laboratory orchestra for Filipino composers, and a training orchestra for young conductors. Under the direction of Maestro Josefino Chino Toledo, the orchestra maintains a roster of 65 members exclusively from within the UP community, including alumni, students, faculty, and staff from all UP Campuses. They are the only orchestra in the country that regularly performs Filipino, Asian, contemporary, and new works in addition to the standard orchestra repertoire. |
https://up.edu.ph/the-investiture-and-the-summits/ | University of the Philippines | UP History in the Making this September This September, UP historical events will take place. From September 13 to 15, the University of the Philippines will hold three milestone events in Davao City, Davao del Sur, Mindanao, with all events marking firsts in the history of not just UP but the region as well. These include: a pioneering summit that puts the development of the Bangsamoro front and center in the national University’s strategic initiatives; the investiture ceremony for the first Mindanawan UP President, to be held for the first time on the UP Mindanao campus; and finally, the first UP-initiated summit gathering leaders of state universities and colleges from across the country with the aim of boosting engagement and partnerships in the Philippine higher education sector. With these series of high profile events, the University sets itself squarely upon the path to become the national university it is meant to be, a public service university “doing what we can for others” as “Iskolar Para sa Bayan”, as UP President Angelo A. Jimenez said in his address to the UP Diliman Class of 2023. A national university serving the Filipino people, focusing specially on the country’s most underrepresented and marginalized communities. The UP-Bangsamoro Development Program Summit Consultation Date: September 13 Time: 1:00-5:00 PM Venue: Dusit Thani Residences Davao Mindanao has been envisioned as the country’s agri-industrial center, given its rich natural, economic and human development resources, its potentials, and its people’s aspirations. The island is key to achieving the Philippine Development Plan 2023-2028’s overall objective of “economic transformation for a prosperous, inclusive and resilient society”, aligned with Ambisyon Natin 2040 and the country’s commitment to the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals. However, growth and development in Mindanao has remained uneven, hampered by such issues as poverty, social conflicts, criminality and social unrest. The Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (BARMM), in particular, has seen a significant drop, among families, in poverty incidence, from 52.6% in 2018 to 29.95 in 2021; but it still ranks among the lowest in the Human Development Index list of Philippine regions and provinces. In keeping with its mandate under Republic Act No. 9500 to take the lead in higher education and public service and to relate its activities to the needs and aspirations of all Filipinos, the University of the Philippines will host the UP-Bangsamoro Development Program Summit Consultation to discuss opportunities for collaboration aiming to improve the socio-economic conditions of the Bangsamoro and Mindanao. This will be held on Sept. 13, 2023, 1:00 PM at the Dusit Thani Residence Davao. These include the creation of a UP-Bangsamoro Development Program, which would be the first of its kind between the University, the BARMM government and local government units, and development NGOs and SUCs in the region. The program is envisioned to serve as an avenue of convergence between UP and the Bangsamoro for co-creating opportunities and collaborative action to strengthen human capital and improve socio-economic conditions of the Bangsamoro. According to its concept note, the UP-Bangsamoro Development Program’s major aims would include: providing a unified, inclusive, and effective way of collaboration between UP and BARMM stakeholders in crafting and delivering evidence-based development policies, plans, and programs; increasing partnership with development NGOs in BARMM to promote and improve socio-economic conditions in communities; promoting shared expertise and resources between UP and BARMM State Universities and Colleges to provide quality education; and promoting creative industries, and enhancing human capital. Slated to attend the summit are: BARMM Chief Minister Ahod Ebrahim, Al Haj; officials and representatives of various ministries and committees of the Bangsamoro Parliament; and LGUs, NGOs, and state universities and colleges (SUCs) in the region. A memorandum of understanding between the University and the BTA will also be presented by the UP to its partners in the transition authority. Panaad at Kabilin: Pagtatalaga kay Kgg. Angelo A. Jimenez bilang ika-22 Pangulo ng Unibersidad ng Pilipinas [Investiture of Atty. Angelo A. Jimenez as 22nd President of the University of the Philippines] Date: September 14, 2023 Time: 9:00 AM Venue: UP Mindanao Atrium, Tugbok, Davao City, Davao del Sur “The hallmark of UP in the next six years will be service to the nation. Service to the nation is constitutive of who we are and what we do. Together, we will work towards a UP that is more engaged with the nation,” Atty. Angelo A. Jimenez said in his speech on Feb. 10, when he accepted the position and authority of leading the University as its 22nd President. Born and raised in the City of Butuan, Agusan del Norte, Jimenez is the first Mindanawan and the first Manobo, honored and named as “Datu Mankalagan” or “Great Spirit” in 2007, to become UP President. To mark the symbolic significance of his rise to become the head of UP as the national university, his formal investiture as the 22nd UP President will be held at the Atrium of UP Mindanao, in Tugbok, Davao City, on Sept. 14 at 9:00 AM. For Jimenez, being a son of the South is integral to his UP Presidency. “It was when I got elected that people reminded me that I’m the first UP President who came from Mindanao; and I was amazed, actually surprised, maybe a little bit shocked,” he said in an interview he did for the UP Forum. “I never realized that my election would resonate in Mindanao. Finally, one of their own has become a UP President. I wanted to, in my own little way, remind UP where its ultimate loyalty belongs; and, I couldn’t imagine a more marginalized community than our IPs in the mountains where there has been an ongoing conflict and there still is right now.” Jimenez is a labor lawyer and a respected authority on global worker migration. His work has contributed to the establishment of the country’s new Department of Migrant Workers, as well as to the labor migration regulatory framework in countries in Asia, Africa, and the Middle East. A former Deputy Administrator of the Overseas Workers Welfare Administration, he served as Labor Attache in Japan, Kuwait, and Iraq, and was awarded Presidential citations for his work in ensuring the safety of Filipino workers during the Israel-Lebanon conflict, including the rescue of a Filipino hostage held in Iraq. With his extensive background in labor migration, Jimenez has been tapped as an expert lecturer by the UP Centre International de Formation des Autorités et Leaders or International Training Center for Authorities and Leaders Philippines. He has also written papers for organizations such as the International Organization for Migration Philippines and the Blas Ople Policy Center He is a regular lecturer on Philippine overseas labor laws at the UP Law Center’s Mandatory Continuing Legal Education program. Jimenez served on the UP Board of Regents twice, first as a Student Regent in 1992, when he was also elected Chair of the University Student Council of UP Diliman; and again when he was appointed Regent by former President Rodrigo R. Duterte in 2016, during which Jimenez also served concurrently as Trustee of the UP Foundation, Inc. He obtained both his Bachelor of Laws and Bachelor of Arts (Sociology) degrees from UP Diliman. As a law student at UP Diliman, he was Associate Editor of the Philippine Collegian and President of the College Editors Guild of the Philippines. He went on to earn his Master in Public Management degree from the National University of Singapore’s Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy. He was also a Lee Kuan Yew Fellow at the Harvard School of Government. Read more about his profile here Taking inspiration from and being guided by his Mindanawan and indigenous roots, Jimenez aims to highlight the view from the margins and bring a unique perspective on how UP can further contribute to national development. Championing kindness in the University, and setting public service as a pillar of his vision and strategic initiatives for UP, his administration plans to widen access to UP and UP-quality education through various courses, modes, and platforms, as well as to strengthen partnerships with Philippine SUCs. These partnerships are intended to advance higher education in the country through shared knowledge and expertise. UP Mindanao, which is hosting an investiture ceremony for the UP President for the first time, is the sixth constituent university under the UP System, and the only UP constituent university in Mindanao with the primary mandate to provide equitable access to quality UP education to Mindanawans. It offers academic programs in the fields of the humanities, architecture, mathematics, food, economics, social, natural, and computing sciences. As a graduate university, it offer a PhD by Research, and graduate degrees in management, food science, urban and regional planning, and sports science. Its development agenda focuses on opening additional academic programs and new Colleges in Human Kinetics, Medicine, and Engineering, to support Mindanao sports, health, technological, and bio-cultural diversity initiatives. UP Mindanao is headed by Chancellor Lyre Anni E. Murao. (For more news on UP Mindanao, visit their Facebook page) Pagtutulay, Pagtutuloy: 1st UP-SUC Summit Strengthening Partnerships in Philippine Public Higher Education Date: September 15, 2023 Time: 8:00 AM Venue: Dusit Thani Grand Ballroom Davao Stronger together. This belief in stronger partnerships within the Philippine higher education sector is what drives “Pagtutulay, Pagtutuloy: The 1st UP-SUC Summit on Excellence and Equity in Public Higher Education”, which will be held on September 15 at Dusit Thani Grand Ballroom, Davao City, a day after UP President Jimenez’ investiture in UP Mindanao. This UP-SUC Summit will convene leaders of Philippine SUCs, Commission on Higher Education (CHED) officials, and interested stakeholders from Congress and private higher education institutions. It was Jimenez’s cognizance of inter-SUC engagement and partnerships as imperatives for knowledge co-creation, innovation, research, and public service towards national development that gave rise to the conduct of the summit. This comes with the realization that when the common and unique strengths of SUCs are put together in the spirit of cooperation, they can make higher education an even more formidable force in building the Filipino nation. The summit is envisioned to inspire engagement in transdisciplinary academic, research, and public service programs through co-designed projects. It is an opportunity for SUCs to link up and be active co-producers in knowledge-building that will ultimately translate into the service of communities and the country. “Pagtutulay, Pagtutuloy” is a platform for this network of SUCs to: (1) discuss strategies for overcoming challenges in establishing and maintaining linkages between universities; (2) share best practices and innovative approaches in academic, research, and public service collaboration; (3) identify opportunities for graduate education, student and faculty exchange, joint research, and sharing of educational resources and other academic and research activities; and (4) establish a framework for sustainable and effective collaboration between UP, CHED, and other SUCs by the signing of a Memorandum of Understanding that outlines the key points of agreement among the participants. The summit includes the launch of four UP programs relevant to inter-SUC engagement: the UP Data Commons; Philippines Massive Open Online Courses (PHMOOCs); TVUP programs; and the UP Archipelagic and Ocean Virtual University (UPAOVU). It is expected to close with the signing of the Mindanao Declaration on Excellence and Equity in Public Higher Education. The UP Data Commons, inaugurated in 2021, is a world class high performance computing and storage facility, that includes the necessary hardware and software resources, at the UP Diliman College of Science. Its launch during the summit opens this UP resource to SUC partnerships in pursuit of innovative research, such as those on artificial intelligence and big data. It has three petabytes of storage, with plans to increase it to seven, and connectivity speeds that allow data transfer in milliseconds. PHMOOCs is a new platform designed to foster universal access to quality education, promote lifeline learning, and enhance collaboration among higher education institutions in the country. It promotes knowledge sharing, collaborative course development and implementation, research partnerships, and teaching methods and technology use innovations. It is envisioned to widen education opportunities by leveraging technology to provide accessible, inclusive, and high-quality courses, and to address the diverse needs of learners, wherever they may be. The UP Open University, which began offering MOOCS in 2013, leads this initiative, that also aims to link up with MOOCs platforms in other countries. TVUP, the UP-owned and operated internet television network, expanded its reach through Cignal TV Channel 101 in 2022. Its debut in “Pagtutulay, Pagtutuloy” intensifies its commitment to the production of open educational resources in the Philippines by inviting collaborations in knowledge production through the creation of inter-university programs. TVUP will eventually evolve to become a training facility for performance and production. The UPAOVU represents the country’s aspiration of becoming an economically prosperous and environmentally sustainable archipelagic nation. Spurred by the development of the blue economy that ties up with archipelagic and ocean studies work done by UP faculty and researchers over many decades, the UPAOVU will become the hub of research and teaching that brings together the strengths of various SUCs in marine biology, oceanography, fisheries, and other allied disciplines. The end goal is to become invaluable resources, partners, and enablers of the blue economy, all leading in the formulation of policies and programs that are coherent, inclusive, and sustainable. Service as the Hallmark of UP With these three landmark events, the UP System under President Jimenez officially launches its strategic platform for the next six years. This strategic plan follows three themes: “Public Service for the Common Good”; “Teaching, Research, and Innovation for Future-ready Citizens”; and “University Governance and Infrastructure with Transparency and Accountability”. Overarching all of these is the vision of UP as: “A national university dedicated to the formation of good citizens and leaders, engaged in knowledge co-creation towards a just, equitable, and progressive society,” guided by the principle of “Honor and Excellence in the Service of the Nation”. For this week in September, and for the next six years and beyond, service to the nation will truly be the hallmark of UP. |
https://up.edu.ph/paj-fetes-2023-upaa-awardees/ | PAJ fetes 2023 UPAA Awardees – University of the Philippines | PAJ fetes 2023 UPAA Awardees PAJ fetes 2023 UPAA Awardees August 29, 2023 | Written by Arlyn VCD Palisoc Romualdo UP President Angelo A. Jimenez (rightmost) leads the toast to the 2023 UP Alumni Association awardees (Photo by Misael Bacani, UP MPRO) “To the best of the best of this University, our alumni, for representing our highest ideals and aspirations, for being true alumni of UP and sons and daughters of the Filipino nation which UP has dedicated to support and promote, cheers!” This was UP President Angelo A. Jimenez’ toast to the 2023 UP Alumni Association (UPAA) awardees during the dinner he hosted in their honor at Ang Bahay ng Alumni on August 16. The social event is usually held days before the actual awarding ceremony. This year, the ceremony was scheduled on August 19. Leading the 38 individual awardees were Most Distinguished Alumna, former Philippine Vice President Maria Leonor Gerona Robredo, and Most Distinguished Alumnus, National Economic and Development Authority (NEDA) Secretary Arsenio M. Balisacan. Four were recognized with UPAA Lifetime Distinguished Achievement Awards: National Scientist Lourdes J. Cruz, Dr. Nathaniel A. Einsiedel, Dr. Gisela Padilla Concepcion, and Engr. Rene Santiago. Twenty-nine were given the UPAA Distinguished Alumni Awards in various fields and disciplines, and three were recipients of the UPAA Presidential Awards. Ten families received the UPAA Multigenerational UP Alumni Family Awards—one with four generations of alumni and three with three generations of alumni. UP Epsilon Chi Fraternity Alumni, Inc. was cited with the UPAA Distinguished Service Award for an Alumni Chapter. 2023 UPAA Most Distinguished Alumna, former Philippine Vice President Maria Leoner Gerona Robredo talks about the “sense of home” that UP alumni feel when they meet other alumni, when they cheer for the UP Fighting Maroons, or when they gather in celebratory events such as the one hosted by the UP President. (Photo by Misael Bacani, UP MPRO) “We may have different stories about our college experience and yet we are bound by a shared feeling—that sense of home when we talk about UP. This goes beyond every alumni homecoming or every other chance that we get to come back to our UP campus, wherever that may be in the country,” Robredo said in her message, which she had requested to deliver earlier than scheduled because she had to catch the bus to Naga in time for the commemoration of her husband’s death anniversary. Her husband was former Department of Interior and Local Government Secretary Jesse Robredo, who died in a plane crash on August 18, 2012. “What I have learned from this esteemed institution has greatly contributed to my professional formation as a public servant. . . I will forever be grateful to the University for molding me.”—2023 UPAA Most Distinguished Alumnus, National Economic Development Authority Secretary Arsenio M. Balisacan (Photo by Misael Bacani, UP MPRO) Balisacan, on the other hand, said that he was “very fortunate” because UP gave him the “space, time, and resources, and privilege to pursue [his] academic interests freely.” He also encouraged his fellow awardees to “continue striving towards our ultimate vision for the nation, continue striving to attain that excellence with honor, and continue being active participants in our country’s development journey.” UP President Angelo A. Jimenez delivers a brief address before toasting to the awardees. (Photo by Misael Bacani, UP MPRO) “Have we fulfilled our promise as the best and the brightest?” Jimenez posed this question in his speech, saying that UP has lasted more than a hundred years and yet “we find our society still faced with so many challenges.” This prompted him and his team to envision UP as “a national university dedicated to producing good citizens and leaders, and engaged in knowledge co-creation towards a just, equitable, and prosperous society.” His emphasis on the production of good citizens is a dramatic shift from expected visions of UP as a great university or as a regional and global center of excellence. UPAA President and Alumni Regent Robert Lester F. Aranton starts the short program with his opening remarks. (Photo by Misael Bacani, UP MPRO) The list of the 2023 UPAA awardees in the dinner program can be found below. |
https://up.edu.ph/malaysian-ambassador-visits-up/ | Malaysian Ambassador visits UP – University of the Philippines | Malaysian Ambassador visits UP Malaysian Ambassador visits UP September 8, 2023 | Written by Arlyn VCD Palisoc Romualdo From left: Malaysian Embassy Counsellor Hazlina Mohammed Hatta; Malaysian Embassy Counsellor Nadhirah Mohammad Zanudin; Malaysian Embassy Chargé d’Affaires a.i./Deputy Head of Mission Mohd Fareed Zakaria; Malaysian Ambassador Dato’ Abdul Malik Melvin Castelino bin Anthony; UP President Angelo A. Jimenez; Asian Center Dean Henelito A. Sevilla Jr.; and Assistant Vice President for Academic Affairs (Internationalization) and Office of International Linkages Director Imee Su Martinez. (Photo by Misael A. Bacani, UP MPRO) Officials of the Embassy of Malaysia, Manila, headed by Ambassador Dato’ Abdul Malik Melvin Castelino bin Anthony, paid a courtesy visit to University of the Philippines President Angelo A. Jimenez (PAJ) on August 23. With the ambassador were: Chargé d’Affaires a.i./Deputy Head of Mission Mohd Fareed Zakaria; and Counsellors Hazlina Mohammed Hatta and Nadhirah Mohammad Zanudin.On the UP side, PAJ was joined by: UP Diliman Chancellor Edgardo Carlo L. Vistan II; Assistant Vice President for Academic Affairs (Internationalization) and Office of International Linkages Director Imee Su Martinez; and Asian Center Dean Henelito A. Sevilla Jr. The group’s discussion centered on possible partnerships between UP and Malaysian universities, as well as on collaborative initiatives to advance education, research, and public service in Mindanao. Chatting before the group photo op: from left: Malaysian Embassy Counsellor Nadhirah Mohammad Zanudin; Malaysian Embassy Chargé d’Affaires a.i./Deputy Head of Mission Mohd Fareed Zakaria; Malaysian Ambassador Dato’ Abdul Malik Melvin Castelino bin Anthon; and UP President Angelo A. Jimenez. (Photo by Misael A. Bacani, UP MPRO) From left: Assistant Vice President for Academic Affairs (Internationalization) and Office of International Linkages Director Imee Su Martine; UP Diliman Chancellor Edgardo Carlo L. Vistan II; UP President Angelo A. Jimenez; Malaysian Ambassador Dato’ Abdul Malik Melvin Castelino bin Anthony; Malaysian Embassy Chargé d’Affaires a.i./Deputy Head of Mission Mohd Fareed Zakaria; and Malaysian Embassy Counsellor Nadhirah Mohammad Zanudin. (Photo by Misael A. Bacani, UP MPRO) Malaysian Ambassador Dato’ Abdul Malik Melvin Castelino bin Anthony responds to UP President Angelo A. Jimenez’s (PAJ) opening of the discussion on Islamic finance with sukuk or Sharia-compliant bonds. PAJ was a former labor attaché assigned to countries in the Middle East such as Iraq, Kuwait, and Lebanon. (Photo by Misael A. Bacani, UP MPRO) UP President Angelo A. Jimenez’ (PAJ) shares his views on how UP can contribute to Mindanao development, following his trip to Tawi-Tawi as commencement speaker of the Mindanao State University – Tawi-Tawi College of Technology and Oceanography. PAJ, both a Manobo and Christian lowlander from Butuan, is the first UP president from Mindanao. (Photo by Misael A. Bacani, UP MPRO) |
https://up.edu.ph/up-still-stellar-in-2nd-licensure-exam-for-architects-for-2023/ | UP still stellar in 2nd licensure exam for architects for 2023 – University of the Philippines | UP still stellar in 2nd licensure exam for architects for 2023 UP still stellar in 2nd licensure exam for architects for 2023 June 21, 2023 | Written by Arlyn VCD Palisoc Romualdo All architecture graduates of the University of the Philippines (UP)—50 from UP Diliman (UPD) and 26 from UP Mindanao (UPMin)—aced the June 2023 Licensure Examination for Architects (LEA). UPD emerged as the top performing school, having met the minimum number of examinees and exceeding the passing percentage of at least 80. Three of those graduates landed in the top ten. The results posted by the Professional Regulation Commission on June 15 showed that Ma. Katrina Joy Seno was at number seven, Lorenzo Jarell Lasaleta placed eighth, and Ellora Trisha Narida was at ninth. UP continued its topnotch performance from last January’s LEA, where it also posted a 100% passing rate. UPD had 27 examinees then, three of whom made it to the top ten: Mariel Mei Rias (fourth), Emmanuel Inocencio (sixth), and Marie Raphaelle Lopez (eighth). Of the seven UPMin examinees, meanwhile, Dawnelli Luar placed seventh in the list of top ten passers. |
https://up.edu.ph/make-works-of-immediate-national-impact-paj/ | ‘Make works of immediate national impact’ – PAJ – University of the Philippines | ‘Make works of immediate national impact’ – PAJ ‘Make works of immediate national impact’ – PAJ October 4, 2023 | Written by Arlyn VCD Palisoc Romualdo UP President Angelo A. Jimenez addresses the recipients of the UP President Edgardo J. Angara (UPPEJA) Fellowship Awards. (Photo by Misael A. Bacani, UP MPRO) “Our lawmakers, and the people they represent, await the fruits of your labor, your commitment, and your passion.” This is what UP President Angelo A. Jimenez (PAJ) told the 23 recipients of the recently-revived UP President Edgardo J. Angara (UPPEJA) Fellowship Awards in the ceremony held at the Philippine Senate on September 26. The award, PAJ said, was “an opportunity to make works of immediate national impact.” The fellows are Filipino scholars from universities, think tanks, and organizations here and abroad. The 19 UPPEJA-awarded research projects cover a wide range of education- and education reform-related topics. These were selected based on priority areas identified by the Second Congressional Commission on Education or EDCOM II: school infrastructure; access to quality higher education; needs-based system projecting the demands in workers’ upskilling; ensuring seamless and integrated delivery of education; complementarity between public and private education; integrated performance management and accountability system; efficiency in education financing and resource mobilization, and equity in the delivery of education; and decentralization, quality of education governance, and participatory governance. One of the fellows, National Scientist and UP Manila Chancellor Carmecita D. Padilla, shared that she is “reviewing the gaps in the supply and demand for health human resources, assessing the health care system, and making recommendations to address the findings.” Another, Prof. John Paul C. Vergara of the Ateneo de Manila University, is looking into “generative artificial intelligence and how it will make an impact on higher education.” Riz Supreme B. Comia of WeSolve Foundation, meanwhile said that she and her research partner, Kenneth Isaiah I. Abante, are studying “the players and the special education fund and how participatory governance may be achieved in this area of the education system.” The Fellowship runs from 26 July 2023 to 30 June 2024 with a research grant of P500,000. Below are the awardees. Kenneth Isaiah I. Abante and Riz Supreme B. Comia, WeSolve Foundation Michael Alba, Far Eastern University Cleve V. Arguelles, De La Salle University and Joel Paulin Mendoza, World Bank Lisa Grace S. Bersales, University of the Philippines Krista Danielle S. Yu, De La Salle University and Dr. Michael R. Cabalfin, Philippine Institute for Development Studies Ma. Assunta C. Cuyegkeng, Ateneo de Manila University Geoffrey Ducanes, Ateneo de Manila University Ma. Regina M. Hechanova-Alampay, Ateneo de Manila University Enrique Nino P. Leviste and Dr. Ma. Glenda Lopez Wui, Ateneo de Manila University Elizabeth M. King, Georgetown University Rosario G. Manasan, Asian Development Bank Carolyn Medel-Añonuevo, UNESCO Regional Office for Southern Africa Dina S. Ocampo, University of the Philippines Carmencita D. Padilla, University of the Philippines Maria Mercedes T. Rodrigo, Ateneo de Manila University Luis G. Sison, University of the Philippines Luis Rey I. Velasco, University of the Philippines John Paul C. Vergara, Ateneo de Manila University Felicia Yeban, Philippine Normal University The awardees (bottom row) with EDCOM II co-chairpersons, commissioners, technical secretariat, and advisers; Angara family; and former and current UP officials (Photo by Misael A. Bacani, UP MPRO) From left: Awardees Riz Supreme B. Comia and Kenneth Isaiah I. Abante of WeSolve Foundation chat with UP President Angelo A. Jimenez. (Photo by Misael A. Bacani, UP MPRO) EDCOM II Co-chairperson and Senate Committee on Basic Education chair, Senator Sherwin T. Gatchalian delivers the welcome remarks. (Photo by Misael A. Bacani, UP MPRO) EDCOM II Advisory Council for Academe member, Dr. Maria Cynthia Rose B. Bautista gives a brief background on the UP President Edgardo J. Angara (UPPEJA) Fellowship Awards. (Photo by Misael A. Bacani, UP MPRO) EDCOM II Executive Director Karol Mark R. Yee provides the overview on the awardees. (Photo by Misael A. Bacani, UP MPRO) Senator Juan Edgardo M. Angara (left) listens as UP President Angelo A. Jimenez (middle) engages Senator Sherwin T. Gatchalian (right) in a lively discussion. (Photo by Misael A. Bacani, UP MPRO) Senator Juan Edgardo M. Angara, EDCOM II commissioner and a member of the Fellowship committee, talks briefly about his father, after whom the fellowship is named. The awards ceremony was held two days after the late senator’s birth anniversary. (Photo by Misael A. Bacani, UP MPRO) UP President Angelo A. Jimenez sits in the gallery with the UPPEJA fellows, listening intently to the discussion of the Senate resolution congratulating the awardees. (Photo by Misael A. Bacani, UP MPRO) The Angara family, senators, EDCOM II members, UP officials, and awardees pose for a photo after Senate Resolution No. 812 was unanimously approved. (Photo by Misael A. Bacani, UP MPRO) |
https://up.edu.ph/up-sectors-push-for-intensified-mental-health-programs/ | UP sectors push for intensified mental health programs – University of the Philippines | UP sectors push for intensified mental health programs UP sectors push for intensified mental health programs October 18, 2023 | Written by Arlyn VCD Palisoc Romualdo Participants sign the commitment wall “to help transform UP into a nurturing university” during the UP System Mental Health and Wellbeing Conference. Photo by Misael Bacani, UP MPRO. UP President Angelo Jimenez says the conference is “a dream come true” for him. Photo by Misael Bacani, UP MPRO. More resources, human and financial, are needed to strengthen UP’s mental health initiatives. This was the bottom-line of the recommendations presented by representatives of the University’s various sectors—students, faculty, staff, and mental health practitioners—during the UP System Mental Health and Wellbeing Conference (MHWC) on October 11-12 in UP Los Baños. They pushed for the continuation of support programs that were started during the COVID-19 lockdowns and called for more intensified efforts across all UP campuses, benefitting all sectors of UP. These included, among others, the continuous training of mental health advocates, sustained financial support for consultations and medications, additional mental health professionals, mental health breaks for all, pedagogical review, and the institutionalization of mental health units, not just programs. All of these in accordance with Republic Act No. 11036 or the Mental Health Act enacted in 2018. In his message, UP President Angelo Jimenez declared, “What is at stake is no less than the salvation of our community and our society.” He revealed that the conduct of the conference was one of his first instructions as UP president to Assistant Vice President for Academic Affairs (Student Affairs) and Office of Student Development Services Director Ma. Shari Niña Oliquino, adding that he felt very strongly about mental health and wellbeing as problems in this area have gotten worse because of the COVID-19 pandemic. Jimenez emphasized the University’s commitment to its responsibility to “develop strong minds, resilient souls, and courageous spirits.” MHWC plenary speakers were UP Professor Emeritus and former UP Diliman chancellor, Dr. Michael Tan, who talked about “Ginhawa, Wellness and the Academe: Sociocultural Perspectives”; UP Manila Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Medicine Chair, Dr. Evangeline Bascara-Dela Fuente, who discussed “Mental Health and Wellbeing of Filipinos”; and UP Diliman PsycServ Director, Dr. Divine Love Salvador, who delivered her and UP Professor Emeritus Violeta Bautista’s presentation on “The Place of Mental Health and Wellbeing in UP’s Educational Philosophy”. The UP sectoral representatives proceeded to their breakout sessions after the plenary to discuss recommendations, guided by the insights of the three speakers. The plenary speakers (from left): UP Professor Emeritus and former UP Diliman Chancellor Michael Tan; UP Manila Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Medicine Chair, Dr. Evangeline Bascara-Dela Fuente; and UP Diliman PsycServ Director, Dr. Divine Love Salvador. Photos by Misael Bacani, UP MPRO. Closing off MHWC was UP Executive Vice President Jose Fernando Alcantara, who said that the recommendations will be compiled and utilized in the crafting the implementation plan. He also expressed hope for a 2024 conference so that progress reports on the recommendations may be presented. The sectoral breakout sessions. Photos by Misael Bacani, UP MPRO. Assistant Vice President for Academic Affairs (Student Affairs) and Office of Student Development Services Director Ma. Shari Niña Oliquino. Photo by Misael Bacani, UP MPRO. UP Los Baños Chancellor Jose Camacho Jr. Photo by Misael Bacani, UP MPRO. UP Los Baños Vice Chancellor for Student Affairs Janette H. Malata-Silva. Photo by Misael Bacani, UP MPRO. UP Executive Vice President Jose Fernando Alcantara delivers the closing remarks. Photo by Misael Bacani, UP MPRO. From left: UP President Angelo Jimenez, Faculty Regent Carl Marc Ramota, Staff Regent Victoria Belegal, and Student Regent Sofia Jan Trinidad listen to Professor Emeritus Michael Tan. The sectoral regents presented their manifestations on mental health and wellbeing in the second day of the conference. Photo by Misael Bacani, UP MPRO. UP President Angelo Jimenez (left) chats with Professor Emeritus Michael Tan before the program starts. Photo by Misael Bacani, UP MPRO. Faculty Regent Carl Marc Ramota initiates the signing of the commitment wall, writing that his action would be “to push the agenda of MH&W in the BOR”. Staff Regent Victoria Belegal and Student Regent Sofia Jan Trinidad then signed after him. Photo by Misael Bacani, UP MPRO. The participants and organizers of the UP System Mental Health and Wellbeing Conference. Photo by Misael Bacani, UP MPRO. |
https://up.edu.ph/up-in-uaap-86-back-to-back-basketball-twin-wins/ | UP in UAAP 86: Back-to-back basketball twin wins – University of the Philippines | UP in UAAP 86: Back-to-back basketball twin wins UP in UAAP 86: Back-to-back basketball twin wins October 6, 2023 | Written by Arlyn VCD Palisoc Romualdo One of CJ Cansino’s five successful shots from beyond the arc in UP’s UAAP season opener versus Adamson University on October 1 (Photo by Misael Bacani, UP MPRO) On the heels of its UAAP opening stunner against Adamson University (AdU) on October 1, UP notched basketball twin wins again on October 4 at the Mall of Asia Arena, this time versus the University of the East (UE). The UP Fighting Maroons edged the UE Red Warriors by 15 points, 84-69, and won with 18 points over the UE Lady Warriors, 66-48. 24vs24: Adamson’s Kat Agojo challenges Rizza Lozada’s jumper. (Photo by Misael Bacani, UP MPRO) In their first games of this 68th UAAP season, the UP basketball teams registered double-digit leads as well, taking down the AdU Soaring Falcons and AdU Lady Falcons, 68-51 and 92-61, respectively. JD Cagulangan’s no-look hand-off to Malik Diouf (Photo by Misael Bacani, UP MPRO) Malik Diouf easily converts the assist from JD Cagulangan. (Photo by Misael Bacani, UP MPRO) Reigning MVP Malick Diouf kept a stellar performance with another double-double, 19 points and 16 rebounds, coming off his 20-point, 17-rebound game against Adu. The returning CJ Cansino, who sat out a year due to injury, made his presence felt as well. Now as team captain, Cansino in his court comeback cashed in 19 points for UP against AdU and 17 points against UE. UP President Angelo A. Jimenez (in jacket) raises his fist, singing “UP Naming Mahal” along with other UP faithful. (Photo by Misael Bacani, UP MPRO) UP President Angelo A. Jimenez (in jacket) raises his fist, singing “UP Naming Mahal” along with other UP faithful. (Photo by Misael Bacani, UP MPRO) The Fighting Maroons bench (Photo by Misael Bacani, UP MPRO) Team Captain Justine Domingo (left) says that they still had a long way to go in the season, as Coach Paul Ramos listens intently. (Photo by Misael Bacani, UP MPRO) Rookie Francis Lopez makes his first slam in the UAAP men’s basketball tournament. (Photo by Misael Bacani, UP MPRO) The Maroons side goes wild with the buzzer beating three by Harold Alarcon. There were 1.3 seconds left in the first quarter when Alarcon released the shot from the arc across the court. (Photo by Misael Bacani, UP MPRO) CJ Cansino (left) apologizes for seemingly acting cocky on court after making his shots. His explanation of feeling like a kid being let out to play instead of being told to take an afternoon nap draws out a grin from Coach Goldwin Monteverde beside him. (Photo by Misael Bacani, UP MPRO) To view the official UAAP photos of the UP-UE matches on October 4, click here for men’s basketball and here for women’s basketball. |
https://up.edu.ph/scholarship-to-ease-field-work-financial-woes-for-up-cswcd-students/ | Scholarship to ease field work financial woes for UP CSWCD students – University of the Philippines | Scholarship to ease field work financial woes for UP CSWCD students Scholarship to ease field work financial woes for UP CSWCD students October 27, 2023 | Written by Arlyn VCD Palisoc Romualdo From left: CSWCD College Secretary Paul Edward Muego, UP OAR Director K.C. Abalos-Orendain, CSWCD Dean Lenore Polotan-Dela Cruz, Brandt Ivann Paul Aquino, John Bryan Salamanca, Perrie Rejuso, Jedidiah Apolinario and Adeza Ann Azares, AVP for Public Affairs Jeanette Yasol-Naval, and Dr. Aileen Reyes of the UPD Office of the Vice Chancellor for Student Affairs. (Photo by Misael Bacani, UP MPRO) Immense relief from the mental and emotional toll of thinking about money for internship expenses. Less worrying about how to get extra income to cover financial requirements of field work. Money for food, transportation, and other personal needs that would otherwise be taken out of an already stretched family budget. “The need to support CSWCD students doing field work was first identified because this entails allowances necessary to travel, work, and live with partner communities which are usually outside of Metro Manila and in remote areas.”—UP Assistant Vice President for Public Affairs Jeanette Yasol-Naval (Photo by Misael Bacani, UP MPRO) These are some of the ways the Fe Parajas I. Benito Scholarship will benefit its recipients, according to the recipients themselves—Community Development majors Brandt Ivann Paul Aquino, Perrie Rejuso, and John Bryan Salamanca, and Social Work majors Jedidiah Apolinario and Adeza Ann Azares. “What we can do in return is to become good community development workers.”—John Bryan Salamanca, on receiving the scholarship (Photo by Misael Bacani, UP MPRO) Jedidiah Apolinario says the scholarship is a big help in easing the burden of field work expenses on her family income, allowing her to focus more on her internship and attending to the needs of her clients. (Photo by Misael Bacani, UP MPRO) The scholarship was launched on October 23 with the awarding of grants to the first batch of recipients, who are all fourth-year students of the UP Diliman (UPD) College of Social Work and Community Development (CSWCD). They are currently enrolled in the field instruction program, which is either community-based work or agency-based internship. Established by Ted Benito in honor of his mother, who graduated with a 1954 BA Social Work degree from the then-UP College of Liberal Arts, the scholarship was his way of “paying it forward”: an act of compassion she instilled in him. Social work and social workers “need to be uplifted,” he said. US-based Ted Benito joins the launch and awarding via Zoom. (Photo by Misael Bacani, UP MPRO) Eric Panuncialman, president of the UP Alumni Association of Greater Los Angeles (UPAAGLA), added that social work and community development are “very fulfilling humanitarian jobs.” The UPAAGLA was Benito’s first link to getting the scholarship created. Coordination with the UP Office of Alumni Relations (OAR), UPD Office of the Vice Chancellor for Student Affairs, CSWCD, and the UPD Office of Scholarship and Grants laid the foundation for the firm establishment of the scholarship. UPAAGLA President Eric Panuncialman delivers his message via Zoom. (Photo by Misael Bacani, UP MPRO) A group photo of those physically present and those who joined via Zoom (Photo by Misael Bacani, UP MPRO) |
https://up.edu.ph/days-of-remembrance/ | Days of Remembrance – University of the Philippines | Days of Remembrance On September 17, 2018, University of the Philippines President Danilo L. Concepcion signed Proclamation No. 1, Series of 2018, declaring September 21 every year as UP Day of Remembrance. The Day serves to commemorate members of the UP community who stood at the forefront of the resistance to Martial Law during the administration of President Ferdinand E. Marcos. The commemoration also serves to highlight the University’s role as a champion of academic freedom and as a beacon for hope and an advocate of human rights during the darkest days of democracy in the country. The Day is intended to remember the sacrifices and legacy of UP heroes, the living and the fallen, and to impart their stories to younger generations of Iskolar ng Bayan and other patriotic Filipinos. Recently, the Day has been expanded to a series of days which will allow for more online activities and substantial discussions on the impact of Martial Law to the country and its people. Read more: Sept. 21 to be proclaimed UP Day of Remembrance Related reading: September 21 is UP Day of Remembrance Signing of the UP Day of Remembrance Proclamation Day of Remembrance 2022 On September 21, 1972, President Ferdinand E. Marcos signed Proclamation No. 1081 declaring martial law over the entire country, supposedly responding to the rising “communist threat” at the time. This year marks the 50th anniversary of this declaration that led to a decades-long period in Philippine history remembered for its authoritarian rule, a record of human rights abuses, repression of basic freedoms and freedom of the press, and unmitigated corruption and theft by those in power that left much of the country in poverty. This September 21 Wednesday, the University of the Philippines (UP) joins the nation in remembering and honoring the heroes, activists, and human rights victims who stood against martial law and the Marcos regime. This remembrance of struggle and sacrifice is made more poignant and urgent now in a time of disinformation, fake news, and historical revisionism. In this year’s UP Day of Remembrance, with the theme, “Manindigan sa Katotohanan, Itanghal ang Katarungan,” the University will again commemorate the legacy of resistance and heroism of these activists, many of whom are members of the UP community. As with the previous years’ Days of Remembrance, UP will hold a series of activities and events, both online and in person, in all constituent universities of the UP System across the country to share these stories with the younger generations of Iskolar ng Bayan and other patriotic Filipinos and keep the flame of truth and justice alive. This year also marks the fifth UP Day of Remembrance since UP President Danilo L. Concepcion signed. On September 17, 2018, Proclamation No. 1, Series of 2018, declared September 21 every year as UP Day of Remembrance. Read more: ML@50: UP holds 5th Day of Remembrance to mark 50 years since martial law declaration Days of Remembrance 2021 The 50th anniversary of the declaration of Martial Law in the Philippines and the upcoming national elections call for historical awareness from our voting populace. Once again, the University of the Philippines (UP) honored the struggles of the Filipino people under the authoritarian regime and commemorated the University’s contributions in the uprising against the Marcos dictatorship through the UP Days of Remembrance. This year’s UP Days of Remembrance was a week-long virtual commemoration held from September 20 to 24, 2021, from 9:00 a.m. to 12:00 noon. With the theme “Dambana ng Gunita: Mga Batayang Katotohanan at Aral ng Batas Militar”, the commemoration exposed Martial Law-related disinformation and historical revisionism propagated in various media platforms. Five educational webinars brought out the truths and debunked myths about Martial Law and the Marcos regime. Each webinar is interspersed with artistic and musical performances that illustrate the socio-cultural milieu of the era. Faculty and researchers from across the UP System, scholars from outside the University and overseas, and human rights activists and progressive artists spoke about the realities of Martial Law based on their own experiences and studies. This year’s presenters and performers enshrined the names and struggles of the University’s best and brightest who fought, struggled, and made the most extraordinary sacrifices in the name of freedom and democratic ideals. Read more: Truths and lessons of Martial Law to be discussed in the week-long UP Days of Remembrance Related story: UP Days of Remembrance to shine a light on the myths and misinformation on Martial Law and the Marcos regime Day 1: Hindi Bayani si Marcos Day 2: Hindi Mapaya sa Panahon ng Batas Militar Day 3: Nilabag ang mga Karapatang Pantao Day 4: Walang Golden Age sa Ekonomiya Day 5: Nagnakaw mula sa Kaban ng Bayan Days of Remembrance 2020 2020’s UP Day of Remembrance, titled “Dambana ng Gunita: Mga Hulagway ng Pagkamulat at Kabayanihan 1972-1986,” consisted of two main activities: four webinars featuring UP alumni and faculty who fought during Martial Law sharing their experiences; and, an online exhibit to feature Martial Law narratives of resistance and hope that continue to resonate up to now. These online activities were held across all eight UP constituent units, and revolved around four themes: Hamon ng Batas Militar, focusing on the early years of clampdown on civil liberties and adapting to the situation with new forms of struggle; Detenido, Desparecido, a remembrance of the Marcos regime’s violation of human rights and cruelty through disregard of due process, indefinite imprisonment, torture, disappearances and killings; Sining at Panitik: Daluyan ng Tinig, recalling writers and artists who created new forms of expression, inspiring and mobilizing the masses for action against deception; and, Patungong People Power: Turning Points, on the events in the 1980s that became turning points which led to the end of the Marcos dictatorship. In pursuit of its tradition of struggle for academic freedom and democratic ideals, UP stood at the forefront of the resistance to Martial Law and the Marcos regime, contributing to this struggle many of its best and brightest. UP deemed it proper to enshrine their names and struggles for younger and future generations of the University to emulate. It is for this reason that UP President Danilo L. Concepcion signed Proclamation No. 1 in 2018 declaring September 21 of every year as UP Day of Remembrance, during which special lectures, meetings and ceremonies will be held across the UP System to commemorate UP’s participation and sacrifices in the struggle against dictatorship and tyranny. The UP Day of Remembrance 2020 is made all the more significant as the University commemorated in February this year the 50th anniversary of the First Quarter Storm, which led to the Diliman Commune and other watershed events prior to the declaration of Martial Law. Read more: UP to hold virtual commemoration of the struggle against Martial Law in UP Day of Remembrance 2020 Related story: Stories from fields of struggle against Martial Law abound in UP Day of Remembrance 2020 UP Day of Remembrance 2020 – Day 1 UP Day of Remembrance 2020-Day 2 Day of Remembrance 2019 As recognition of the University’s role at the forefront of awareness, vigilance, and militancy, and to expand on 2018’s inaugural program, the University launched an expanded lineup of events with the theme, “Dambana ng Paggunita at Pagtutuos sa Batas Militar ni Marcos,” to banner the key messages: Marahas ang Batas Militar, Lugmok ang Ekonomiya, Niyurakan ang Karapatang Pantao, Sinupil ang Pamamahayag, at Ninakaw ang Kabang-Yaman. Pre-event activities started on September 16 with the airing of Lakad Gunita sa Pamantasang Hinirang, a documentary video, on both TVUP and the University of the Philippines online channels to kickstart the weeklong campaign. The documentary highlighted key landmarks in the Diliman campus that became hotbeds of activism: Quezon Hall, Palma Hall, Vinzons Hall, Melchor Hall, and Kamia and Sampaguita dormitories which all stood witness to the events of the First Quarter Storm and the Diliman Commune. On the actual Day of Remembrance on September 19, an opening ceremony was held at the AS Steps (Palma Hall) in UP Diliman, accompanied by the unfurling of streamers across the hall bearing this year’s central messages. Danas, a series of performances recreating and commemorating the martial law experience was featured as street art, ensuring access to the widest audiences. At the center of the performances, a Dambana was set up by students and faculty of the College of Fine Arts. A free premiere screening of TVUP’s Lakad Gunita sa Pamantasang Hinirang capped the year’s Day of Remembrance. The following day, martial law-themed films were screened. Among these were Liway and Portraits of Mosquito Press, and the documentary 1081. The screening was followed by a forum on Media, Martial Law, and Human Rights with journalist Ceres P. Doyo and artist Boni P. Ilagan. Read more: UP Day of Remembrance 2019 Highlights of the Day of Remembrance 2019 Lakad Gunita sa Pamantasang Hinirang Day of Remembrance 2018 (Left to right) Dr. Carol Araullo, representing HRVV, NHCP Chair Rene Escalante, UP President Danilo Concepcion, Sen. Aquilino Pimentel III, CHR Commissioner Leah Armamento (representing CHR Chair Chito Gascon), and HRVVMC Executive Director Carmelo Victor Crisanto, and UP Vice President for Development Elvira Zamora, sign a Memorandum of Understanding for a Human Rights Violations Victims’ Memorial in UP Diliman. UP Assistant Vice President for Public Affairs (standing) serves as master of ceremonies. Photo by Bong Arboleda, MPRO UP marked the first UP Day of Remembrance by concretizing plans to construct the country’s memorial for victims of human rights violations during the Marcos regime. UP President Danilo L. Concepcion signed on September 21, 2018 a memorandum of understanding (MOU) with the Human Rights Violations Victims’ Memorial Commission (HRVVMC) formalizing institutional partnership in establishing the Human Rights Violations Victims’ Memorial in UP Diliman. “Higit sa alinmang pook, dito sa ating pamantasan sumibol at lumago ang puno ng pagtutol at pag-aalsa; kung kaya dito rin naman nadama ang mabigat na dagok ng panunupil at pananamantala noong panahon ng martial law ni Pangulong Marcos (More than any place, the University is where resistance and uprising sprang and grew; and that is why this was also where the brunt of repression and abuse of President Marcos’s martial law fell),” Concepcion said. Sa araw na ito tayo ay nagpapasya na ikintal sa puso at damdamin ang dakilang alaala ng mga araw ng pakikibaka, ng mga taong nagsakripisyo at nagbuwis ng buhay, upang ito kailanman ay hindi malimutan at hindi na maulit pa (On this day, we decide to commit the legacy of the days of struggle, of the many who sacrificed their lives; so that they will never be forgotten and [their fates] never repeated),” Concepcion added. “Ito ang ating dasal, ito ang ating banal na panata (This is our prayer, this is our sacred promise),” he added. Four days before the MOU signing, Concepcion signed a proclamation designating September 21, 2018 and September 21 of every year thereafter as “UP Day of Remembrance” in honor of the sacrifice of the University’s “best and brightest” for the struggle against dictatorship and despotism, many of whom died resisting the abuses of the Marcos regime. Read more: UP holds first Day of Remembrance, commits site for martial law memorial Related reading: Memorial for victims of the Marcos regime to rise in UP Highlights of the Day of Remembrance 2018 |
https://up.edu.ph/upaasf-osds-roll-out-alumni-mentoring-program/ | UPAASF, OSDS roll out Alumni Mentoring Program – University of the Philippines | UPAASF, OSDS roll out Alumni Mentoring Program UPAASF, OSDS roll out Alumni Mentoring Program November 13, 2023 | Written by Arlyn VCD Palisoc Romualdo UP President Angelo Jimenez (seated left) and Student Regent Sofia Jan Trinidad (seated right) with, standing from left, Leimer Hanz Esperas Miranda, John Louis Quizon Nieto, Mark Nicholas Labor Cagas, Ian Gabriel Soriano Dela Cena, Julyanne Gail Quising Frilles, UP Office of Alumni Relations Director Karen Connie Abalos-Orendain, UP Diliman Vice Chancellor for Student Affairs Jerwin Agpaoa, UP Assistant VP for Academic Affairs (Student Affairs) and Office of Student Development Services Director Shari Niña Oliquino, Hannah Nicole Gaudiel, Yumi San Juan Nishimura, Jacqueline Ann Bautista Vicerra, Christine Atienza Chua, Mary Austin Zamora Dela Cruz, and Aya Lamadrid. (Photo by Misael Bacani, UP MPRO) “Your mentors are here to guide you, not for you to follow their paths, but for you to create your own,” UP President Angelo Jimenez (PAJ) told the first batch of mentees in the Alumni Mentoring Program of the UP Alumni Association of San Francisco (UPAASF). The program was established in partnership with the UP Office of Student Development Services (OSDS) and with assistance from the UP Diliman Office of the Vice Chancellor for Student Affairs (OVCSA). Launched on November 8, it matches volunteer mentors with UPD students enrolled in fields related to the mentors’ areas of expertise. According to the Alumni Mentoring Program packet, the program “puts the needs, desires, and challenges of the mentee at the core of the mentorship experience” as it uses a design thinking approach to mentee-centered mentoring. To the UPAASF mentors who joined the launch via Zoom, PAJ said, “You will help shape these future leaders.” Assistant VP for Academic Affairs (Student Affairs) and OSDS Director Shari Niña Oliquino, meanwhile, referred to the mentors as the “cornerstone of this initiative.” She also expressed hope that the pilot program will “serve as a catalyst for other alumni associations and private organizations to step forward and provide career assistance to UP students.” “You will be future leaders.”—UP President Angelo Jimenez to the first batch of mentees in the Alumni Mentoring Program (Photo by Misael Bacani, UP MPRO) For third-year BS Statistics major, Hannah Nicole Gaudiel, the program “could not have come at a better time,” explaining that she had some idea of where she wanted to be but she was “unsure of how to get there.” Mark Nicholas Cagas, a third-year BS Computer Engineering student, said that the program was not just about career guidance, but “about forging a path that is authentic to each of us [mentees].” He also lauded the mentee-centered approach that gives importance to “our voice in this partnership.” UPAASF President Rosario Calderon said she was excited about the opportunity to share her expertise and passion, already advising the mentees that a successful career entails “humility and teamwork, both as a team leader and as a team player.” The Alumni Mentoring Program runs from November 2023 to February 2024. UPAASF MENTORS UPD MENTEES Rosario Calderon Ian Gabriel Soriano Dela Cena, BS Mechanical Engineering Maria Angelica Lizardo Oarde, BS Economics Jaime Cortes Mary Austin Zamora Dela Cruz, BS Business Economics Leimer Hanz Esperas Miranda, BS Statistics Sonia Delen Christine Atienza Chua, BS Business Administration Julienne Guingab Vinarao, BS Business Administration and Accountancy Simeon Godinez Mark Nicholas Labor Cagas, BS Computer Engineering Jacqueline Ann Bautista Vicerra, BS Computer Science Eric Golangco Yumi San Juan Nishimura, BS Materials Engineering Keith Kevin Largo Saraza, BS Chemical Engineering Leticia Quizon Aya Lamadrid (Dan Moises Dave Repasa Cuesta), BS Business Administration and Accountancy Sofie Alessandra Custodio Villamar, BS Hotel, Restaurant and Institution Management Michaela Abao Viray Julyanne Gail Quising Frilles, BS Statistics Hannah Nicole Gaudiel, BS Statistics Zigfred Viray John Louis Quizon Nieto, BS Electronics Engineering “This is just the beginning, and the possibilities are limitless.”—UP Assistant VP for Academic Affairs (Student Affairs) and Office of Student Development Services Director Shari Niña Oliquino in her opening remarks during the launch of the Alumni Mentoring Program (Photo by Misael Bacani, UP MPRO) Mentor Michaela Abao Viray says the Alumni Mentoring Program is innovative and participatory. (Photo by Misael Bacani, UP MPRO) “With [the Alumni Mentoring Program], I’ve found an answer that will allow me to approach my career path in a more intimate and personalized way.”—Hannah Nicole Gaudiel, BS Statistics, one of the mentees (Photo by Misael Bacani, UP MPRO) “We hope that in the future, we ourselves will have the privilege to give back, and when we do, we will look back at this moment with gratitude and pride.”—Mark Nicholas Cagas, BS Computer Engineering, one of the mentees (Photo by Misael Bacani, UP MPRO) Mentor Simeon Godinez briefly describes the contents of the program packets given to the mentees. (Photo by Misael Bacani, UP MPRO) UP President Angelo Jimenez asks the UP Alumni Association of San Francisco member-mentors to lead in helping UP expand the Alumni Mentoring Program to other alumni groups around the world. (Photo by Misael Bacani, UP MPRO) Mentor Rosario Calderon says she is looking forward to meeting the mentees in person. (Photo by Misael Bacani, UP MPRO) “I have high hopes for this program to be sustained across the UP System.”—UP Diliman Vice Chancellor for Student Affairs Jerwin Agpaoa (Photo by Misael Bacani, UP MPRO) |
https://up.edu.ph/up-initiates-platform-for-bangsamoro-development-and-collaboration/ | UP initiates platform for Bangsamoro development and collaboration – University of the Philippines | UP initiates platform for Bangsamoro development and collaboration UP initiates platform for Bangsamoro development and collaboration September 25, 2023 | Written by Fred Dabu UP President Angelo A. Jimenez and Abdulkarim T. Misuari, Bangsamoro Transition Authority (BTA) Member and Deputy BTA Parliament Speaker greet each other in solidarity and brotherhood at the historic UP-Bangsamoro Development Institute Summit Consultation held on September 13 in Davao City. (Photo by Kevin Christian Roque, UPMPRO) On the eve of the investiture of University of the Philippines (UP) President Angelo “Jijil” A. Jimenez at the UP Mindanao Atrium, a historic consultation meeting with Bangsamoro Transition Authority officials and stakeholders was held at the Dusit Thani Residences in Davao City on September 13. Representatives from the UP System and constituent units, the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (BARMM) government, and State Universities and Colleges (SUCs) in BARMM discussed opportunities for collaboration, with the goal of improving the socio-economic conditions of the Bangsamoro region and Mindanao in general. UP Mindanao Chancellor Lyre Anni E. Murao said the event was an affirmation of the academic leaders’ desire to help Mindanaoans. She added that UP is eager to cooperate and harmonize its efforts with partner SUCs, primarily the Mindanao State University System (MSU). UP Mindanao Chancellor Lyre Anni E. Murao. (Photo by Kevin Christian Roque, UPMPRO) UP Pres. Jimenez, a Manobo and Mindanaoan himself, explained that while Mindanao is rich in natural and human resources, the regions’ development was severely stifled due to deeply-rooted problems that cause poverty, underdevelopment, and social conflicts. “I realized, so many years ago, that the people of Mindanao likewise deserve to experience the same fruits of development and peace that more progressive provinces of our archipelago were already enjoying,” Jimenez emphasized, and said further that he hoped UP could actively serve as catalyst and enabler for social transformation. UP President Angelo A. Jimenez. (Photo by Kevin Christian Roque, UPMPRO) Jimenez called on all stakeholders to “seize the once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to partner now with the national University, while it is being led by one of us, and allow one another to help sustain Mindanao’s overall progress,” in accordance with the University’s mandate under Republic Act 9500, which is to lead in the nation’s higher education and public service spheres. “The University of the Philippines is eager to support the development of educational institutions within the Bangsamoro region. By providing technical assistance, faculty exchanges, and curriculum development support, we aim to empower the youth with quality education, fostering a knowledge-based society,” Jimenez said. For Jimenez, the meeting is “a significant milestone towards making quality education and basic services accessible even to the poorest and marginalized sectors, and enhancing inclusive development in the country today.” “We are pursuing the dream of building a future where every individual in the Bangsamoro region has access to quality education, economic opportunities, and an enabling environment in which to thrive,” he emphasized. Erwin Protacio, UP Mindanao Office of Extension and Community Service Director. (Photo by Kevin Christian Roque, UPMPRO) Prof. Erwin Protacio, Director of the Office of Extension and Community Service of UP Mindanao, presented what the UP-BARMM Institute Stakeholders’ Forum had already accomplished. Dr. Leo DP. Cubillan, UP Vice President for Academic Affairs, presented the program’s Concept Note that was created by the Bangsamoro technical working group (TWG). Expert resource persons also reported what their respective institutions could contribute to BARMM. These would include platforms for capability building and sharing of expertise to address the many issues and challenges on education, health, agriculture and fisheries, labor and employment, science and technology, human settlements and development, indigenous peoples’ affairs, and many others. UP Vice President for Academic Affairs Leo Cubillan. (Photo by Kevin Christian Roque, UPMPRO) Responses from Bangsamoro government officials In response to the UP initiative, Hon. Abdulkarim T. Misuari, BTA Member and Deputy BTA Parliament Speaker, expressed his gratitude to UP and everyone who attended the meeting. He said that “it is about time. . . . it is never too late to start right,” as he explained the importance of education in the development of every individual and in sustaining peace and progress in the country. “Knowledge comes first,” he said, emphasizing that actions should be based on education. “Education is the best start,” he added, signaling the readiness of the Bangsamoro to collaborate with SUCs. Abdulkarim T. Misuari, BTA Member and Deputy BTA Parliament Speaker. (Photo by Kevin Christian Roque, UPMPRO) MSU System President Basari D. Mapupuno conveyed the collective excitement of the MSU System in this transformative journey with UP and BARMM. He also highlighted the programs, contributions and role of MSU in Mindanao. Palawan Mamaon, the representative of the Bangsamoro Planning and Development Authority (BPDA), also thanked UP for helping the Bangsamoro in addressing the many problems in BARMM. He also talked about the Bangsamoro Development Plan 2023-2028 and the need for research to be translated into outputs beneficial to the communities. MSU System President Basari D. Mapupuno. (Photo by Kevin Christian Roque, UPMPRO)] Hon. Akmad A. Brahim, Minister of Environment, Natural Resources and Energy, expressed his thanks to UP scientists who could help the Bangsamoro. Ministers and representatives from the Ministry of Trade, Investment and Tourism, and the Ministry of Labor and Employment, as well as UP Visayas Chancellor Clement C. Camposano also shared their ideas during the open forum. Akmad A. Brahim, BTA Minister of Environment, Natural Resources and Energy. (Photo by Kevin Christian Roque, UPMPRO) To close the event, UP Executive Vice President Jose Fernando T. Alcantara called for the convening of the TWG to discuss the eventual creation of the Bangsamoro Development Institute with UP, MSU and BARMM working together. Among UP’s academic and research institutions to be involved in the program are: UP Resilience Institute; UP National Center for Transportation Studies; UP Center for Integrative and Development Studies; UP National College of Public Administration and Governance; UP Manila National Institutes of Health; UP Cebu Center for Environmental Informatics; UP Mindanao Center for Advancement of Research in Mindanao; UP Los Baños National Institute of Molecular Biology and Biotechnology; Philippine Genome Center; UP Institute of Islamic Studies; UP Baguio Cordillera Studies Center; UP Mindanao Studies Center; and UP Office for Initiatives in Culture and the Arts. The program will have an Advisory Board with members from UP and BARMM. UP Executive Vice President Jose Fernando T. Alcantara. (Photo by Kevin Christian Roque, UPMPRO) |
https://up.edu.ph/we-are-here-to-renew-bonds/ | “We are here to renew bonds” – University of the Philippines | “We are here to renew bonds” “We are here to renew bonds” September 29, 2023 | Written by Fred Dabu University of the Philippines alumni in Congress with officials of the university huddle for a group photo at the Executive House, UP Diliman, Quezon City. Photo by Jonathan Madrid, UP MPRO. The Executive House in the Diliman campus of the University of the Philippines (UP) once again housed a gathering of distinguished alumni as UP President Angelo Jimenez hosted the traditional fellowship night on the 28th of September with UP alumni members of the Senate and the House of Representatives of the 19th Congress of the Philippines. Jimenez highlighted in his message the important role of the University in producing leaders of the nation and in shaping the nation, as well as the role of prominent alumni at the highest levels of government. He provided several updates on UP’s most recent accomplishments and major legacy projects to be pursued during his term. “We are here to renew our bonds,” said Jimenez. Albay Representative Edcel Lagman, the most senior among those present, spoke on behalf of the UP alumni members in the House of Representatives. He pledged to gain the support of fellow alumni and allies in the allocation of funds for UP. Senator Lorna Regina “Loren” Legarda and Sen. Juan Edgardo “Sonny” Angara briefly discussed with UP officials their plans to support the various UP constituent units. Also present were: Rep. Stella Luz Alabastro-Quimbo; Rep. Richelle Singson; Rep. Rachel Marguerite Del Mar; Rep. Drixie Mae Suarez-Cardema; Rep. Zia Alonto Adiong; Rep. Lorenz Defensor; Rep. Adrian Michael Amatong; Rep. Jonathan Keith Flores; Rep. Pablo John Garcia Jr.; Rep. Gabriel Bordado; and Rep. Ron Salo. UP officials with President Jimenez were: Executive Vice President Jose Fernando Alcantara; VP for Academic Affairs Leo Cubillan; VP for Planning and Finance Iryn Balmores; VP for Development Ferdinand Pecson; VP for Public Affairs Roland Tolentino; UP Diliman Chancellor Edgardo Carlo Vistan; UP Los Banos Chancellor Jose Camacho Jr.; UP Mindanao Chancellor Lyre Anni Murao; UP Baguio Chancellor Corazon Abansi; UP Philippine General Hospital Director Gerardo Legaspi; AVP for Public Affairs and Office of Alumni Relations Director Jeanette Yasol-Naval; Padayon Public Service Office Director Cherish Aileen Brillon; TVUP Executive Director Grace Alfonso; UP Resilience Institute Executive Director Alfredo Mahar Lagmay; AVP for Student Affairs and Office of Student Development Services Director Shari Oliquino; and Chief of Staff of the Office of the President Ricky Dela Torre. The lawmakers were serenaded by the UP Concert Chorus. Albay Representative Edcel Lagman. Photo by Jonathan Madrid, UP MPRO. President Angelo Jimenez talks with Senator Lorna Regina “Loren” Legarda at the fellowship night for UP alumni in Congress. Photo by Jonathan Madrid, UP MPRO. President Jimenez (center) talks with Cebu City 1st District Representative Rachel Marguerite B. Del Mar (left) and Senator Juan Edgardo “Sonny” Angara (right). Photo by Jonathan Madrid, UP MPRO. President Jimenez speaks with members of the UP Concert Chorus, who performed for the members of Congress. Photo by Jonathan Madrid, UP MPRO. |
https://up.edu.ph/aupaeu-opens-academic-union-month-marks-world-teachers-day-at-quezon-hall/ | AUPAEU opens Academic Union Month, marks World Teachers’ Day at Quezon Hall – University of the Philippines | AUPAEU opens Academic Union Month, marks World Teachers’ Day at Quezon Hall AUPAEU opens Academic Union Month, marks World Teachers’ Day at Quezon Hall October 6, 2023 | Written by Fred Dabu Prof. Reggie Vallejos, AUPAEU-Manila Chapter President, addresses the event participants. (Photo by Abraham Arboleda, UPMPRO) More than 125 members of the University of the Philippines (UP) community, comprised of faculty, REPS, employees, students, and residents, and spearheaded by the All UP Academic Employees Union (AUPAEU), gathered in front of the UP Diliman Quezon Hall on October 5 to mark World Teachers’ Day and start the month-long celebration of the UP Systemwide Academic Union Month. AUPAEU officers, UP President Angelo Jimenez, UP Faculty Regent Carl Marc Ramota, and leaders of the multisectoral alliance delivered solidarity messages. Union members highlighted the campaigns for: democratic governance and academic freedom in UP, salary upgrading, higher fringe benefits, additional plantilla items and regularization of employees, among other issues. Participants also joined the Zumba session, solidarity breakfast, and raffle held during the program. UP President Angelo Jimenez delivering his message of solidarity with the AUPAEU on World Teachers’ Day. (Photo by Fred Dabu, UPMPRO) AUPAEU-Diliman Chapter President Rolando Delos Reyes discusses how UP community issues are linked with national issues during the program. (Photo by Fred Dabu, UPMPRO) Prof. Rommel Rodriguez, Vice President for Faculty of the AUPAEU National, reads the emailed message from the Union’s UPLB Chapter. (Photo by Fred Dabu, UPMPRO) AUPAEU-Diliman Chapter President Rolando Delos Reyes. (Photo by Fred Dabu, UPMPRO) (Photo by Fred Dabu, UPMPRO) Representatives from the UP Manila student council. (Photo by Fred Dabu, UPMPRO) Raffle winners were called in front to receive grocery packs. (Photo by Fred Dabu, UPMPRO) |
https://up.edu.ph/taiwanese-industrial-execs-explore-partnerships-with-up/ | Taiwanese industrial execs explore partnerships with UP – University of the Philippines | Taiwanese industrial execs explore partnerships with UP Taiwanese industrial execs explore partnerships with UP October 16, 2023 | Written by Fred Dabu Lin Hai Industrial Park Manufacturers Association (LHIPMA) President Chao-Hsien Lai (left) and University of the Philippines President Angelo Jimenez (right) shake hands after signing a memorandum of understanding formalizing the common desire for collaboration for academic and related purposes. Photo by Jonathan Madrid, UP MPRO. Executives of the Kaohsiung Lin Hai Industrial Park Manufacturers Association (LHIPMA), a non-governmental organization representing companies thriving in a highly developed industrial zone in Kaohsiung, Taiwan, visited the University of the Philippines (UP) to discuss partnership opportunities, especially in the area of green energy. They were warmly received by University officials at the Executive House in UP Diliman on October 10. LHIPMA President Chao-Hsien Lai and UP President Angelo Jimenez signed a memorandum of understanding to formalize the common desire for collaboration for academic and related purposes. The Kaohsiung Lin Hai Industrial Park is home to more than 400 companies specializing in Taiwan’s key industries such as base metals, metal products, machinery, transportation, chemical products, food and beverage manufacturing, power equipment and repairs, and many more. According to Jimenez, collaboration with LHIPMA is mutually beneficial for the University and the industries, strengthens Philippine and Taiwan relations, and also helps address the problems related to climate change. Lin Hai Industrial Park Manufacturers Association (LHIPMA) President Chao-Hsien Lai (left) and University of the Philippines President Angelo Jimenez (right) sign the memorandum of understanding formalizing the common desire for collaboration for academic and related purposes. Photo by Jonathan Madrid, UP MPRO. Also present during the meeting were: Dr. Paul Chung, Senior Adviser of the Metal Industries Research & Development Centre, and more than 30 LHIPMA-member top executives from various industries in Kaohsiung, Taiwan; UP officials, namely, Dr. Imee Su Martinez, Assistant Vice President for Academic Affairs (Internationalization) and Director of the Office of International Linkages; Dr. Gisela Concepcion, Professor Emeritus; Dr. Maria Antonia Tanchuling, College of Engineering (COE) Dean; Dr. Eric Augustus Tingatinga, COE Associate Dean for Alumni & Institutional Linkages; Jose Fernando Alcantara, Executive Vice President; Rolando Tolentino, Vice President for Public Affairs; Edgardo Carlo Vistan, UP Diliman Chancellor; Dr. Enrico Basilio, Director of the UP National College of Public Administration and Governance (NCPAG) Center for Policy and Executive Development (CPED); Dr. Eing Ming Wu, UP NCPAG Visiting Professor and Senior Managing Advisor of the Edu-Connect Southeast Asia Association (Kaohsiung, Taiwan); EnP. John Moses Cruz, UP NCPAG Center for Policy and Executive Development; Engr. Joey Gomez, UP Alumni Engineers (UPAE) President; and UP Engineering Research and Development Foundation, Inc. (UPERDFI) officials. The Taiwanese delegation is meeting with Philippine government officials and industry leaders to discuss partnerships and investment opportunities and will conclude their six-day visit to the country on October 13. Lin Hai Industrial Park Manufacturers Association (LHIPMA) President Chao-Hsien Lai (standing, fourth from left) and University of the Philippines President Angelo Jimenez (standing, fifth from right) pose with members of both parties after signing the document formalizing the common desire for collaboration for academic and related purposes. Photo by Jonathan Madrid, UP MPRO. |
https://up.edu.ph/up-hosts-national-conference-for-climate-and-disaster-resilience/ | UP hosts national conference for Climate and Disaster Resilience – University of the Philippines | UP hosts national conference for Climate and Disaster Resilience UP hosts national conference for Climate and Disaster Resilience October 26, 2023 | Written by Fred Dabu Participants, guests and organizers of the 2nd National Conference of the Philippine Academic Society for Climate and Disaster Resilience (PASCDR). (Photo by Bong Arboleda, UPMPRO) More than 200 participants from academic institutions, non-government organizations, and local government units attended the opening of the three-day 2nd National Conference of the Philippine Academic Society for Climate and Disaster Resilience (PASCDR), held October 25 at the Atencio-Libunao Hall, UP Diliman, Quezon City. Dr. Emmanuel M. Luna, PASCDR National Coordinator, set the tone for the conference with the theme “From Discourses to Actions: Mobilizing the Academe for Disaster Risk Reduction and Climate Change Adaptation and Mitigation.” Taking off from the first conference held in November 2019, the second conference aims to look back and reflect on what the academe has done concerning climate and disaster resilience in order to stimulate the sharing and critique of lessons, reflections, innovations and practices from the past and current situation. Dr. Emmanuel M. Luna, UP professor and PASCDR National Coordinator, provides an overview of the conference. (Photo by Bong Arboleda, UPMPRO) The welcome remarks of QC Mayor Ma. Josefina “Joy” Belmonte were delivered by Albert Kimpo, Assistant City Administrator for Operations of QC, while Secretary Robert E.A. Borje, Vice-Chair and Executive Director of the Philippines’ Climate Change Commission, delivered the keynote address for the conference. Plenary and parallel sessions featured discussions by expert panelists and officials, including Professor Emeritus Rex Victor O. Cruz of the UP Los Baños Integrated Natural Resources and Environmental Management (UPLB-INREM), Joe Carlo Soriano of the Office of Civil Defense, Dr. Ronald P. Law of the Department of Health (DOH) Health Emergency Management Bureau, and Executive Director Alfredo Mahar Francisco A. Lagmay of the UP Resilience Institute (UPRI). Mr. Albert Kimpo, Assistant City Administrator for Operations of Quezon City. (Photo by Bong Arboleda, UPMPRO) The national conference was organized by the PASCDR and the UPRI in partnership with the UP Social Action and Research for Development Foundation, Inc. Launched in 2019, the PASCDR is a network of individuals from the academe aiming to promote, integrate, and conduct disaster risk reduction and climate change actions towards safe schools and societal resilience. Its core members were from Ateneo de Manila, De La Salle University, Far Eastern University, UP Diliman, UP Manila, and the Philippines Public Safety College. Officers of the Philippine Academic Society for Climate and Disaster Resilience (PASCDR) and the UP Resilience Institute pose with guest speakers and resource persons Mr. Albert Kimpo, Secretary Robert E.A. Borje, Professor Emeritus Rex Victor O. Cruz, Dr. Ronald P. Law, and Joe Carlo Soriano. (Photo by Bong Arboleda, UPMPRO) |
https://up.edu.ph/ups-2023-annual-procurement-conference-highlights-good-governance/ | UP’s 2023 Annual Procurement Conference highlights good governance – University of the Philippines | UP’s 2023 Annual Procurement Conference highlights good governance UP’s 2023 Annual Procurement Conference highlights good governance October 27, 2023 | Written by Fred Dabu The University of the Philippines Procurement Office hosted the University’s 2023 Annual Procurement Conference at the GT Toyota Auditorium in UP Diliman on October 20, 2023. (Photo by Jonathan Madrid, UPMPRO) With the theme, “UP LIPAD: Linking Inspired Procurement and Digitalization”, the University of the Philippines (UP) System Procurement Office hosted the University’s 2023 Annual Procurement Conference at the GT Toyota Auditorium in UP Diliman on October 20, 2023. Over 260 participants from various constituent units of the UP System, mostly procurement officers from UP Diliman, UP Manila and UP Open University, attended the whole-day event that featured lectures, workshops and games about increasing procurement efficiency, sharing best practices across CUs, and mastering procurement work with the aid of digital tools. Atty. Flor Rissa L. Ofilada welcomes the UP officials, conference participants and speakers. (Photo by Jonathan Madrid, UPMPRO) Atty. Flor Rissa L. Ofilada, Director of the UP System Procurement Office, provided the overview of the conference. She likened procurement to travelling abroad and flying via airplane where careful planning, precision and commitment are required from everyone for more efficient and successful functions and outcomes. She said the administrative officers are now ready to do procurement work on their own, to make their “flight” after completing all the preparations and after gaining sufficient knowledge and skills during the past years; hence, the theme, “UP LIPAD”. Atty. Ofilada also served as conference emcee and moderator. Atty. Alex L. Lacson delivers his keynote address for the conference. (Photo by Jonathan Madrid, UPMPRO) In his keynote address, Atty. Alex L. Lacson, UP alumnus and bestselling author, highlighted the valuable service being done by procurement officers and the need for more personnel to become champions of good governance, stressing that procurement is at the heart of public service and that good procurement translates to good governance. He added that transparency, integrity, accountability and perseverance are some of the important ingredients that comprise good procurement work, and that these lead to quality facilities, supplies, tools, equipment and services. He also praised UP’s procurement system as one of the most honest and efficient in the country. UP Executive Vice President Jose Fernando T. Alcantara, UP Diliman Chancellor Edgardo Carlo L. Vistan II, and Office of the President Chief of Staff Ricky D. Dela Torre conveyed their insights and inspirational messages at the conference. Vistan acknowledged the participants as being the lifeblood of the University as he encouraged them to keep on improving office work systems and prioritizing good governance in the work they are doing. Alcantara discussed three principles related to procurement: compliance, prudence, and service. He said the UP administration wants to ensure that the end-user is happy, enabled and satisfied with the work of the administrative personnel. Dela Torre likewise commended the procurement officers for the innovations and improvements that make the University’s procurement system more efficient, effective and indispensable in serving the people. Finally, Dr. Imee S. Martinez, Assistant Vice President for Academic Affairs (Internationalization) and Director of the Office of International Linkages, shared a success story in her recorded video message to the participants. UP Diliman Chancellor Edgardo Carlo L. Vistan II shares insights in doing excellent procurement work. (Photo by Jonathan Madrid, UPMPRO) UP Executive Vice President Jose Fernando T. Alcantara conveys the UP administration’s focus on public service. (Photo by Jonathan Madrid, UPMPRO) To cap the whole-day conference and celebration, select procurement officers showcased their talents in the music contest, the Halloween costume contest, and the fellowship dinner. |
https://up.edu.ph/new-up-manila-chancellor-dr-tee-receives-university-symbols-of-authority-from-dr-padilla/ | New UP Manila Chancellor Dr. Tee receives University symbols of authority from Dr. Padilla – University of the Philippines | New UP Manila Chancellor Dr. Tee receives University symbols of authority from Dr. Padilla New UP Manila Chancellor Dr. Tee receives University symbols of authority from Dr. Padilla November 9, 2023 | Written by Fred Dabu The University of the Philippines (UP) Manila, the Health Sciences Center of the country, held its turnover ceremony for the Chancellorship of Dr. Michael L. Tee in the afternoon of November 7, 2023 at the UP College of Nursing Auditorium in Ermita, Manila. The event featured the turning over of the University’s symbols of authority, the Mace, Bell and Gavel, from the 9th Chancellor, Dr. Carmencita D. Padilla, to the 10th Chancellor, Dr. Tee, and the oath-taking of UP Manila’s Vice Chancellors, Assistants to the Vice Chancellors, Directors, and Heads of Units who will serve under the leadership of Dr. Tee. Dr. Carmencita D. Padilla, National Scientist and the 9th Chancellor of UP Manila, turns over the UP Manila Mace to Dr. Michael L. Tee, the 10th Chancellor, during the ceremony held at the UP College of Nursing Auditorium in Ermita, Manila. (Photo by Bong Arboleda, UP MPRO) Dr. Michael L. Tee, the 10th Chancellor of UP Manila, receives the University Bell and Gavel from Dr. Carmencita D. Padilla during the turnover ceremony. (Photo by Bong Arboleda, UP MPRO) Dr. Padilla’s valedictory address highlighted her administration’s accomplishments and summed up the lessons learned during the past nine years. Dr. Tee, for his part, outlined his administration’s vision and goals in his acceptance speech. UP President Angelo A. Jimenez delivered an inspiring message during the event. He also led the oath-taking of the new officials. Dr. Padilla thanked the UP Manila community: for their dedication to teaching, research and extension work; for responding to the challenges during the pandemic; and for accelerating change and fostering innovation during her term as Chancellor. She cited the University’s most notable achievements, including: the establishment of the Quality Assurance Office and the Healthy University Office; improvement and expansion of health services and wellness programs, such as the Enhanced Hospitalization Program (eHOPE) and the psychosocial or mental health program; improving support mechanisms for students and faculty/researchers; implementing the digital transformation project, telemedicine and remote learning and teaching; promoting faculty and curriculum development, international linkages, and multisectoral collaborations in multidisciplinary environments; building new or improved infrastructures and acquiring state-of-the-art facilities and equipment; excelling in community engagements and services; and providing technical assistance to state universities and colleges (SUCs) and partner institutions. others. Dr. Carmencita D. Padilla, National Scientist and the 9th Chancellor of UP Manila, delivers her valedictory address. (Photo by Bong Arboleda, UP MPRO) “As I pass the torch to the succeeding Chancellor, I want to emphasize the importance of viewing institution building as a continuum. We laid the foundation, building on the achievement of the past, ensuring that UP Manila remain a dynamic and ever relevant institution, and marked by a steadfast dedication to addressing the evolving health needs of the Filipino people. This responsibility transcends any single chancellorship. I trust that my successor will carry this legacy forward with the same resolute commitment to UP’s mission of service to the Filipino people,” Padilla said. Dr. Carmencita D. Padilla is accompanied by Dr. Michael L. Tee as past and present officials of the UP Manila administration and attendees of the turnover ceremony applaud Padilla for her outstanding leadership and legacy as Chancellor. (Photo by Bong Arboleda, UP MPRO) Chancellor Tee said UP Manila will continue to serve to improve the lives of people, to link with and grow together with partner universities, and to deliver healthcare to millions of Filipinos annually, as well as to respond to the needs of the University’s constituents. He said the School of Health Sciences in Palo, Leyte; Baler, Aurora; Koronadal, South Cotabato; Tarlac City; and the University’s volunteers and health professionals in the communities will continue to serve as ambassadors from and for the underserved. He also pledged to promote academic freedom as this is anchored on present realities and is integral to UP. UP Manila Chancellor Michael L. Tee, MD, MHPED, MBA, delivers his acceptance speech. (Photo by Bong Arboleda, UP MPRO) Dr. Tee said that human capital is the most valuable asset of UP and his administration envisions a nurturing campus. They will pursue a housing facility with quality amenities for employees, promote health and wellness, and enhance academe-industry partnerships, among the many other initiatives of the “accessible leadership” of his administration. “Bukas po ang aming opisina, papakinggan po namin ang inyong mga nais iparating. Aaksyonan po namin ang inyong mga hinaing, ang inyong mga nais iparating, at kung anuman ang inyong mga ambisyon na kaakibat ang unibersidad sa susunod pang panahon. Together, let us realize the University’s potential. I’m privileged to be working with you,” Tee said in his acceptance speech. President Jimenez congratulated Dr. Tee, expressing his confidence that the university was “in good hands.” He also thanked National Scientist Padilla for her three terms of leadership as UPM Chancellor, commending her for “serv[ing] with dedication despite the unprecedented historic challenges” of the COVID-19 pandemic. The members of UP Manila Chancellor’s Management Team (CMT) and new officials are: Dr. Heizel Manapat-Reyes, Vice Chancellor for Academic Affairs; Dr. Johanna Patricia A. Cañal, Vice Chancellor for Administration; Dr. Jose V. Tecson, III, Vice Chancellor for Planning and Development; Dr. Leslie Michelle M. Dalmacio, Vice Chancellor for Research; Prof. Honey Libertine Achanzar-Labor, Special Assistant to the Chancellor on UP Manila Museum; Assoc. Prof. Gina S. Salazar, Assistant to the Vice Chancellor for Academic Affairs; Dr. Hilton Y. Lam, Assistant to the Vice Chancellor for Administration and Finance; and Dr. Tammy L. dela Rosa, Assistant to the Vice Chancellor for Planning and Development. The Directors and Heads of Central Administration Offices are: Dr. Cesar A. Perez, Jr., Director of the Information, Publication, and Public Affairs Office; Atty. James Dennis C. Gumpal, Chief of the Legal Office; Dr. Coralie Therese D. Dimacali, Director of the Quality Assurance Office; Dr. Leilani Apostol-Nicodemus, Director of the Center for Gender and Women Studies; Dr. Anthony Geronimo H. Cordero, Director of the Community Health and Development Program; Dr. Vanessa-Maria Torres-Ticzon, Coordinator of the Creche Learning Center; Dr. Iris Thiele Isip-Tan, Director of the Interactive Learning Center; Asst. Prof. Migel Antonio P. Catalig, Director of the Learning Resource Center; Dr. Carl Abelardo T. Antonio, Director of the National Graduate Office for the Health Sciences; Prof. Josephine D. Agapito, Director of the National Service Training Program; Dr. Valerie P. Tiempo-Guinto, Director of the Office of Alumni Relations, and Coordinator of the Office of Anti-Sexual Harassment; Dr. Lenora C. Fernandez, Coordinator of the Office of Extension and Continuing Education; Dr. Vivien Fe Fadrilan-Camacho, Director of the Office of International Linkages; Asst. Prof. Odessa N. Joson, Director of the Office of Student Affairs; Asst. Prof. Jean Flor C. Casauay, University Registrar; Prof. Carolina S. Pulumbarit, Director of the Sentro ng Wikang Filipino; Ms. Maria Nimfa V. Castro, University Librarian; Dr. Paul Michael R. Hernandez, Director of the Healthy University Office; Dr. Michael Antonio F. Mendoza, Director of the Human Resource and Development Office; Mr. Marbert John C. Marasigan, Director of the Information Management Services; Dr. Eric S. Talens, Director of the Ugnayan ng Pahinungod; Dr. Edward H.M. Wang, Director of the Office of Research Integrity; Dr. Emerito Jose A. Faraon, Head of the Research Grants Administration Office; Dr. Ricardo M. Manalastas, Director of the Research Management and Translation Office; and Prof. Lourdes Marie S. Tejero, Director of the Technology Transfer and Business Development Office. Officials of the UP System and UP Manila, family members of UP Manila’s new officials, and UP Manila faculty, students, administrative staff, and alumni attended the ceremony. UP President Angelo A. Jimenez leads the oath-taking of the new Vice Chancellors who will serve under the leadership of Chancellor Tee. (Photo by Bong Arboleda, UP MPRO) UP President Angelo A. Jimenez leads the oath-taking of the new officials who will serve under the leadership of Chancellor Tee. (Photo by Bong Arboleda, UP MPRO) UP President Angelo A. Jimenez and UP Manila Chancellor Michael L. Tee (center) pose with the Vice Chancellors, Assistants to the Vice Chancellors, Directors, and Heads of Units of UP Manila. (Photo by Bong Arboleda, UP MPRO) UP System officials headed by President Angelo A. Jimenez pose with UP Manila Chancellor Michael L. Tee (center). From left: Vice President for Development Ferdinand Jesus A. Pecson, Vice President for Legal Affairs Abraham Rey M. Acosta, Vice President for Planning and Finance Iryn Y. Balmores, Vice President for Academic Affairs Leo D.P. Cubillan, Faculty Regent Carl Marc L. Ramota, Executive Vice President Jose Fernando T. Alcantara, Vice President for Public Affairs Rolando B. Tolentino, and Secretary of the University and of the Board of Regents Roberto M.J. Lara. (Photo by Bong Arboleda, UP MPRO) |
https://up.edu.ph/up-alumni-researchers-recognized-by-the-nast-phl-as-outstanding-filipino-scientists/ | UP alumni, researchers recognized by the NAST PHL as outstanding Filipino scientists – University of the Philippines | UP alumni, researchers recognized by the NAST PHL as outstanding Filipino scientists UP alumni, researchers recognized by the NAST PHL as outstanding Filipino scientists June 21, 2023 | Written by Celeste Ann Castillo Llaneta Alumni and researchers of the University of the Philippines (UP) have been recognized by the National Academy of Science and Technology, Philippines (NAST PHL), the highest recognition body on science and technology, for their significant scientific contributions to the country. The NAST PHL will introduce the new members of the Academy, the 2023 Outstanding Young Scientists, and the researchers who won scientific awards for 2023, in an awarding ceremony to be held on 13 July 2023. This is as the culminating activity of the 45th NAST Annual Scientific Meeting, according to the NAST’s official website. NAST Academicians Three UP scientists and alumni are among the four new NAST PHL Academicians. Membership to the Academy is given to resident Filipino scientists elected as Academicians who have made exemplary contributions to science and technology in the Philippines. The three new Academicians from UP are: Dr. Maria Corazon A. De Ungria (Microbiology) and Dr. Gil S. Jacinto (Chemical Oceanography), both from UP Diliman; and Dr. Roel R. Suralta (Agricultural Sciences) of the Philippine Rice Research Institute. In addition, a UP alumnus, Dr. Leodevico L. Ilag (Microbiology and Immunology), will be conferred the title of new Corresponding Member, which is given to a non-resident Filipino scientist who has made exemplary contributions to the advancement of science and technology and who must have continuing connections and contributions to Philippine science. Outstanding Young Scientists for 2023 The NAST PHL will also award nine Outstanding Young Scientists (OYS) for 2023—young Filipino scientists below the age of 40 years old, who have made significant contributions to science and technology. Of the nine, five are members of the UP community: Nonawin B. Lucob-Agustin (Agricultural Science) of the Philippine Rice Research Institute; Jillian Aira S. Gabo-Ratio (Earth Resources Engineering) of UP Diliman; Reinabelle C. Reyes (Astrophysics), Associate Professor at the National Institute of Physics in UP Diliman; Albert Remus R. Rosana (Microbiology and Biotechnology) of the UP Los Baños; and Ourlad Alzeus G. Tantengco (Molecular Medicine) of UP Manila. Outstanding Book/Monograph and Outstanding Scientific Paper Awardees Several UP alumni will also be receiving the NAST’s 2023 Outstanding Book/Monograph awards, which is given annually for books and/or monographs published by Filipino publishers based in the Philippines within five years preceding the award, with the majority of the authors of publication being Filipinos. One of the two winning books/monographs is titled “The Philippines’ Response to the COVID-19 Pandemic: Learning from the Experience and Emerging Stronger to Future Shocks”, published by the Philippine Institute for Development Studies in 2022. The UP alumni among its authors are: Celia M. Reyes, Michael Ralph M. Abrigo, Arkin A. Arboneda, Roehlano M. Briones, Carlos C. Cabaero, Maria Margarita H. Debuque-Gonzales, Charlotte Justine G. Diokno-Sicat, Kris A. Francisco, Adoracion M. Navarro, Aniceto, Jr. C. Orbeta, Ma. Kristina P. Ortiz, Valerie Gilbert T. Ulep, Anna Rita P. Vargas, and Jana Flor V. Vizmanos. The Outstanding Paper (OSP) Award, on the other hand, is given annually for papers published in Thompson Reuters or SCOPUS-listed journals in the Philippines within five years preceding the award. Mudjekeewis D. Santos, who graduated from UP with a Bachelor of Science degree in Biology, is one of the authors of one of the winning scientific papers, titled “Vulnerability to Climate Change of ‘Giant Squid’ (Thysanoteuthis rhombus) Fishery in Marinduque, Philippines”, published in The Philippine Journal of Fisheries in 2021. NAST Talent Search for Young Scientists The winners of the NAST Talent Search for Young Scientists (NTSYS), a project of the NAST to encourage young people to pursue a career in science, will also be awarded. Chosen after the finalists’ paper presentations held on 21 April, the winners of the NTSYS are: First prize: Jayson G. Cosme (Physics) of UP Diliman Second prize: Michael T. Castro (Chemical Engineering) of UP Diliman Third Prize: Ann Franchesca B. Laguna (Computer Science and Engineering) of De La Salle University, who earned her BS Computer Engineering and MS Electrical Engineering degrees from UP Diliman In addition, Dr. Neil Jerome A. Egarguin (Mathematics) of UPLB and Mr. Charlon A. Ligson (Marine Science) of the UP Diliman Marine Science Institute are among the four who will receive special citations. NAST Environmental Science Award Dr. Dranreb Earl O. Juanico (Physics) of the Technological Institute of the Philippines is this year’s NAST Environmental Science Awardee. He is recognized for his outstanding scientific and technological research work that contributes to environmental protection and conservation. He earned his doctorate in Physics from UP Diliman. With reports by the UP Office of Alumni Relations. |
https://up.edu.ph/uplb-inaugurates-new-math-building-paj-pledges-support-for-expansion/ | UPLB inaugurates new Math Building; PAJ pledges support for expansion – University of the Philippines | UPLB inaugurates new Math Building; PAJ pledges support for expansion UPLB inaugurates new Math Building; PAJ pledges support for expansion September 29, 2023 | Written by Celeste Ann Castillo Llaneta University of the Philippines President Angelo Jimenez (PAJ), UPLB Chancellor Jose Camacho, and other UP System and UPLB officials, cut the ribbon symbolizing the inauguration of the new Match building. Photo by Abraham Arboleda (UP MPRO). A milestone nearly two decades in the making, the Institute of Mathematical Sciences and Physics of the College of Arts and Sciences, UP Los Baños, inaugurated today its new Mathematics Building along Luz. U. Oñate Street. In attendance were UP President Angelo Jimenez, UP Vice President for Academic Affairs Leo Cubillan, UPLB Chancellor Jose Camacho, Jr., and past UPLB Chancellors, Vice Chancellors, UPLB-CAS Deans and Directors of the IMSP. According to the historical marker unveiled during the inauguration, construction of the three-storey Math Building was initiated during the term of IMSP Director Genaro Cuaresma (2001-2007), while the design and funding were approved during the incumbency of IMSP Director Virgilio Sison (2007-2013). Construction commenced in January 2014, and partial completion happened under the helm of IMSP Director Chrysaline Margus Piñol (2013-2019). Completion and furnishing were realized through the leadership of IMSP Director Editha Jose (2019-present). UP System and UPLB officials unveil the historical marker of the Math building. Photo by Abraham Arboleda (UP MPRO). In his message during the inauguration, UP President Jimenez shared UPLB’s impact on the development of his social awareness and desire to serve. He pledged his administration’s support for UPLB’s expansion even as he exhorted the UPLB community to continue to push the boundaries of knowledge and strive for excellence in academics, research and public service and eventually, to “produce a Nobel Prize awardee”. UP President Jimenez, UPLB Chancellor Camacho, and other UP System and UPLB officials pose with students in the new building’s classroom, showing off the airy, well-lit room and its “K-drama-inspired” desks and chairs. Photo by Abraham Arboleda (UP-MPRO). |
https://up.edu.ph/up-honors-its-77-up-scientists/ | UP honors its 77 UP Scientists – University of the Philippines | UP honors its 77 UP Scientists UP honors its 77 UP Scientists October 2, 2023 | Written by Celeste Ann Castillo Llaneta A group photo for posterity of the awardees, University officials and guests of the awarding ceremony at the DL Umali Hall, UP Los Baños. Photo by Abraham Arboleda, UP MPRO. Vice President for Academic Affairs Leo Cubillan speaking to awardees and guests at the ceremony. Photo by Abraham Arboleda, UP MPRO. The University of the Philippines (UP) honored its outstanding UP Scientists in an awarding ceremony titled “Celebrating Odysseys of Scientific Excellence”, which was held on September 29, 2023 at the Dioscoro L. Umali Hall in UP Los Baños (UPLB). A total of 77 UP faculty members were appointed “UP Scientist” during the 1381st meeting of the UP Board of Regents (BOR) on May 25, 2023, comprising Batch 2022-2024 of the UP Scientific Productivity System (SPS). Of the 77, 22 are from UP Diliman, 33 from UPLB, 18 from UP Manila, and two each from UP Mindanao and UP Visayas. Watch the streaming video of the ceremony here The UP SPS was established by the UP BOR in August 2005 to support the development of science and technology and to encourage and reward scientific productivity in UP. According to the UP Office of the Vice President for Academic Affairs, the University has been supporting its scientists through the provision of research funds and by honoring with the “UP Scientist” Award those who have distinguished themselves in their specialized disciplines. The Award bestows not just esteemed recognition but also material incentives and a conducive environment that fosters advanced scientific productivity for national development. Since the inception of the UP SPS, the University has issued 774 appointments to the UP Scientist ranks—with scientists meeting the requirements of the ranks retaining or improving their ranks. The event was attended by officials of the UP System, including UP President Angelo A. Jimenez, Vice President for Academic Affairs Leo Cubillan, Vice President for Public Affairs Roland Tolentino, Faculty Regent Carl Marc L. Ramota, Student Regent Sofia Jan DG Trinidad, Staff Regent Victoria C. Belegal, and chancellors of the UP constituent units—UP Diliman Chancellor Edgardo Vistan, UPLB Chancellor Jose Camacho, National Scientist and UP Manila Chancellor Carmencita Padilla, UP Mindanao Chancellor Lyre Anni Murao, and UP Visayas Chancellor Clement Camposano. President Angelo Jimenez giving his keynote address at the awarding ceremony. Photo by Abraham Arboleda, UP MPRO. University officials and awardees throwing their clenched fists in the air as they sing the University Hymn UP Naming Mahal. Photo by Abraham Arboleda, UP MPRO. |
https://up.edu.ph/up-sanctuary-a-haven-to-promote-mental-health-soon-to-rise-in-up-diliman/ | UP Sanctuary, a haven to promote mental health, soon to rise in UP Diliman – University of the Philippines | UP Sanctuary, a haven to promote mental health, soon to rise in UP Diliman UP Sanctuary, a haven to promote mental health, soon to rise in UP Diliman October 9, 2023 | Written by Celeste Ann Castillo Llaneta Members of the Portia Sorority pose with University of the Philippines (UP) President Angelo Jimenez (middle in black, gold and maroon shirt) and UP Diliman Chancellor Edgardo Carlo Vistan (in maroon shirt), at the site of the UP Portia Sanctuary. Photo by Abraham Arboleda, UP MPRO. A new, verdant and peaceful haven is soon to rise in the Diliman campus—a place where, as UP President Angelo A. Jimenez put it, UP students and members of the UP community can reconnect and interact with Nature, with one another, and with themselves. In the afternoon of October 4, in a portion of the Lagoon in front of the Faculty Center, the UP Portia Sanctuary was launched in a simple ceremony attended by UP System and UP Diliman officials headed by UP President Jimenez, UP Diliman Chancellor Edgardo Carlo L. Vistan, UP Assistant Vice President for Academic Affairs and Office of Student Development Services Director Ma. Shari Niña Oliquino, UP System Procurement Office Director Flor L. Ofilada; and members of the UP College of Law-based Portia Sorority and Portia Sorority Alumnae Association. The UP Portia Sanctuary is a project by the UP Office of the President and the UP Office of the Assistant Vice President for Student Affairs – Office Student Development Services (OSDS), in partnership with the UP Portia Sorority and its alumnae association. The UP Sanctuary is designed as a dedicated space where one can find solace and tranquility during periods of heightened psychological stress, providing a safe refuge for all members of the UP community, especially the students, faculty, and staff. The idea of the UP Sanctuary was originally conceptualized by the members of the UP Portia Sorority. Arch. Micaela Benedicto, an alumna of the UP College of Architecture, contributed her expertise by crafting the initial architectural designs. |
https://up.edu.ph/coalition-of-up-faculty-and-staff-hold-forum-on-salary-related-issues-in-up/ | Coalition of UP faculty and staff hold forum on salary-related issues in UP – University of the Philippines | Coalition of UP faculty and staff hold forum on salary-related issues in UP Coalition of UP faculty and staff hold forum on salary-related issues in UP October 27, 2023 | Written by Franco Gargantiel II Image source: https://www.facebook.com/photo/?fbid=178308428657942&set=a.178308538657931 The UP Salary Fight Network held a UP Systemwide forum titled “GRABE NA, KULANG NA! SAHOD, ITAAS NA!” on October 25 at the UP Diliman Student Union Building’s Alcantara Hall. The forum aimed to address the different issues that have plagued many members of the UP community such as delayed salaries, outdated worker benefits, the demands for higher pay for both contractual and regular workers and lecturers, overtime pay, and more. In attendance, either in person or via Zoom, were various employees, from teachers to contractual workers. Among the speakers were All UP Academic Employees Union President Perlita Raña and UP Workers Alliance Chair Jonathan Beldia. They discussed the working conditions for rank-and-file employees and the general situation regarding salary processing in the University. Celeste F. Vallejos, Director of the UP College of Social Work and Community Development Office of Research and Extension Development Office and member of the Alliance of Contractual Employees in UP (ACE UP), introduced the UP Salary Fight Network and spoke about how the network aims to combat all of these salary-related issues. “Ano ang ating magagawa?” she asked. “Kailangan nating mamulat, magkaisa at kumilos.” The UP Salary Fight Network (UPSFN) is a broad coalition of UP faculty, REPS, and regular and contractual employees that advocates for meaningful and just salary increase and for a lasting solution to the problematic schemes and practices regarding salaries in UP. It is composed of various organizations, including the Workers Alliance, ACE UP, the All UP Academic Employees Union, CONTEND and the All UP Workers Union-UP Manila Philippine General Hospital, and was established during a press conference of REPS and UP contractual employees held in UP Manila in June 2023. Watch the livestream of the forum on the UP Salary Fight Network FB page: https://www.facebook.com/UPSalaryFightNetwork/videos/892523888904122 |
https://up.edu.ph/up-secures-8-out-of-top-10-spots-in-licensure-examination-for-fisheries-professionals/ | UP secures 8 out of top 10 spots in licensure examination for fisheries professionals – University of the Philippines | UP secures 8 out of top 10 spots in licensure examination for fisheries professionals UP secures 8 out of top 10 spots in licensure examination for fisheries professionals November 8, 2023 | Written by Franco Gargantiel II Eight out of the 10 examinees who topped the recent licensure examination for fisheries professionals are graduates of the University of the Philippines Visayas. This was announced by Professional Regulation Commission (PRC), which released on Monday, November 6, the list of 716 out of 2,124 examinees who successfully passed the October 2023 licensure examination for fisheries professionals. The examination took place from October 25 to 26. The eight topnotchers from UP Visayas are: Allen Patrick Rodriguez Araneta, Klynne Clarise Manliquez Kuizon and Rizza Mae Tagupa Guyapale who all tied for second place with an average of 86.75%; Reylan Alilaen Alegroso, who placed fourth with an average of 85.75%; Carl Bryle Mosura Rosal and Gyll Anne Marie Namon Moquera, who tied for fifth place with an average of 85.50%; Hanna Raiza Molina Grantoza, who placed eighth with an average of 84.75%; And Chris Jan Panisa Dinaga, who placed tenth with an average of 84.25%. The University of the Philippines congratulates the UP graduates who topped the exams and all the all the examinees who successfully passed. |
https://up.edu.ph/upm-registers-100-passing-rate-in-pharmacists-licensure-exam/ | UPM registers 100% passing rate in Pharmacists Licensure Exam – University of the Philippines | UPM registers 100% passing rate in Pharmacists Licensure Exam UPM registers 100% passing rate in Pharmacists Licensure Exam November 13, 2023 | Written by Franco Gargantiel II The University of the Philippines Manila (UPM) registered a 100 percent passing rate in the Pharmacists Licensure Examination given by the Board of Pharmacy this November, as all 35 of its graduates passed the exam on their first attempt. UPM student Joseph Benedict Lumantao Carpio was also among the topnotchers, ranking fourth among all examinees with a score of 92.28 percent. The Professional Regulation Commission (PRC) announced these results on November 8, 2023. Out of 4,038 total examinees, 2,974 passed the exam. |
https://up.edu.ph/moa-signing-between-upcwgs-and-mwss-ro/ | MOA signing between UPCWGS and MWSS RO – University of the Philippines | MOA signing between UPCWGS and MWSS RO MOA signing between UPCWGS and MWSS RO November 13, 2023 | Written by Franco Gargantiel II Representatives of UP and the MWSS RO officially sign the MOA launching the 2023 Sex Disaggregated Water Data Survey (SDWDS) Project. From left to right: UP CWGS Director Marie Aubrey Villaceran, UP Executive Vice President Jose Fernando Alcantara, MWSS RO Chief Regulator Patrick Lester Ty, and MWSS RO Deputy Administrator for Administration and Legal Affairs Claudine Orocio-Isorena. (Photo by Bong Arboleda, UPMPRO) The 2023 Sex Disaggregated Water Data Survey (SDWDS) was officially launched on November 10, with the ceremonial signing of a Memorandum of Agreement (MOA) between the University of the Philippines Center for Women’s and Gender Studies (UP CWGS) and the Metropolitan Waterworks and Sewerage System Regulatory Office (MWSS RO). The SDWDS project is a collaboration between the UP CWGS and the MWSS RO, intended to promote gender equality and women empowerment by integrating a Gender and Development (GAD) perspective in all its programs, policies, and activities, through enabling mechanisms that institutionalize gender mainstreaming to ensure equal opportunities and participation for both sexes. The attendees of the ceremonial MOA signing from both the UP CWGS and the MWSS RO. (Photo by Bong Arboleda, UPMPRO) The UP CWGS and the MWSS RO are jointly conducting the 2023 SDWDS project as the basis for planning, budgeting, programming, and policy formulation of the Gender and Development Focal Point System. According to the project brief, the objectives of the project are: to gather baseline information on the basic water statistics in the Concession Area covering Metro Manila and parts of Cavite and Rizal; to produce survey design and survey instruments for use in the study; and to produce data that is gender-sensitive for use in the planning, budgeting, programming, and policy formulation of the MWSS RO and to assess how policies and programs on water have different impacts on women and men, and girls and boys. Notable attendees of the MOA signing are UP Executive Vice President Jose Fernando Alcantara, MWSS Chief Regulator Patrick Lester, and UPCWGS Director Marie Aubrey J. Villaceran. The ceremonial MOA signing between the UP CWGS and the MWSS RO is capped with and exchange of gifts. (Photo by Bong Arboleda, UPMPRO) |
https://up.edu.ph/satirist-manuel-urbano-jr-a-k-a-mr-shooli-is-up-gawad-plaridel-awardee/ | Satirist Manuel Urbano, Jr., a.k.a., “Mr. Shooli”, is UP Gawad Plaridel awardee – University of the Philippines | Satirist Manuel Urbano, Jr., a.k.a., “Mr. Shooli”, is UP Gawad Plaridel awardee Satirist Manuel Urbano, Jr., a.k.a., “Mr. Shooli”, is UP Gawad Plaridel awardee October 17, 2023 | Written by Chelsea Lilang The University of the Philippines System Officials, UP Gawad Plaridel Committee and UP Chancellors with Mr. Shooli (8th from the left) Photo by Jonathan Madrid, UP MPRO. Actor, satirist, and advertising creative Manuel” Jun” Salazar Urbano Jr., popularly known on television, film, and the Internet as “Mr. Shooli”, was conferred the prestigious Gawad Plaridel by the University of the Philippines Diliman (UPD) College of Mass Communication on October 11, during a ceremony held at the UP Film Institute Film Center’s Cine Adarna. The UP Gawad Plaridel 2023 awarding ceremony was attended by UP officials led by UP President Angelo Jimenez, Vice President for Public Affairs Roland Tolentino, UP Diliman Chancellor Edgardo Carlo Vistan II, UPD Vice Chancellor for Community Affairs Roehl Jamon, UP Cebu Chancellor Leo B. Malagar, UP Visayas Chancellor Clement Camposano, and UP College of Mass Communication (CMC) officials, staff, students from the UP CMC and other units, fellow Gawad Plaridel awardees, and guests from media organizations and other universities. Urbano told PhilSTAR L!fe that he would not be attending the UP Gawad Plaridel awarding ceremony. “Papupuntahin ko si Mr. Shooli,” he joked—then proceeded to do just that. Photo by Jonathan Madrid, UPMPRO. UP College of Mass Communication Dean Fernando dlC. Paragas said in his welcome remarks: “Today’s Gawad Plaridel ceremony is a gift of our College to you and to our family and friends in the community in communication and media and across and beyond the country. After 1,421 days since the last Gawad Plaridel awarding ceremony, we present to you our gift of an event that honors Mr. Manuel Urbano, Jr. whose lifelong work of speaking truth to power through humor is in itself a gift to all of us.” UP President Jimenez delivers his message during the awarding ceremony. Photo by Jonathan Madrid, UP MPRO. UP President Jimenez expressed his deepest congratulations to the awardee, whom he personally admire. “I am glad and proud to see Mr. Jun Urbano receive the UP Gawad Plaridel, first and foremost, because of his continuing commitment to the highest levels of excellence and professionalism, and his precious contributions to Philippine media spanning decades, that make him worthy of the recognition; and second, for the words of wisdom and inspiration that he will be imparting to us this afternoon. Surely, Mr. Urbano’s message—Mr. Shooli’s message—will be remembered long after today,” he said in his speech.” Jimenez also mentioned a beer commercial that became famous in the 80s. “Here in these advertisements, Mr. Urbano speaks to both young and old alike. The humble ‘roasted highland legumes’—yes the ‘isang platitong mani’—goes as perfectly well the beer and fellowship, just as much as the more expensive and sinful inihaw na pusit, kalderetang maanghang, crispy pata, sizzling sisig or chicharong bulaklak do, and so making the bonds among friends and families stronger and happier during reunions.” Even at 84 years old, Urbano never fails to amaze his guests and friends in media with his portrayal of his iconic character, “Mr. Shooli”. His body of work has been notable for its profound social commentary, and his remarkable contributions to multimedia commercial advertising are distinguished by their humane values and unforgettable Pinoy humor. Manuel “Mr. Shooli” reveals his secret formula during the 2023 UP Gawad Plaridel awarding ceremony: “When I tell you your faults through comedy, tatawa ka. Iyan ang formula ko.” Presenting him the trophy is UP President Jimenez. Photo by Jonathan Madrid, UPMPRO. Professor Emeritus Nicanor G. Tiongson announced that Urbano was being recognized “for directing well-made and memorable television ads, which highlighted typical Filipino characters and situations; propounded positive values like love of country, industry among workers and professional loyalty to friends, concern for indigenous peoples and our brothers in the regions; and featured Filipino personalities who made the country proud through their international achievements” and “for creating the TV series ‘Mongolian Barbecue’, which became a conduit for enlightening and conscientizing the public, and giving them a critical understanding of current urgent social issues through interviews with known government officials.” He was also cited for his consistency in taking a pro-Filipino and pro-people stand and for speaking truth to power; for setting and maintaining a high level of excellence in the TV ads, which led to his being acclaimed as one of the most awarded commercial ad directors in his day; and for creating productions in television and film that elevated the substance and form that future generations of Filipino media practitioners can look up to. The UP Filipiniana Dance Group and UP Samaskom perform in an intermission number. Photo by Jonathan Madrid, UP MPRO. For the traditional Gawad Plaridel lecture, Urbano delivered it as his iconic character, Mr. Shooli, who was tasked to deliver Urbano’s acceptance speech but left the manuscript in the taxi, and so in lieu of an acceptance speech, recounted his experiences in the Philippines from the perspective of a Mongolian instead. The satirist mentioned that in the past, “Filipino are the best people in Southeast Asia” and “Philippines number two to Japan in economy”. Then he compared it to the current status of the Philippines, ridden with thieves, extrajudicial killings, and economic deprivation forching the Philippines to import goods from other countries. He also talked about the overseas Filipino workers (OFWs) being exported to pay the debt of the Philippines. He compared the ordinary thief and political thief as well. “Yung ordinary thief, siya pipili ikaw pa nanakawan niya. Ang political thief, kayo pumipili kung sino mananakawan sa inyo.” He recalled his father, National Artist Manuel Conde, who used to say: “Mr. Shooli, if you want the patient to get well because he is very sick and he doesn’t want to take the bitter medicine for him to get well, give him joke. Patawanin mo. Pag bukas na yung kanyang bibig tsaka mo ipasok yung gamut. And that’s what I’m doing to you,” Urbano added. “I’m sure ang mga sinasabi ni Mr. Shooli, tumatatak sa inyo.” He said to the UP students and all Philippine youth: “This country is your country. The future of this country is your future. Then try to work on it. Use your knowledge to improve the country.” “Mr. Shooli” delivers his Plaridel lecture with flair and aplomb. Photo by Jonatan Madrid, UPMPRO. The UP Gawad Plaridel is the sole award of the UP System for outstanding practitioners known for their integrity and excellence in the different fields of media—print media, radio, television, cinema, and new media. The award is named after the great propagandist Marcelo H. del Pilar, whose nom de plume was “Plaridel”. The recognition comes with a trophy sculpture depicting the editor of La Solidaridad by National Artist Napoleon V. Abueva. UP Gawad Plaridel Awardee for 2023 Mr. Manuel “Jun” Urbano, Jr., also known as Mr. Shooli, with his family and friends. Also present is the actor and assistant director of “Mongolian Barbecue”, Leo Martinez (right from the center). Photo by Jonathan Madrid, UPMPRO. Established in 2004, the Gawad Plaridel tradition includes a lecture by the laureate on pertinent issues within their respective field or craft. Previous recipients of the honor include media luminaries such as Eugenia Apostol, Vilma Santos-Recto, Fidela Magpayo, Cheche Lazaro, Pacheco Seares, Kidlat Tahimik, Eloisa Cruz Canlas, Rosa Rosal, Jose Lacaba, Nora Aunor, Ricky Lee, Francisca Custodio, Tina Monzon-Palma, Jessica Soho, and last awarded to Bonifacio Ilagan in 2019. Urbano is the first to be conferred the UP Gawad Plaridel after a hiatus due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Watch the Gawad Plaridel Awarding Ceremony with this video from TVUP |
https://up.edu.ph/upm-is-top-performing-school-in-recent-physician-licensure-exams/ | UPM is top performing school in recent Physician Licensure Exams – University of the Philippines | UPM is top performing school in recent Physician Licensure Exams UPM is top performing school in recent Physician Licensure Exams November 17, 2023 | Written by Franco Gargantiel II The University of the Philippines Manila placed first in the list of top ten performing schools in the October 2023 Physician Licensure Exam, with 164 out of 168 or 97.62% of its examinees passing the exam. Two UPM graduates made it to the top ten passers. Jon Michael Saluta Kimpo placed 4th overall with a rating of 88.42%, followed by Tranquil Matthew Apasan Salvador IV who placed 5th with a rating of 88.17%. The Professional Regulation Commission (PRC) announced the top-performing schools in the October 2023 Physician Licensure Exams on November 10. The Physician board exam was conducted on October 20-21 and 27-28, 2023. |
https://up.edu.ph/uplb-and-upd-secure-top-spots-in-november-2023-nutritionist-dietitians-licensure-exam/ | UPLB and UPD secure top spots in November 2023 Nutritionist-Dietitians Licensure Exam – University of the Philippines | UPLB and UPD secure top spots in November 2023 Nutritionist-Dietitians Licensure Exam UPLB and UPD secure top spots in November 2023 Nutritionist-Dietitians Licensure Exam December 1, 2023 | Written by Franco Gargantiel II The University of the Philippines Diliman (UPD) and UP Los Baños (UPLB) ranked first among the top performing schools in the November 2023 Nutritionist-Dietitians Licensure Examination. Both UP constituent universities reported a 100% passing rate, as all their examinees—40 from UPLB and 37 from UPD—passed the test. Examinees from both UP Diliman and UPLB also ranked among the ten highest placers in the November 2023 Nutritionist-Dietitians Licensure Exam. They are: Michelle Orot Udarbe, UPD – ranked 2nd with a rating of 92.05%; Mark Jerome Corachea Morgado, UPLB – ranked 3rd with a rating of 91.35%; Alyssa P. Arnoco, UPD– ranked 7th with a rating of 90.65%; Arvin Jay Arce Entereso, UPLB – ranked 8th with a rating of 90.60%; and, Kathrin Ellen Tan Lavadia, UPD – ranked 10th with a rating of 90.45%. The University extends its warmest congratulations to its graduates who placed in the top ten, and to all the examinees who passed. On November 28, the Professional Regulation Commission announced that that 895 out of 1,219 examinees passed the Nutritionist-Dietitians Licensure Exam given by the Board of Nutrition and Dietetics this November 2023. |
https://up.edu.ph/upm-posts-100-passing-rate-in-first-speech-language-pathologists-licensure-exam/ | UPM posts 100% passing rate in first Speech-Language Pathologists Licensure Exam – University of the Philippines | UPM posts 100% passing rate in first Speech-Language Pathologists Licensure Exam UPM posts 100% passing rate in first Speech-Language Pathologists Licensure Exam November 24, 2023 | Written by Franco Gargantiel II The Oblation in front of the University of the Philippines – Philippine General Hospital (UP PGH) in UP Manila. UP MPRO file photo. UP Manila (UPM) marked a milestone as all 141 of its BS Speech Pathology graduates from the College of Allied Medical Professions (CAMP) passed the first ever Speech-Language Pathologists (SLPs) Licensure Examination in the country. UPM was top performing school, along with Cebu Doctors University and University of Santo Tomas. Top performing schools are those with at least 50 examinees and a perfect passing percentage. Of the 545 total test takers, 543 passed. The results were released by the Professional Regulation Commission (PRC) on November 20, just four working days after the exam was held on November 13 and 14 in Cebu, Davao, and the National Capital Region. In March of this year, the PRC Professional Regulatory Board of Speech-Language Pathology administered the oath of the first batch of SLPs who qualified for registration without examination. On top of the historic 100% passing percentage, 35 CAMP alumni were among the 59 examinees who placed in the top ten. They are: Pristine Ellise Ty Chua – ranked no.1 with a rating of 93.75 Gillianne Joy Sarte Scruz – ranked no.2 with a rating of 93.50 Marion Louise Gaya Virtucio – ranked no.2 with a rating of 93.50 Serena Justine Tanabuco Tan – ranked no.3 with a rating of 93.00 Mariam Lujain Jajurie Anwar Bahraq -ranked no.4 with a rating of 92.75 Nina Alexis De Los Dantos Benedicto – ranked no.4 with a rating of 92.75 Jonathan Averilla Cruz – ranked no.4 with a rating of 92.75 Melissa Romaine Koa Cheng -ranked no.5 with a rating of 92.50 Justine Maetus Baldino Medina -ranked no.5 with a rating of 92.50 Jean Kaye Millan Tolentino- ranked no.5 with a rating of 92.50 Julianna Ysabel Garcia Aleta- ranked no.6 with a rating of 92.25 Abiegail Ventura Bonficatio – ranked no.6 with a rating of 92.25 Anna Sophia Flores David -ranked no.6 with a rating of 92.25 Indiana Louise Jalimao Ramos – ranked no.6 with a rating of 92.25 Maria Blanquita Mata Salvador – ranked no.6 with a rating of 92.25 Annika Jenine Dela Cruz Uy – ranked no. 7 with a rating of 92.00 Sophia Ellyse Tieng Chua – ranked no. 8 with a rating of 91.75 Julienne Isabelle Cabildo Galang- ranked no.8 with a rating of 91.75 Nicole Bernadette Cervantes Mercado – ranked no.8 with a rating of 91.75 Lara Francesca Royong Rempillo – ranked no.8 with a rating of 91.75 Hillary Kaylin Chua Sy -ranked no.8 with a rating of 91.75 Paula Marie Sanvictores TIson – ranked no. 8 with a rating of 91.75 Andrea Jade Aguirre Bondoc -ranked no.9 with a rating of 91.50 Katrina Isabelle Estrada Desquitado – ranked no.9 with a rating of 91.50 Katrina Ysabel De Leon Dimayuga – ranked no.9 with a rating of 91.50 Kyla Kristiana Faelnar Lu – ranked no.9 with a rating of 91.50 Tiffany Toney Ponte Magpoc – ranked no.9 with a rating of 91.50 Katrina Claire Reyes Marcaida – ranked no.9 with a rating of 91.50 Justine Mirabelle Lao Mayor – ranked no.9 with a rating of 91.50 Nicole Angelika Tamayo Pingol – ranked no.9 with a rating of 91.50 Ainah Barte Taraaw – ranked no.9 with a rating of 91.50 Ramon Angelo Patawaran Jacinto- ranked no.10 with a rating of 91.25 Micah Faith Malitan Marcial – ranked no.10 with a rating of 91.25 Miguel Eduardo Manianglung Mercado – ranked no. 10 with a rating of 91.25 Vicenta Maritoni Mago Rosero – ranked no.10 with a rating of 91.25 |
https://up.edu.ph/lgbtqi-research-resource-center-up-in-up/ | LGBTQI research resource center up in UP – University of the Philippines | LGBTQI research resource center up in UP LGBTQI research resource center up in UP August 9, 2023 | Written by Jo. Florendo B. Lontoc Academic, professional, and advocacy institutions joined forces to establish the University of the Philippines (UP) Rainbow Research Hub that aims for better and more LGBTQI scholarship and research. Supported by the UP Office of the Vice President for Academic Affairs and the UP Center for Women’s and Gender Studies, the collaborating institutions: the UP School of Statistics, the UP Diliman Office for the Advancement of Teaching, the Psychological Association of the Philippines-LGBT Psychology Special Interest Group, and Babaylanes Inc., launched the hub on June 30, 2023 at the UP Diliman University Theater Lobby. The hub is currently headed by Asst. Prof. Xavier Javines Bilon of the UP School of Statistics. Introducing the hub during its launch, he said it was a response to a demand for LGBTQI research, apparent during a 2021 webinar for students and academics on doing LGBTQI research. “Our goal at the UP Rainbow Research hub is to make a difference for the LGBTQI community in the Philippines through better LGBTQI scholarship and research,” Bilon said. “We achieve this by supporting students’ access to knowledge and expanding educators’ arsenal of teaching materials through our accessible open educational resources in doing LGBTQI research.” Asst. Prof. Xavier Javines Bilon, Project Leader of the UP Rainbow Research Hub, gives an overview of the research hub and its features. Photo courtesy of the UP Rainbow Research Hub. In her closing remarks, Director Marby Villaceran of the UP Center for Women’s and Gender Studies said: “By generating reliable data and empirical evidence, researchers can challenge discriminatory narratives and provide a more accurate understanding of sexual orientation, gender identity, and expression.” According to Bilon, the hub currently features six video lectures and four journal articles covering topics from methodological challenges to ethical and practical considerations of studying LGBTQI lives and issues. “We cover the basics, such as introduction to basic concepts in gender and sexuality, and the more advanced topics, like intersectionality,” Bilon added. They can be accessed freely at rainbowresearchhub.up.edu.ph. UP Center for Women’s and Gender Studies Director Marby Villaceran delivers her closing remarks for the event. Photo courtesy of the UP Rainbow Research Hub. The launch was attended by more than 50 guests, University officials, academics, students, and members of civil society organizations, from the different CUs of UP, other universities in the country, and other development partners. Guests were welcomed by UP Assistant Vice President for Academic Affairs Maria Theresa Payongayong and UP Diliman Chancellor Edgardo Carlo Vistan. Messages of solidarity were delivered by: Dean Joseph Ryan Lansangan of the UP School of Statistics; Former Director Jose Antonio Clemente of the UP Diliman Office for the Advancement of Teaching; Co-Chair Beatriz Torre of the Psychological Association of the Philippines LGBT Psychology Special Interest Group; and, Babaylanes Inc. Executive Director Jap Ignacio. Responses were given by representatives of partner institutions: Michael Tiu Jr. of the UP College of Law Gender Law and Policy Program, and Julia Labao of UP Babaylan. Beauty queen Nicole Cordoves was the master of ceremonies. |
https://up.edu.ph/up-asserts-relevance-of-remembering-martial-law/ | UP asserts relevance of remembering martial law – University of the Philippines | UP asserts relevance of remembering martial law UP asserts relevance of remembering martial law September 21, 2023 | Written by Jo. Florendo B. Lontoc #WeRemember is the official hashtag of this year’s commemoration of martial law by the University of the Philippines (UP) for its annual Day of Remembrance, which it has formally held since 2018. Details of the commemoration were announced by the UP Presidential Commission on Culture and Arts (UP-PCCA), headed by Raymundo Rovillos, a professor of History and former Chancellor of UP Baguio, which is supporting and coordinating UP Day of Remembrance activities in all UP constituent universities and its autonomous college. “Join us in commemorating the UP Day of Remembrance, as we use symbolic forms of dissent to ensure history is never forgotten,” the UP-PCCA invitation to the public stated. The highlight of this year’s commemoration was today’s noise barrage, or “Noises and Voices of Memory and Dissent”. Exhorting the public to “Raise your voice, break the silence!” UP led them wherever they were in making noise the whole hour between 12 noon and 1 PM. In UP Diliman, the noise barrage was held around the Academic Oval, particularly at: the UP Theater; the College of Music; Palma Hall, where many protest actions had been launched since the First Quarter Storm; and Vinzons Hall, which is the student union building of UP Diliman and which also provides shelter to student leaders and activists of the country. According to Rovillos, from September through October, discussions will be held on the Diliman campus on several aspects and shadows of martial law: media’s control of public discourse and society wresting it back for just ends; disinformation during the first year of the Marcos Jr. presidency; and, the memories and lessons from those who struggled. Exhibits, workshops, and presentations would be mounted: to showcase the heroism of the indigenous, the defiant pages of The Philippine Collegian, artworks on memory, and the radical figure of then UP President Salvador P. Lopez; and, to conduct research and write creatively and critically from the margins. A documentary and short films will be shown for free to highlight cinematic perspectives on the regime. A series of activities have been lined up in the other UP campuses for a similarly extended Day of Remembrance. UP Los Baños has an ongoing exhibit on a lot of literature on martial law, as well as on the works of eight contemporary visual artists. Later this month It will dedicate the inauguration of its Sculpture Garden to the Day of Remembrance. The campus will also stage various activities: a multi-verse production to give voice to nameless victims; display banner tarpaulin posters of heroes and martyrs from the campus and the Southern Tagalog region; mount a foodfest of “politically-charged” dishes; and house a solo exhibit on mothering and grief. The UP Open University held a virtual noise barrage and an interactive AI poetry performance today. Its student council organized watch parties and discussion of the films “ML”, “Liway”, and “The Kingmaker”. In UP Baguio, verses were read on September 5 on a “Makalagip Poetry Night” which focused on oral histories. By the end of October, the campus will set up an ayuyang (gathering place) for the different youth groups and community-based cultural organizations in Baguio City and nearby areas, to hold a “cultural event and mountain night” upholding indigenous peoples’ rights. UP Cebu gathered members of the press on September 15.for a campaign to fight lies and historical erasure and amnesia. Days leading to September 21, it held: community immersions in the public market; a “parlor fest” of fact-checking; a masterclass on Cebu press freedom; the exhibit and protest action [Proclamation] “1081”; a collaborative cultural production on the stories of Cebuano martial law victims and survivors; a forum for future journalists; discussions on the anti-terror law, the First Quarter Storm, and women in the resistance; and, a children’s reading. On September 21, it held forums on using Philippine independent historical discourses, on academic freedom, and on the historic role of media; and on September 22, a forum on the role of newsrooms in digital space. On September 17, 2018, UP President Danilo Concepcion signed Proclamation No. 1, Series of 2018, declaring September 21 every year as UP Day of Remembrance. He cited: the evils of martial law, with UP in the frontlines of resistance, coming from a tradition of academic freedom and the championing of democracy and human rights; and, UP’s best and brightest becoming heroes and martyrs of the resistance. Through this proclamation, UP supports the holding of special activities commemorating “[its] participation and sacrifice in the struggle against martial law and the continuing education of our students, faculty, and staff on the importance of academic freedom, civil liberties, and human rights in our society”. #WeRemember #UPDayOfRemembrance #NeverAgain #KalinangangUP #KalinangangBayan #WeRememberML51 Below are some photos of the noise barrage in UP Diliman. Member of the UP Diliman community converge at the Palma Hall (formerly knowns as the AS Steps) to join this year’s Day of Remembrance noise barrage. Photo by Misael Bacani, UP MPRO. Participants of the noise barrage in UP Diliman attach a sign on The Oblation for the Day of Remembrance commemoration. Photo by Misael Bacani, UP MPRO. Participants of the UP Day of Remembrance 2023 noise barrage gather infront of The Oblation in UP Diliman to express their sentiments on current social issues and historical distortion. Photo by Misael Bacani, UP MPRO. Members of the UP College of Music community join this year’s Day of Remembrance noise barrage in UP Diliman. Photo by Jonathan Madrid, UP MPRO. Members of the UP College of Music community join this year’s Day of Remembrance noise barrage in UP Diliman. Photo by Jonathan Madrid, UP MPRO. Workers from various offices in UP Diliman join this year’s Day of Remembrance noise barrage infront of the UP Theater. Photo by Jonathan, Madrid. |
https://up.edu.ph/we-encourage-activism-because-we-care/ | We encourage activism. . . because we care. – University of the Philippines | We encourage activism. . . because we care. We encourage activism. . . because we care. October 5, 2023 | Written by Jo. Florendo B. Lontoc The four-hour University Welcome Assembly 2023 held at the UP Theater, UP Diliman, Quezon City, on September 18, 2023 was livestreamed on the Facebook page of the Office of the Vice Chancellor for Student Affairs with the hashtags #BuhayIsko and #readyforitupd. Photo by Abraham Arboleda, UPMPRO The University of the Philippines welcomed this year’s batch of freshmen, transferees, shiftees, and foreign exchange students in UP Diliman through a rousing program, this year’s University Welcome Assembly (UWA), on September 18, 2023 at the UP Theater. The UP president and the UP Diliman chancellor, college deans, and secretaries briefed the audience on what to expect from their college, campus, and university; and on their life as UP students. UP President Angelo Jimenez’s rousing speech leaves the audience re-thinking the historical role of UP in Philippine national and higher education development, but affirms the primacy of UP education and serving the people, during the University Welcome Assembly 2023 at the UP Theater, UP Diliman, Quezon City, on September 18, 2023. Photo by Abraham Arboleda, UPMPRO Hearing UP President Angelo Jimenez for probably the first time, the audience appeared to warm up to him as he did a roll call of the crowd by geographical origin. They also cheered most of the what he pointed to. Jimenez briefed the students on the stereotypes. “Aktibista daw ang mga taga-UP. Natural. We encourage activism. . . because we care. You care [about] what’s happening to your community, your society, your country, to the world. . . . You see something that needs to be changed, you do something to change it,” he said. “They say you are radicals. Radical is root, di ba? Because you will be trained to look at the cause of the cause. . . until your mind is able to grasp the root causes,” he added. But Jimenez also gave the students an early reality check. “This University was really created to produce leaders of a very young nation over a hundred years ago. We succeeded so much. But after a hundred years, our society is still among the most unequal in the world. In Southeast Asia, we’re second most unequal. . . . “That is the first great moral paradox of our existence,” he said, encouraging the students to think as early as now how to turn things around for the University whose mission beyond honor and excellence was to serve the country. Jimenez further emphasized the value of their education, “With the kind of inequality we’re experiencing today, your education is not a right, it is a privilege.” “Study,” he told them. “And think about those other people who have to have less so that you could have this great opportunity,” Jimenez added, referring to the resources being spent for the students’ education. “Serve the people.” “I would like your generation to replicate themselves to the idea of the University which shall embrace the highest hopes of our people, their deepest devotions, their most serious aspirations,” he said. UP Diliman Chancellor Edgardo Carlo Vistan speaks of the community as “rich in culture, rich in tradition, rich in history, rich in diversity, rich in experiences, particularly learning experiences not only from the classes that you will attend but also from the other members of the UP Diliman community that you will interact with. . . . Make the most out of this rich community,” advising the audience of the University Welcome Assembly 2023 at the UP Theater, UP Diliman, Quezon City, on September 18, 2023. Photo by Abraham Arboleda, UPMPRO The students got to know the diverse backgrounds of the University’s top leaders: Jimenez as a Student Regent and Student Council Chair; UP Diliman Chancellor Edgardo Carlo Vistan as a Law student with a Microbiology undergraduate degree; and Admissions Director Francisco delos Reyes as a statistician who rose above the poverty of his family through a UP education. Performances were rendered by KontraGaPi, the UP Concert Chorus, the ConChords, the UP Streetdance Club, and Legato Visual Performing Arts Group. The UP Pep Squad taught the UP cheers. There were also random live interviews with members of the audience conducted by the masters of ceremonies, Jose Monfred Sy and Christine Joy Magpayo, both of the College of Arts and Letters. UP President Angelo Jimenez is able to sustain the audience’s interest with his presentation of UP’s moral obligations and paradoxes, the fellowship of diverse elites, and the great many opportunities of obtaining a UP education, during the University Welcome Assembly 2023 at the UP Theater, UP Diliman, Quezon City, on September 18, 2023. Photo by Abraham Arboleda, UPMPRO An interactive portion of the University Welcome Assembly 2023 held at the UP Theater, UP Diliman, Quezon City, on September 18, 2023 has the masters of ceremony Jose Monfred Sy and Christine Joy Magpayo of the College of Arts and Letters looking for members of the audience willing to be interviewed live. Photo by Abraham Arboleda, UPMPRO A highlight of the UP Diliman University Welcome Assembly 2023 at the UP Theater, UP Diliman, Quezon City, on September 18, 2023 is the UP Pep Squad teaching UP Diliman freshmen, shiftees, transferees, and foreign exchange students the four UP cheers which they can use to support athletes during competitions. Photo by Abraham Arboleda, UPMPRO A segment from the spectacle of lights and dance performed by the Legato Visual Performing Arts Group during the University Welcome Assembly 2023 at the UP Theater, UP Diliman, Quezon City, on September 18, 2023. Photo by Abraham Arboleda, UPMPRO |
https://up.edu.ph/upaa-to-support-governments-ambisyon-2040/ | UPAA to support government’s Ambisyon 2040 – University of the Philippines | UPAA to support government’s Ambisyon 2040 UPAA to support government’s Ambisyon 2040 September 13, 2023 | Written by Jo. Florendo B. Lontoc Arsenio Balisacan, National Economic and Development Authority Secretary and 2023 UPAA Most Distinguished Alumnus, receives a certificate and tokens of appreciation from the UP Alumni Association (UPAA), represented by Robert Lester Aranton, UPAA President and Alumni Regent, for being the resource speaker of the UP Alumni Council Meeting on August 18, 2023 at Ang Bahay ng Alumni, UP Diliman, Quezon City. Milagros de Guzman, UPAA Assistant Secretary, and Amina Zalmira Rasul-Bernardo, UPAA Board of Directors member and Council Meeting master of ceremonies, look on. Photo by Abraham Arboleda, UPMPRO. The University of the Philippines Alumni Council, the advisory body of the UP Alumni Association (UPAA), resolved to fully support Ambisyon 2040, the government’s program for long-term economic growth. The council made the resolution during its annual meeting with the theme, “Handog sa Pamantasan, Pag-alay sa Bayan”. With resource person for the resolution, Secretary Arsenio Balisacan of the National Economic and Development Authority (NEDA). The meeting was held at the Ang Bahay ng Alumni in UP Diliman on August 18. Balisacan, this year’s UPAA Most Distinguished Alumnus, explained Ambisyon 2040 in his UP Alumni Council Meeting lecture, “Social and Economic Transformation for Inclusive Philippine Development”. The program envisions human development as “matatag, maginhawa, at panatag”. He emphasized that a “rapid, sustained, and inclusive growth is a necessary condition for the Philippines to become a predominantly middle-class society” by 2040. Balisacan spoke of a target annual growth rate of 6-8.5%. Arsenio Balisacan, National Economic and Development Authority Secretary and 2023 UPAA Most Distinguished Alumnus, delivers his lecture, “Social and Economic Transformation for Inclusive Philippine Development” as the resource speaker for the UP Alumni Council Meeting on August 18, 2023 at Ang Bahay ng Alumni, UP Diliman, Quezon City. Photo by Abraham Arboleda, UPMPRO. While maintaining that the trick to growth is in the hands of the private sector, particularly through innovation and actively targeting bigger markets, government must raise its spending to achieve the targeted growth rates. Balisacan said government must sustain spending on infrastructure at 5-6% of GDP (gross domestic product). He said NEDA would continue monitoring and advising slow spenders in government. Balisacan further highlighted the need for government to enhance society’s ecosystem for research and development and innovations, requiring, among others, robust partnership among government, private sector, and the academe. The UP Alumni Council through Atty. Raul Reyes, the UPAA legal counsel and Chair of Council’s Resolution Committee, presented a draft of the resolution, which stated that the UPAA “will fully support the [NEDA’S] program for long-term economic growth called the Ambisyon 2040”. Raul Reyes, UP Alumni Association (UPAA) Legal Counsel and UPAA Resolutions Committee Chair, presents the draft Council Resolutions to the Alumni Council body during the Council Meeting on August 18, 2023 at Ang Bahay ng Alumni, UP Diliman, Quezon City. Photo by Abraham Arboleda, UPMPRO. It further resolved that the UPAA “will support and participate in the academe’s role in the government’s plan for social and economic transformation in order to raise the quality of investments vis-a-vis employment” and that it “will actively contribute to and encourage academic programs that will produce graduates who are eligible to provide efficient human capital to the government’s programs”. The UP Alumni Council is composed of: University officials, deans and directors; past and present members of the UP Board of Regents; the current UPAA Board of Directors and the current officers of the UPAA chapters; the Distinguished Alumni Awardees; and other persons as may be designated by the UPAA Board of Directors. It holds the annual meeting in order to draft and pass resolutions presented for endorsement to the general UPAA membership during the General Homecoming. These resolutions are then submitted to: the UP alumni in Congress and in the Senate for aid in legislation; the Board of Regents; and appropriate government and private agencies for reference in formulation of policies. Additional photos of the Alumni Council Meeting are available below. Milagros de Guzman, Assistant Secretary of the UP Alumni Association, delivers the invocation during the UP Alumni Council Meeting on August 18, 2023 at Ang Bahay ng Alumni, UP Diliman, Quezon City. Photo by Abraham Arboleda, UPMPRO. Robert Lester Aranton, UPAA President and Alumni Regent, delivers the welcome remarks during the UP Alumni Council Meeting on August 18, 2023 at Ang Bahay ng Alumni, UP Diliman, Quezon City. Photo by Abraham Arboleda, UPMPRO Jeanette Yasol-Naval, UP System Office of Alumni Relations Director, makes a roll call of the UP Alumni Council during their annual meeting held on August 18, 2023 at Ang Bahay ng Alumni, UP Diliman, Quezon City. Photo by Abraham Arboleda, UPMPRO . Herminio Bagro III, UP Alumni Association (UPAA) Secretary and UP Alumni Council Meeting Committee Chair, introduces the resource speaker for the UP Alumni Council Meeting on August 18, 2023 at Ang Bahay ng Alumni, UP Diliman, Quezon City. Photo by Abraham Arboleda, UPMPRO. Arsenio Balisacan, National Economic and Development Authority Secretary and 2023 UPAA Most Distinguished Alumnus. delivers his lecture, “Social and Economic Transformation for Inclusive Philippine Development” as the resource speaker for the UP Alumni Council Meeting on August 18, 2023 at Ang Bahay ng Alumni, UP Diliman, Quezon City; with the panelists: Herminio Bagro III, UP Alumni Association (UPAA) Secretary and UP Alumni Council Meeting Committee Chair; Robert Lester Aranton, UPAA President and Alumni Regent; Jeanette Yasol-Naval, Acting Vice President for Public Affairs and UP System Office of Alumni Relations Director; and Amina Zalmira Rasul-Bernardo, UPAA Board of Director member and 2016 UPAA Most Distinguished Alumna. Photo by Abraham Arboleda, UPMPRO. The UP Alumni Council led by the UP Alumni Association Board of Directors conducts the annual meeting to draft resolutions to be supported by the UP Alumni Association for forwarding to top policy bodies of the country, on August 18, 2023 at Ang Bahay ng Alumni, UP Diliman, Quezon City. Photo by Abraham Arboleda, UPMPRO. The UP Alumni Council members raise their fists as they sing the closing lines of “UP Naming Mahal” at the closing of the UP Alumni Council Meeting on August 18, 2023 at Ang Bahay ng Alumni, UP Diliman, Quezon City. Photo by Abraham Arboleda, UPMPRO. UP President Angelo Jimenez joins the UP Alumni Council for lunch during the latter’s annual meeting held this year on August 18 at Ang Bahay ng Alumni, UP Diliman, Quezon City. Photo by Abraham Arboleda, UPMPRO. |
https://up.edu.ph/dr-michael-tee-is-new-up-manila-chancellor/ | Dr. Michael Tee is new UP Manila Chancellor – University of the Philippines | Dr. Michael Tee is new UP Manila Chancellor Dr. Michael Tee is new UP Manila Chancellor October 6, 2023 | Written by Jo. Florendo B. Lontoc Newly-appointed University of the Philippines (UP) Manila Chancellor Michael Tee, MD, MHPED, MBA. File photo, UP MPRO. Michael Tee, MD, MHPED, MBA, a doctor of internal medicine-rheumatology, has been appointed as the new chancellor of UP Manila, succeeding newly declared National Scientist Carmencita Padilla, a clinical geneticist and pediatrician, who will finish her third term as the chancellor of the UP constituent university on October 31, 2023. The UP Manila community congratulated Tee, currently the UP Manila Vice Chancellor for Planning and Development, in its Facebook page on October 5, 2023, after the UP Board of Regents, the University’s highest governing body, approved his appointment for a term of three years in a special meeting earlier that day. Other social media posts greeting him included that of the UP Manila Alumni Association (UPMAS): “Congratulations, UPMAS President Dr. Michael Tee, on your appointment as 12th chancellor of UP Manila!” Others said: “Congrats, idol Michael Tee! Youngest UP Manila chancellor in their history!” “Yes, congrats to my rheumatologist who has saved my life countless of times since 2018. Grabe, deserved talaga!” Before his appointment as Vice Chancellor in 2014, Tee had served as: Assistant to the Philippine General Hospital (PGH) Director for Public Affairs, and PGH spokesperson from 2004 to 2010; the editor-in-chief of the UP Manila Journal for the 2010, 2011, 2013, and 2014 issues; and, Director of the UP Manila Information, Publication, and Public Affairs Office in 2011 and from 2014 to 2015. He earned his BS Biology in UP Diliman in 1993, his Doctor of Medicine in UP Manila in 1998, his Masters in Health Professions Education in UP Manila in 2007, and his Master in Business Administration in UP Diliman in 2015. Tee was part of a breakthrough international clinical trial that paved the way for the registration of a rheumatoid arthritis drug, similarly effective to infliximab but at less than third of the cost. According to the program of an international conference on environment and human health, Tee’s research interests originally focused on autoimmune diseases such as lupus, gout, and rheumatoid arthritis. However, as COVID19 developed into a pandemic, Tee initiated several studies that aimed to guide policy directions in government response. |
https://up.edu.ph/di-nagbabago-ang-damdamin/ | “Di Nagbabago ang Damdamin”: UP Sectoral Regents hold first homecoming – University of the Philippines | “Di Nagbabago ang Damdamin”: UP Sectoral Regents hold first homecoming “Di Nagbabago ang Damdamin”: UP Sectoral Regents hold first homecoming October 17, 2023 | Written by Jo. Florendo B. Lontoc The Offices of the Sectoral Regents of the University of the Philippines held a “Di Nagbabago ang Damdamin” homecoming for past and incumbent Student, Faculty, and Staff Regents of the University on October 12, 2023 at the Atencio-Libunao Hall, UP Diliman, Quezon City. This is the first time a reunion of the sectoral regents is organized. More than 30 of them are able to attend the reunion. Incumbent UP President Angelo Jimenez attended the homecoming both as guest of honor and as Student Regent in 1992, just as UP Cebu Chancellor Leo Malagar was in 1996-1997. The first Faculty Regent and later 18th UP President, Francisco Nemenzo, was also in attendance. Based on the offices’ presentation, there have been 37 student regents and 27 faculty regents since the students’ and the faculty’s representation in the BOR institutionalized by Executive Order No. 204, s. 1987 of President Corazon Aquino. There have been seven staff regents since the post was created through Republic Act 9500 or the New UP Charter of 2008. The regents represent their constituents in the highest governing and decision-making body of the University, the Board of Regents (BOR), under a principle of democratic governance. They uphold the values of consultation, academic freedom, and respect for human rights in making decisions for the University, according to incumbent Faculty Regent Carl Marc Ramota. Some of the UP faculty regents headed by the first UP Faculty Regent and 18th UP President Francisco Nemenzo, with Administrative Officer Corazon Arcena of the Offices of the Sectoral Regents, during the first-ever homecoming and reunion of past and present UP sectoral regents held on October 12, 2023 at Atencio-Libunao Hall, UP Diliman. All but one of the UP staff regents, including the first UP Staff Regent Clodualdo Cabrera, with long-time Offices of the Sectoral Regents administrative staff members Corazon Arcena and Toto Cumpio, during the first-ever homecoming and reunion of past and present UP sectoral regents held on October 12, 2023 at Atencio-Libunao Hall, UP Diliman. Some of the UP student regents—with 1992 Student Regent and incumbent UP President Angelo Jimenez; and 2017 UP Student Regent, UP Assistant Vice President for Student Affairs, and UP Office of Student Development Services Director Ma. Shari Niña Oliquino— with long-time Offices of the Sectoral Regents administrative staff members Corazon Arcena and Toto Cumpio, during the first-ever homecoming and reunion of past and present UP sectoral regents held on October 12, 2023 at Atencio-Libunao Hall, UP Diliman. Incumbents Student Regent Sofia Jan Trinidad, Faculty Regent Carl Marc Ramota, and Staff Regent Victoria Belegal, with National Chair of the Katipunan ng mga Sangguniang Mag-aaral sa UP or KASAMA sa UP and program host Franz Andrew Ronquillo, sing the last lines of the “UP Naming Mahal” with raised left fists during the first-ever homecoming and reunion of past and present UP sectoral regents held on October 12, 2023 at Atencio-Libunao Hall, UP Diliman. Student Regent in 1992 and UP President Angelo Jimenez and Student Regent in 1989 Gonzalo Bongolan sing the last lines of the “UP Naming Mahal” with raised fists during the first-ever homecoming and reunion of past and present UP sectoral regents held on October 12, 2023 at Atencio-Libunao Hall, UP Diliman. |
https://up.edu.ph/up-visual-identity-guidebook-2017-now-available-online/# | UP Visual Identity Guidebook 2017 now available online – University of the Philippines | UP Visual Identity Guidebook 2017 now available online UP Visual Identity Guidebook 2017 now available online March 14, 2017 | Written by UP Media and Public Relations Office UP Visual Identity Guide 2017 This is a digital copy of the University of the Philippines Visual Identity Guidebook 2017. This guide serves to define the elements found in official trademarks of the university, such as the seal, university colors, logo type and The Oblation. The VIG also prescribes how these symbols should be used in official communications, websites, social media accounts and other materials of the university’s units, offices, organizations, faculty, students and staff. The adoption of the UP VIG was approved by the Board of Regents on its 1324th Meeting held last 26 January 2017, at the Board Room, Quezon Hall, UP Diliman, Quezon City. |
https://up.edu.ph/up-college-admission-test-upcat-2024-tips/ | UP College Admission Test (UPCAT) 2024 Tips – University of the Philippines | UP College Admission Test (UPCAT) 2024 Tips UP College Admission Test (UPCAT) 2024 Tips June 2, 2023 | Written by UP Media and Public Relations Office As the University of the Philippines prepares to administer the UP College Admission Test (UPCAT) for the first time since 2020, UP campuses and units have released helpful announcements, traffic rerouting schemes, and reminders for our UPCAT-takers who will be taking the test in the UP campuses. Please click on the links below for the latest announcement from the constituent university of your concern. UP Diliman UP Manila UP Los Baños UP Visayas UP Open University UP Mindanao UP Baguio UP Cebu UP Tacloban The Office of Admissions reminds this year’s UPCAT applicants to bring the following: Test Permit Current School ID or government-issued ID Sharpened good-quality pencils Eraser Snacks and Water Facemask and sanitizer Jacket (optional) For the latest announcements from the Office of Admissions, please click here. Aside from the items above, test takers are advised to: 1. Read the instructions provided by the UP Office of Admissions. 2. Get their Test Permits from the UP Office of Admissions or the Office of the Registrars of the UP constituent universities. 3. Be on time. Go to their designated Test Center on the date specified in your test permit. June 3 (Saturday) or 4 (Sunday) Be at the venue by 6:00 AM (morning session) or 11:30 AM (afternoon session) 4. Not bring backpacks and large bags. Also, the use of cellphones, calculating devices, and/or cameras during the test is strictly prohibited. 5. Observe minimum public health standards at all times. Only the UPCAT examinees are allowed to enter the campus during the exam. Applicants with incorrect ID photos uploaded in the Form 1 portal, are asked to bring two (2) 2×2 ID pictures with nametag (signature over printed name) on the day of your exam. Incorrect ID photos are those which are blurred, pixelated, have poor contrast, with an obstructed face, dark background, and/or does not resemble current appearance. |
https://up.edu.ph/exploring-korean-studies-in-europe/ | Exploring Korean Studies in Europe – University of the Philippines | Exploring Korean Studies in Europe Exploring Korean Studies in Europe December 1, 2023 | Written by Dr. Kyung Min Bae Dr. Kyung Min Bae at the Goethe University Frankfurt, Germany. Contributed photo. The last time I visited Europe, in 2019, was on a personal trip with my family. But this year, returning to Europe for the first time after the pandemic, I felt like a first-time traveller. Given that I am not the type who enjoys unlimited inflight film watching, crossing different time zones, and waking up multiple times only to realize that the plane is still hours away from its destination, I had to prepare my body and mind for the long flight from the Philippines to Germany. However, even with all the hassles of international travel, I believed it would be a great opportunity for UP Korea Research Center (UP KRC) to promote ourselves, as well as to learn from those in other Korean Studies institutions in Europe with whom we rarely get the opportunity to interact. I was scheduled to present, this November, a paper titled “Return Migration to Where I was Not Born: Two Korean-Filipino Youth’s Experience” at the 6th Social Sciences Korean Studies European Network (SoKEN) conference. The event was held at Goethe University Frankfurt in Frankfurt am Main, which has a thriving Korean Studies program headed by Dr. Yonson Ahn. Although I was given the choice to join online, and admittedly seriously considered that option, I believed it was time for real human connections again. It was only right to go in person. Apart from the conference, I was lucky enough to visit two other institutions: the Freie Universität Berlin and the University of Copenhagen. Dr. Eun-jung Lee, Director of the Institute of Korean Studies, Freie Universität Berlin, generously invited me to be part of the 6th Berlin Forum on Korea organized by the Graduate School of East Asian Studies (GEAS). I served as a discussant to share some insights on the importance of right approaches to Korean studies by both Korea-based and overseas institutions. In UP KRC, our main goal is to train home-grown Filipino scholars who will study Korea in their respective disciplines and through their own lens, rather than imposing a unidirectional way of understanding Korea. I noted the importance of contextualizing what Korean Studies could mean in different countries and institutions, as each has a distinctive socio-historical background that should be considered. At the University of Copenhagen, through Dr. Barbara Wall, I observed Korean Studies classes under the Department of Cross-Cultural and Regional Studies, and also gave an overview on UP KRC’s activities and Korean studies in the Philippines. Dr. Kyung Min Bae (second from right) with students and faculty members at the University of Copenhagen, Denmark. Contributed photo. It was such a great opportunity for me to directly observe how local and Korean scholars are building a community of Korean Studies together in diverse disciplines and training the next generations of cademics and professionals. In Copenhagen, their first- and second-year curriculum is pretty intensive: each week, 12-hour Korean language courses are taken, aside from other content courses. I also learned that every single Korean Studies student goes to Korea as an exchange student as part of the curriculum, so that everyone gets to experience applying their knowledge as well as using the real-world language. I wished this could be possible with our students who are taking Plan C Korean under the Department of Linguistics so that their actual living experiences in Korea will benefit them by making them more competent in understanding language and culture by the time they graduate. UP has existing partnerships with Korean universities, and it is time to maximise our opportunities to activate outbound exchange student programs, particularly given that both countries’ HEIs are seriously pushing internationalization. I hope the long-term planning to strengthen partnerships through exchanges can be made possible. In Germany, one of the most impressive things about their institutions was that it was not just locals, Germans, who are studying in the program; a relatively large number of Koreans and students of other nationalities are taking their doctoral or postdoctoral degree programs because of particular geopolitical or historical contexts in Germany (e.g., unification, refugee policy, migration, etc.), and their dissertations indeed focus on the Korean peninsula, political refugee issues in Korea. This is what UP KRC has also sought to implement, starting last year. We connected Filipino Koreanists with international scholars and Korean informants to conduct research on several comparative studies on migration policies, cultural industry, and foreign policy, to name a few. I believe in this way, scholars’ views are expanded by interacting with other scholars from different socio-cultural backgrounds outside the Philippines and gaining more knowledge that cannot be learned locally. With the mission “to contribute to a greater understanding of Korea in the Philippines,” UP KRC supports the research and networking of Filipino Koreanists. One of the ultimate goals of the UP KRC is to be a Korean Studies hub locally in the Philippines, as well as globally. To achieve this goal, we have networked with local state and private universities, ASEAN partners, and diplomatic sectors. This trip was initially conceived to promote UP KRC, but I am personally glad that European institutions and their students were equally delighted to know about us, especially as we are from the Global South where the Korean Studies experience is somewhat different from their own. A copy of the poster of the event hosted by the Korean Studies of the Goethe University Frankfurt in Germany. Contributed photo. The whole trip required me to jump from one city to another, each time getting used to harsh winds. But it was rewarding and fruitful to finally meet the leading Korean Studies professors in three European universities, witnessing the hard work of training the next generations of scholars and enhancing their strengths in teaching and research, which is exactly what UP KRC also aims to do. Leaving the Philippines, traveling to another continent, seeing how Korean Studies is evolving around the world, and considering how best to position it as an academic discipline in different contexts—all this helped me recognize both our strengths and areas for improvement at UP KRC. As young as our Center is, we understand how crucial it is to equip young generations with diverse resources and balanced views and knowledge on Korea. We will continue to develop; and whatever our weaknesses are, such as how to engage more Korean and international scholars into Korean Studies dialogues in the Philippines, we could strategically benchmark these and improve, based on what I observed outside the Philippines. One sure way for academic institutions to grow and improve is to engage with other related institutions for benchmarking and networking, and I am glad that UP KRC took the initiative to visit Europe, not only for publicity, but to share with and learn from our colleagues around the world. Kyung Min Bae, Ph.D., Director of the UP Korea Research Center, is Assistant Professorial Fellow at the UP Department of Linguistics where she has been teaching since 2010. She obtained her Ph.D. at the UP College of Education in July 2020, with her dissertation, “Professional Identity of Non-native Teachers of Korean as a Foreign Language as Basis for a KFL Teacher Education Program Framework”. [1] Learn more about the UP Korean Research Center: Website:https://upkrc.wordpress.com Facebook:https://www.facebook.com/UPKRC YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@UPKoreaResearchCenter [1] https://ovpaa.up.edu.ph/heads-of-offices-under-the-ovpaa/ |
https://up.edu.ph/up-increases-economic-benefits-for-regular-employees/ | UP increases economic benefits for regular employees – University of the Philippines | UP increases economic benefits for regular employees UP increases economic benefits for regular employees November 9, 2023 | Written by UP Media and Public Relations Office Starting January 2024, regular employees of the University of the Philippines (UP) will get an additional P1,500 to the total amount of annual economic benefits currently received. Specifically, the Annual Incentive Grant or AIG will be increased from P13,700 to P14,000; the Christmas Grocery Allowance, from P8,400 to P9,000; and the Rice Subsidy, from P9,400 to P10,000, thereby, raising from P31,500 to P33,000 the total amount of benefits that UP’s qualified academic and non-academic employees will be entitled to receive annually. The UP Board of Regents (BOR), the highest governing body of the University, approved the proposed adjustments at its 1384th meeting held on October 26 at Quezon Hall, UP Diliman, Quezon City. The BOR took into account the fact that said benefits were included in the past Collective Negotiation Agreements (CNAs) between the University and its two employees’ associations: the All UP Academic Employees Union (AUPAEU) and the All UP Workers Union (AUPWU), and that the last time these benefits were increased was way back in April 2019. The University and the two unions had already executed new CNAs in 2020 and 2021, with the affirmation of providing all benefits previously authorized by the BOR, recognizing the principle of non-diminution of benefits, as well as the sole power of the Board, pursuant to the UP Charter, to adjust such benefits from time to time, subject to the accomplishment of the University’s mission, applicable laws and regulations, and availability of funds. Furthermore, the adjustments on Rice Subsidy and Christmas Grocery serve as welfare measures to alleviate the impact of inflation on employees. The estimated total amount of additional funding required for the increase is P21.477 million per year; and this will be sourced from the Revolving Fund, as the case may be, of the University’s constituent units. |
https://up.edu.ph/bor-approves-appointment-of-five-new-up-system-officials/ | BOR approves appointment of five new UP System officials – University of the Philippines | BOR approves appointment of five new UP System officials BOR approves appointment of five new UP System officials November 9, 2023 | Written by Fred Dabu During the 1384th meeting of the University of the Philippines (UP) Board of Regents (BOR) held at Quezon Hall, UP Diliman on October 26, 2023, the Board approved the appointment of the following UP System officials: Rolando B. Tolentino, appointed as Vice President for Public Affairs, effective September 1, 2023, to serve at the pleasure of the University President; Prof. Cherish Aileen A. Brillon, appointed as Special Assistant to the Vice President for Public Affairs, and Director of the UP Padayon Public Service Office, a program under the Office of the Vice President for Public Affairs, effective June 1, 2023; Galileo S. Zafra, appointed as Director of the UP Press, an administrative office under the Office of the Vice President for Academic Affairs, effective September 1, 2023 until August 31, 2026; Prof. Michelle R. Palumbarit, appointed as Director of the Centre International de Formacion des Autorites et Leaders (CIFAL), a program under the Office of the Vice President for Academic Affairs, effective September 1, 2023 until August 31, 2026; and, Professorial Fellow Kyung Min Bae, appointed as Director of the Korea Research Center, a program under the Office of the Vice President for Academic Affairs, effective September 1, 2023 until August 31, 2026. The UP BOR is the highest governing body of the UP System. The full list of the officials of the UP System Administrative Offices may be viewed here. |
https://up.edu.ph/pcca-lantern-making-contest-2023/ | PCCA Lantern-making Contest 2023 – University of the Philippines | PCCA Lantern-making Contest 2023 PCCA Lantern-making Contest 2023 November 22, 2023 | Written by UP Media and Public Relations Office Calling all UP Creatives! As we approach the Christmas 2023 Season, let’s celebrate and showcase cultural diversity through lanterns! With the theme: “Cultural Kaleidoscope: Celebrating Cultural Diversity in Lanterns”, the Presidential Committee on Culture and the Arts (PCCA) CCA-award for the best CU Lantern is an expression of the Kalinangan Bayan, Kalingang UP campaign of the PCCA. It aims to foster the One-UP spirit, especially with the advent of Christmas 2023 Season, while it also promotes cultural diversity. The PCCA award is a recognition of UP constituent’s creativity and community engagement. Eligibility: Open to any group currently enrolled or employed at the UP Constituent University. Entry Requirements: Participants must register for the contest by a deadline set by the CU CCA/OICA. Registration should include names, positions, CU affiliation, contact details, etc., and can be done online. Illuminated lanterns must be in the form of a star. There is no limit on size. Participants must submit a concept board illustrating ideas behind the lantern, considering the criteria below. Materials: Use of local sustainable materials Should be safe and recyclable or reusable Judging Criteria: Alignment to the CU and PCCA Christmas theme (20%) Lantern that best embody honor, excellence in the service of the nation (15%) Sustainability (15%) Ingenuity of the design (20%) Innovation of the design (15%) Craftsmanship (15%) For more details please contact the Head/Chair of the OICA or CCA of your campus. |
https://up.edu.ph/possible-up-uottawa-collab-areas-discussed/ | Possible UP-uOttawa collab areas discussed – University of the Philippines | Possible UP-uOttawa collab areas discussed Possible UP-uOttawa collab areas discussed November 7, 2023 | Written by Arlyn VCD Palisoc Romualdo Biosurveillance, cybersecurity, and resilience. These were the possible areas of collaboration mentioned by UP President Angelo Jimenez (PAJ) to University of Ottawa (uOttawa) President and Vice Chancellor Jacques Frémont in their meeting on November 6. PAJ took his cue from Frémont’s overview of uOttawa and his discussion of some of its leading programs. It was the latter’s first visit to UP and served as his introduction to the UP System. PAJ was joined by VP for Academic Affairs Leo Cubillan, VP for Public Affairs Roland Tolentino, UP Diliman Chancellor Edgardo Carlo Vistan II, and Assistant VP for Academic Affairs (Internationalization) and Office of International Linkages Director Imee Su Martinez, who gave Frémont a brief presentation on UP. University of Ottawa President and Vice Chancellor Jacques Frémont (leftmost) and UP President Angelo Jimenez (rightmost) discuss cybersecurity, computer engineers, and IT professionals in relation to labor migration and academic exchange. With them are other UP officials (second from left to right), Assistant VP for Academic Affairs (Internationalization) and Office of International Linkages Director Imee Su Martinez, UP Diliman Chancellor Edgardo Carlo Vistan II, VP for Public Affairs Roland Tolentino, and VP for Academic Affairs Leo Cubillan. (Photo by Misael Bacani, UP MPRO) University of Ottawa (uOttawa) President and Vice Chancellor Jacques Frémont talks about the U15 Group of Canadian Research Universities, of which uOttawa is a member. According to its website, U15 members collectively “attract 77% of Canada’s sponsored research funding.” (Photo by Misael Bacani, UP MPRO) UP President Angelo Jimenez (left) and University of Ottawa President and Vice Chancellor Jacques Frémont exchange ideas on how Filipino talent trained abroad may be enticed to return and serve the Philippines. (Photo by Misael Bacani, UP MPRO) UP Assistant VP for Academic Affairs (Internationalization) and Office of International Linkages Director Imee Su Martinez (middle) presents a briefer on the University’s efforts to achieve its mandate as a global and regional university. (Photo by Misael Bacani, UP MPRO) University of Ottawa (uOttawa) President and Vice Chancellor Jacques Frémont (left) tells the story of his appointment to the uOttawa leadership, to UP Diliman Chancellor Edgardo Carlo Vistan II (middle) and UP VP for Public Affairs Roland Tolentino (right). (Photo by Misael Bacani, UP MPRO) UP President Angelo Jimenez (left) and University of Ottawa President and Vice Chancellor Jacques Frémont (Photo by Misael Bacani, UP MPRO) From left: UP Assistant VP for Academic Affairs (Internationalization) and Office of International Linkages Director Imee Su Martinez, UP Diliman Chancellor Edgardo Carlo Vistan II, UP President Angelo Jimenez, University of Ottawa President and Vice Chancellor Jacques Frémont, UP VP for Academic Affairs Leo Cubillan, and UP VP for Public Affairs Roland Tolentino. (Photo by Misael Bacani, UP MPRO) |
https://up.edu.ph/up-and-pnoc-sign-mou/ | UP and PNOC sign MOU – University of the Philippines | UP and PNOC sign MOU UP and PNOC sign MOU November 9, 2023 | Written by Jo. Florendo B. Lontoc The University of the Philippines (UP) and the Philippine National Oil Company (PNOC) have formalized their cooperation. PNOC counts on the national university for urgent technical assistance with its priority projects, proposed investments, and technologies; UP, meanwhile, looks to the government-owned and -controlled corporation for support in equipping energy-related laboratories, among others. The memorandum of understanding was signed by UP President Angelo Jimenez and PNOC President and CEO Oliver Butalid, with UP Vice President for Academic Affairs Leo Cubillan and PNOC General Counsel Antonio Buenviaje signing as witnesses, on November 8, 2023, at the UP Board of Regents Room, Quezon Hall, UP Diliman, Quezon City. UP President Angelo Jimenez and PNOC President and CEO Oliver Butalid introduce themselves to each other before signing the MOU between their two organizations; while Jennifer Racho, PNOC OIC Senior Vice President for Finance and Administrative Services looks on, November 8, 2023, at the UP Board of Regents Room, Quezon Hall, UP Diliman, Quezon City. (Photo by Bong Arboleda, UP MPRO) The PNOC officials present at the MOU signing with UP on November 8, 2023, at the UP Board of Regents Room, Quezon Hall, UP Diliman, Quezon City, are: President and CEO Oliver Butalid; General Counsel Antonio Buenviaje; Corporate Secretary Jesus Joel Mari Arzaga; Jennifer Racho, OIC Senior Vice President for Finance and Administrative Services; and Alma Taganas, OIC Department Manager of Strategy Management Office. (Photo by Bong Arboleda, UP MPRO) UP officials present at the MOU signing with PNOC on November 8, 2023, at the UP Board of Regents Room, Quezon Hall, UP Diliman, Quezon City, are: President Angelo Jimenez; Vice President for Academic Affairs Leo Cubillan; Vice President for Legal Affairs Abraham Rey Acosta; College of Engineering (COE) Dean Maria Antonia Tanchuling; Deputy General Counsel Francis Paul Baclay; Rowaldo Del Mundo, COE Associate Dean for Public Engagement; and Executive Vice President Jose Fernando Alcantara. (Photo by Bong Arboleda, UP MPRO) UP and PNOC officials discuss areas for immediate collaboration before signing the MOU between them on November 8, 2023, at the UP Board of Regents Room, Quezon Hall, UP Diliman, Quezon City. (Photo by Bong Arboleda, UP MPRO) UP President Angelo Jimenez signs the MOU between UP and PNOC, while UP Vice President for Academic Affairs Leo Cubillan signs as witness, on November 8, 2023, at the UP Board of Regents Room, Quezon Hall, UP Diliman, Quezon City. (Photo by Bong Arboleda, UP MPRO) PNOC President and CEO Oliver Butalid signs the MOU between UP and PNOC, while PNOC General Counsel Antonio Buenviaje signs as witness, on November 8, 2023, at the UP Board of Regents Room, Quezon Hall, UP Diliman, Quezon City. (Photo by Bong Arboleda, UP MPRO) PNOC President and CEO Oliver Butalid and UP President Angelo Jimenez sign the MOU between UP and PNOC, while PNOC General Counsel Antonio Buenviaje and UP Vice President for Academic Affairs Leo Cubillan sign as witnesses, on November 8, 2023, at the UP Board of Regents Room, Quezon Hall, UP Diliman, Quezon City. (Photo by Bong Arboleda, UP MPRO) UP Vice President for Academic Affairs Leo Cubillan, UP President Angelo Jimenez, PNOC President and CEO Oliver Butalid, and PNOC General Counsel Antonio Buenviaje—signatories of the MOU between UP and PNOC—present the newly signed copies of the MOU, on November 8, 2023, at the UP Board of Regents Room, Quezon Hall, UP Diliman, Quezon City. (Photo by Bong Arboleda, UP MPRO) Signatories of the MOU between UP and PNOC (seated): UP Vice President for Academic Affairs Leo Cubillan; UP President Angelo Jimenez; PNOC President and CEO Oliver Butalid; and PNOC General Counsel Antonio Buenviaje; with UP Deputy General Counsel Francis Paul Baclay; UP Vice President for Legal Affairs Abraham Rey Acosta; Rowaldo del Mundo, UP College of Engineering (COE) Associate Dean for Public Engagement; COE Dean Maria Antonia Tanchuling; PNOC Corporate Secretary Jesus Joel Mari Arzaga; Alma Taganas, PNOC OIC Department Manager of Strategy Management Office; and Jennifer Racho, PNOC OIC Senior Vice President for Finance and Administrative Services, November 8, 2023, at the UP Board of Regents Room, Quezon Hall, UP Diliman, Quezon City. (Photo by Bong Arboleda, UP MPRO) UP President Angelo Jimenez and PNOC President and CEO Oliver Butalid shake hands after signing the MOU between their two organizations on November 8, 2023, at the UP Board of Regents Room, Quezon Hall, UP Diliman, Quezon City, together with Rowaldo del Mundo, UP College of Engineering (COE) Associate Dean for Public Engagement; COE Dean Maria Antonia Tanchuling; UP Vice President for Legal Affairs Abraham Rey Acosta; UP Vice President for Academic Affairs Leo Cubillan; PNOC Corporate Secretary Jesus Joel Mari Arzaga; PNOC General Counsel Antonio Buenviaje; Jennifer Racho, PNOC OIC Senior Vice President for Finance and Administrative Services; UP Deputy General Counsel Francis Paul Baclay; and Alma Taganas, PNOC OIC Department Manager of Strategy Management Office. (Photo by Bong Arboleda, UP MPRO) |
https://up.edu.ph/up-president-jimenezs-october-sojourn-to-the-us/ | UP President Jimenez’s October sojourn to the US – University of the Philippines | UP President Jimenez’s October sojourn to the US UP President Jimenez’s October sojourn to the US November 11, 2023 | Written by UP Media and Public Relations Office “Far tho’ we wander o’er island yonder, Loyal thy sons we’ll ever be” So go the lines from the UP Beloved, the official school hymn of the University of the Philippines. Or as UP alumni who were students in the 1970s onwards and know the hymn as the UP Naming Mahal sing it: “Malayong lupain amin mang marating, Di rin magbabago ang damdamin” In October this year, Atty. Angelo A. Jimenez, the 22nd President of the University of the Philippines, was invited by several UP alumni associations based in the United States to participate in their festivities and to come and meet the Iskolar ng Bayan who did, indeed, wander far yet remained true to their alma mater. On October 14, Jimenez headed to the San Francisco Bay Area to meet with the UP Alumni Association of San Francisco, Inc. (UPAASF), which was celebrating its Golden Jubilee with the theme, “50 Years of Service, Building a Legacy”. During the UPAASF’s Gala Celebration, UP President Jimenez delivered the keynote address after presenting the UPAASF Distinguished Alumnus Award to Mrs. Cynthia Bonta. Following a lunch reception and fellowship with Alphans and Deltans on October 15, President Jimenez participated in the quarterly Board of Trustees meeting of the Friends of UP Foundation in America, Inc. (FUPFA) on October 16 in New York City, where he presented his vision and priority projects for FUPFA’s support. Later, in the evening of October 18, Jimenez also joined in the celebration of the FUPFA’s 40th anniversary during the Donors Appreciation Night, where he was guest of honor and keynote speaker. Finally, from October 19 to October 22, President Jimenez traveled to New Jersey to participate in the 22nd Grand Reunion and Convention of the UP Alumni Association in America, Inc. (UPAAA)—a three-day celebration that featured former Philippine Vice President Ma. Leonor “Leni” Robredo and National Scientist and then UP Manila Chancellor Carmencita Padilla, among others, as the other guests of honor. Below are photos and videos from UP President Jimenez’s trip to meet and greet the UP alumni who embodied the lines from the UP Naming Mahal, and to share his administration’s vision and strategic initiatives with the members of the UP community who keep the UP spirit alive across the USA. October 14, 2023: UP Alumni Association of San Francisco (UPAASF)’s 50th Anniversary University of the Philippines Alumni Association of San Francisco’s 50th Anniversary held on October 14, 2023 at Embassy Suites Waterfront, San Francisco, Burlingame, California. Photos and captions by: Rey Guarin, Arlene Cabrales and Rosario Calderon At the celebration of University of the Philippines Alumni Association of San Francisco’s 50th Anniversary, Mrs. Cynthia A. Bonta (3rd from left) was bestowed the UPAASF Distinguished Alumna award. Joining her are special guests (L-R) Philippine Consul General Neil Frank Ferrer, California Attorney General Rob Bonta, and UP President Angelo Jimenez, together with UPAASF President Chato Calderon and UPAASF Chair Eric Golangco. In photo: True to their commitment to service and building a legacy, the University of the Philippines Alumni Association of San Francisco (UPAASF) raised funds and gave a $10,000 donation for the much-needed upgrade of Kalayaan Residence Hall. UPAASF’s Alumni Mentoring Program with UP Diliman was also launched during the 50th Anniversary celebration. This group photo shows UPAASF Board Directors and Officers presenting the symbolic check to UP President Angelo Jimenez. Excerpt from UP President Angelo “Jijil” Jimenez’s presentation before the Friends of UP Foundation in America at the Harvard Club on October 18, 2023. UPAAA’s 22nd Biennial Grand Reunion and Convention: Day 0 UP Alumni Association in America (UPAAA) kicks off their “22nd Biennial Grand Reunion and Convention” on October 19, 2023 at the Hyatt Regency, New Brunswick, New Jersey. UP President Angelo A. Jimenez and former Vice President Leni Robredo graced the prestigious event. Meanwhile, UP Alumni Association President and Alumni Regent Robert Lester Aranton did the rounds of introductions during the Welcome Reception. Photos by Ms. Vivian Balagtas and Dr. Colleen Rosales Attendees during the Welcome Reception. UP Alumni Association President and Alumni Regent Robert Lester Aranton delivers the introductions during the Welcome Reception. Pres. Jimenez accompanied by Dr. Winston Umali, incoming UPAAA President (for term 2024-2025), sings during pre-conference Fellowship Night. Pres. Jimenez and members of the UP Alumni Association in America welcomes former Vice President Leni Robredo at the registration area. UPAAA 22nd Biennial Grand Reunion and Convention: Day 1 IN PHOTOS: Day 1 of UP Alumni Association in America’s 22nd Biennial Grand Reunion and Convention: Iskolympics Fun Run (morning) and Jubilarian Night (evening). Photos by Ms. Vivian Balagtas and Dr. Colleen Rosales Pres. Jijil gives welcome remarks during the Iskolympics Fun Run. Pres. Jimenez and the presidents of UPAA – University of the Philippines Alumni Association and UP Alumni Association in America finishing the fun run. UPAA Houston delegates with Pres. Jimenez, former Vice President Leni Robredo, Chancellor Carmencita Padilla, UPAAA President Jun David and Father Gregory Ramon Gaston. Pres. Jimenez and former Vice President Leni Robredo give awards to the Jubilarians. Then UPM Chancellor Carmencita Padilla, former Vice President Leni Robredo, Pres. Jimenez, past UP Alumni Association in America president and current board member Nelsie Parrado, and UPAAA President Jun David presents the Presidential award to Dr. Joy Celo. |
https://up.edu.ph/rice-subsidy-for-2023/ | UP employees to get fourth tranche of their rice subsidy for 2023 – University of the Philippines | UP employees to get fourth tranche of their rice subsidy for 2023 UP employees to get fourth tranche of their rice subsidy for 2023 October 26, 2023 | Written by Jo. Florendo B. Lontoc University of the Philippines (UP) President Angelo Jimenez has just approved the release before the year ends of the fourth tranche of the 2023 rice subsidy for the University’s faculty members; research, extension, and professional staff (REPS); and administrative employees. A memorandum from UP Vice President for Administration Augustus Resurreccion, dated October 24, 2023, says the fourth tranche, in the amount of P2,350 each, will be available starting December 7, 2023. Those holding confidential and managerial positions are entitled to the subsidy in the form of cash. Administrative employees will be given a minimum of 47 kilograms of rice once a supplier is awarded a contract through procurement. In the case of failed bidding, the UP Vice President for Administration can approve requests by the campuses to convert the subsidy into cash. The rice subsidy in four tranches has been approved and authorized by the Board of Regents, UP’s highest governing body, after collective negotiation with UP’s academic employees and workers unions. All UP faculty members, REPS, and administrative employees with regular items—including temporary, UP contractual, casual, coterminous and substitute employees, with employer-employee relations with the University, who will have rendered at least three months of active service as of December 31, 2023—are entitled to the fourth tranche rice subsidy for 2023. Project-based employees who have rendered the minimum length of service are also entitled if funds are provided for in the budget of the projects. Those who have rendered service for less than three months but not less than two months are entitled to P1,600; and those who have rendered for less than two months but not less than a month are entitled to P800. Read the memorandum here: Memo-No.-ACR-23-50_Guidelines-on-the-Release-of-the-Fourth-Tranche-of-the-Rice-Subsidy-for-FY-2023. |
https://up.edu.ph/university-of-the-philippines-up-privacy-notice-foi/# | UNIVERSITY OF THE PHILIPPINES (UP) PRIVACY NOTICE FOR FILIPINO CITIZENS REQUESTING ACCESS TO INFORMATION ON MATTERS OF PUBLIC CONCERN PURSUANT TO EO 2 SERIES OF 2016 – University of the Philippines | UNIVERSITY OF THE PHILIPPINES (UP) PRIVACY NOTICE FOR FILIPINO CITIZENS REQUESTING ACCESS TO INFORMATION ON MATTERS OF PUBLIC CONCERN PURSUANT TO EO 2 SERIES OF 2016 UNIVERSITY OF THE PHILIPPINES (UP) PRIVACY NOTICE FOR FILIPINO CITIZENS REQUESTING ACCESS TO INFORMATION ON MATTERS OF PUBLIC CONCERN PURSUANT TO EO 2 SERIES OF 2016 August 20, 2018 | Written by UP Media and Public Relations Office The University of the Philippines is committed to uphold the right of Filipino citizens to information on matters of public concern under Article III Section 7 of the 1987 Constitution. E.O. No. 2 Series of 2016 http://www.officialgazette.gov.ph/2016/07/23/executive-order-no-02-s-2016/ which applies to the Executive Branch was issued in order to implement such right. UP has adopted a Freedom of Information manual as required by the said E.O. In order to process FOI requests made pursuant to the above E.O. (https://www.up.edu.ph/wp-content/uploads/2018/07/Revised-UP-FOI-Manual-as-of-050718-2.pdf), the University must necessarily process the personal information of a requesting party, that is, information that identifies a requesting party as an individual. The University is likewise committed to uphold the Philippine Data Privacy Act that implements the Constitutional right to informational privacy of data subjects. http://www.officialgazette.gov.ph/2012/08/15/republic-act-no-10173/ This notice explains in general terms, the purpose and legal basis for the processing of the personal information collected by UP in order to act on FOI requests made pursuant to the abovementioned E.O. from Filipino citizens like you, the measures in place to protect your data privacy and the rights that you may exercise in relation to such information. The term UP/University/us/our refers to the University of the Philippines System and Constituent University offices. The term you/your refers to Filipino citizens who make FOI requests pursuant to the provisions of E.O. No. 2 series of 2016 (“requesting parties”) . Personal Information Collected From Requesting Parties, the Purpose and Legal Basis for Collecting the Information FOI requests may be made through a paper-based application process filed with UP’s FOI Receiving Officer(s). We highly encourage requesting parties to lodge requests using the eFOI portal of the Presidential Communications Operations Office at https://www.foi.gov.ph/ Our FOI Receiving Officers may upload paper-based applications to the eFOI portal in order to enable the University to more efficiently process, monitor and track FOI requests. In case you file a paper-based application with a UP office, your image may be captured by UP’s CCTVs and your information may be processed in connection with other security procedures e.g. you shall be required to present a valid government issued ID and sign the relevant logbook etc. upon your entry and exit from University offices. Your name, citizenship and a copy of your government-issued ID indicating your Filipino citizenship or in the absence thereof, a document evidencing your Filipino citizenship, the specific purpose(s) for your request are processed by UP in order to verify your identity and to ascertain that your request involves a matter of public concern and that you are qualified to make such request pursuant to the 1987 Constitution. Kindly note that, in the event your request is granted, and UP provides you with the information requested, the same must be used only for the purpose(s) indicated in your request pursuant to the provisions of the FOI EO, RA 6713 and its IRR, the DPA and related issuances as well as other applicable laws, regulations and issuances. You shall likewise hold UP free and harmless from all liabilities arising from the processing of the information received for purposes other than those stated in your application as well as those purposes allowed by applicable laws and regulations. Your address and contact information (landline, mobile number, email) are processed in order for UP to verify your identity and contact you regarding your request. The abovementioned personal information shall also be processed by UP in order to prevent fraud. UP may also process personal information of requesting parties in order to do research on how to improve FOI implementation and to comply with reportorial requirements subject to the provisions of the DPA and applicable research ethics guidelines. UP will keep your application form and the records regarding your request in order to protect itself from liabilities for the unauthorized processing of information. CCTVs and other security measures which may involve the processing of your personal information are intended to protect your vitally important interests, for public order and safety and pursuant to the University and the public’s legitimate interests. UP does not process your personal information to carry out any wholly automated decision making that affects you. When consent is the appropriate or relevant basis for collecting your personal information, the University will obtain such consent in written, electronic or recorded form at the appropriate time. UP is required to comply with the provisions of the National Archives Act of 2007 R.A. 9470 http://www.officialgazette.gov.ph/2007/05/21/republic-act-no-9470/ and related issuances in the archiving and disposal of your personal information. Nondisclosure of Your Personal Information to Third Parties Except Upon Your Consent or as Required or Permitted by Law As a general rule, UP will only disclose your personal and sensitive personal information to third parties with your consent. The University will disclose or share such information only when required or allowed by applicable laws. Note that as stated above, FOI Receiving Officers may upload your request, including your personal information in the eFOI portal in order to more efficiently process, track and monitor your request. UP is required under issuances to be enrolled in the eFOI portal and to use the same to process FOI requests. The PCOO by operating and maintaining the eFOI portal also therefore processeses your personal information. Under the DPA, personal information may be processed e.g. disclosed, for instance, when it is necessary in order for UP to comply with alegal obligation; to protect your vitally important interests including life and health; necessary to respond to national emergency, public order and safety; necessary to fulfill the functions of public authority or for the pursuant to the legitimate interests of the University or a third party except where such interests are overridden by your fundamental rights. Sensitive personal information (e.g. confidential educational records, age/birthdate, civil status, health, ethnicity, government-issued ID number that identifies an individual) on the other hand may be processed e.g. disclosed when such is allowed by laws and regulations, such regulatory enactments provide for the protection of such information and the consent of the data subject is not required for such law or regulation; such is needed to protect the life and health of the data subject or another person and the data subject is unable to legally or physically express consent, in thecase of medical treatment, needed for the protection of lawful rights and interests of natural or legal persons in court proceedings, for the establishment, exercise or defense of legal claims or where provided to government or public authority. How UP Protects Your Personal Information UP put in place physical, organizational and technical measures to protect your right to privacy and is committed to reviewing and improving the same, so as to be able to comply with the DPA. From time to time UP posts information on relevant sites that explain how you can secure and maintain the confidentiality of your personal information. Rest assured that UP personnel are allowed to process your personal information only when such processing is part of their official duties. As stated above the eFOI portal is operated and maintained by the PCOO. UP is engaged in an ongoing dialogue with the PCOO and NPC to help see to it that your right to data privacy is protected when the eFOI portal is used by to process FOI requests pursuant to its legal obligation. Access To Your Personal Information In case you request for access to or the correction of your personal information made in relation to your FOI request, UP will require you to provide a GIID to ascertain your identity and prevent fraud. In case the request is made through your representative, a letter of authorization stating the name of your authorized representative, the purpose(s) for which the requested document(s) will be used and your GIID as well as the valid GIID of your authorized representative. UP shall request a copy of the GIID that you and your representative presented. Kindly note that since UP is under a legal obligation to use the eFOI portal to process requests there are certain requests that you may make in relation to your personal information in the portal that must be addressed to PCOO as the operator of the eFOI portal e.g. if you register via the eFOI site then the correction of your registration information must be made via the eFOI portal as UP has no means of correcting the personal information that you entered when you registered in the eFOI portal. Queries re the eFOI portal may be directed to: Queries Regarding Data Privacy We encourage you to visit this site from time to time to see any updates regarding this Privacy Notice. Please also refer to the eFOI site Privacy Notice https://www.foi.gov.ph/downloads/FOI%20Privacy%20Notice.pdf For queries, comments or suggestions regarding this System-wide privacy notice, please contact the University of the Philippines System Data Protection Officer through the following: a. Via post c/o the Office of the President 2F North Wing Quezon Hall (Admin Building) University Avenue, UP Diliman, Quezon City 1101 Philippines b. Through the following landlines Phone | (632) 9280110; (632) 9818500 loc. 2521 c. Through email dpo@up.edu.ph |
https://up.edu.ph/memorandum-no-ovpaa-2020-38-on-suspension-of-classes-in-all-up-constituent-universities/ | Memorandum No. OVPAA 2020-38 & 39 on Suspension of Classes in All UP Constituent Universities (except Open University) and Lifting of Deadline for Dropping and Filing of Leave of Absence for Second Semester AY 2019-2020 and Addendum – University of the Philippines | Memorandum No. OVPAA 2020-38 & 39 on Suspension of Classes in All UP Constituent Universities (except Open University) and Lifting of Deadline for Dropping and Filing of Leave of Absence for Second Semester AY 2019-2020 and Addendum Memorandum No. OVPAA 2020-38 & 39 on Suspension of Classes in All UP Constituent Universities (except Open University) and Lifting of Deadline for Dropping and Filing of Leave of Absence for Second Semester AY 2019-2020 and Addendum March 17, 2020 | Posted by UP Media and Public Relations Office Download the full memorandum in PDF format here and the addendum here. |
https://up.edu.ph/salaries-of-up-lecturers-teaching-assistants-and-fellows-to-be-released-early/ | Salaries of UP lecturers, teaching assistants and fellows to be released early – University of the Philippines | Salaries of UP lecturers, teaching assistants and fellows to be released early Salaries of UP lecturers, teaching assistants and fellows to be released early March 20, 2020 | Written by Jo. Florendo B. Lontoc In light of the lockdown of Luzon and provinces in other regions, the UP System administration, through Memorandum No. OVPAA 2020-40 dated March 20, 2020, instructed the constituent universities (CUs) to process the early release of salaries due to lecturers and to teaching assistants (TAs) and fellows (TFs) up to April 15, 2020. Lecturers who are paid at the end of the semester will receive half of the amount, even without the required certifications, which can be submitted after April 15, 2020. TAs and TFs, whose salaries are half paid for by the UP System and half by the CU, will receive their salaries even if the UP System contribution has not yet been downloaded to the CU, in which case the CU will be reimbursed after April 15, 2020. Download copy of the memo here. |
https://up.edu.ph/memorandum-from-ovpaa-academic-contingency-plan-in-light-of-covid-19/ | Memorandum from OVPAA: Academic Contingency Plan in Light of COVID-19 – University of the Philippines | Memorandum from OVPAA: Academic Contingency Plan in Light of COVID-19 Memorandum from OVPAA: Academic Contingency Plan in Light of COVID-19 March 10, 2020 | Posted by UP Media and Public Relations Office In order for the University of the Philippines to continue educating its students in the face of possible class suspensions following the confirmed local transmission of COVID-19, UP is rolling out a contingency plan consisting of blended learning and the use of online materials and platforms to alternate with and augment traditional classroom learning. All classes across all UP campuses will be disseminating learning materials, giving and submitting assignments, and engaging in interactive online exchanges between students and faculty through a variety of virtual learning platforms, while the UP Open University has offered its Massive Open Online Courses (MOOCs) and Quick Guides to Online Learning for UP faculty members to use immediately. Please read the attached memorandum and be guided accordingly. |
https://up.edu.ph/up-pgh-is-designated-as-covid-19-referral-hospital-for-ncr/ | UP-PGH is designated as COVID-19 referral hospital for NCR – University of the Philippines | UP-PGH is designated as COVID-19 referral hospital for NCR UP-PGH is designated as COVID-19 referral hospital for NCR March 20, 2020 | Written by Celeste Ann Castillo Llaneta UP-Philippine General Hospital, a unit under UP Manila. Photo by Jun Madrid, UP MPRO. The University of the Philippines-Philippine General Hospital (UP-PGH) has been designated by the Department of Health (DOH) as one of its COVID-19 referral hospitals for the National Capital Region (NCR) in line with UP’s mandate as a public service university. UP-PGH is tasked with admitting COVID-19 patients within its cluster. This is according to a letter sent by DOH Secretary Francisco Duque to UP officials on March 19, 2020. Aside from UP-PGH, two other hospitals have been designated COVID-19 referral hospitals for NCR: the Dr. Jose M. Rodriguez Memorial Hospital and the Lung Center of the Philippines. UP-PGH, a unit under UP Manila, is considered the biggest modern government tertiary hospital in the Philippines with the expertise and equipment to treat COVID-19 patients. Servicing more than 600,000 patients annually, UP-PGH remains the only national referral center for tertiary care, providing direct and quality patient services to thousands of indigent Filipinos all over the country. The UP-PGH is also one of the hospitals involved in the field validation of the GenAmplify Corona Virus Disease-2019 (COVID-19) rRT-PCR Detection Kit developed by scientists at the UPM National Institutes of Health and the UP-based Philippine Genome Center. In a measure to deal with the public health emergency brought about by COVID-19, the DOH has designated at least one hospital per geographic cluster that would take in COVID-19 patients. Specialty and Level 3 hospitals were considered possible candidates for COVID-19 referral hospitals. The DOH has committed to providing full support for the UP-PGH and other designated referral hospitals. As of March 19, 2020, the DOH has reported 217 confirmed cases of COVID-19. Related: UP-PGH preparing to operate as COVID-19 referral center |
https://up.edu.ph/protocols-carried-out-as-2-up-faculty-members-undergo-test-for-covid-19/ | Protocols carried out as 2 UP faculty members undergo test for COVID-19 – University of the Philippines | Protocols carried out as 2 UP faculty members undergo test for COVID-19 Protocols carried out as 2 UP faculty members undergo test for COVID-19 March 11, 2020 | Written by Jo. Florendo B. Lontoc The University of the Philippines is strictly carrying out protocols following a recent case of two faculty members being declared patients under investigation (PUIs) for COVID-19 or the novel coronavirus disease. University officials coordinating with the UP Diliman Health Service (UPHS), a primary hospital on campus, have confirmed on March 10, 2020, that two faculty members had submitted themselves for possible COVID-19 infection after attending an academic conference in Japan. UPHS declared the two as PUIs after showing fever and respiratory symptoms. UPHS Director Jesusa Catabui has assured the community that protocols were followed in isolating the patients and disinfecting the premises and the ambulance used to carry them to a referral hospital. Following a general protocol the UP System promptly prepared after the first reports of the disease breaking out of Wuhan, China and which it released early February 2020, UP administrators instructed all constituents who “have come into close contact with a confirmed case, or have been exposed to potential infection during travels, to seek consultation with the University Health Service on campus, or at the nearest health facility, and undergo a health assessment before resuming their daily routine.” Under the same protocol, the UPHS and the Quezon City Epidemiology Surveillance Unit (CESU) coordinated the monitoring of the persons with whom the PUIs had been in close contact. Contact tracing resulted in a list of persons for monitoring (PUMs), a term which means they did not manifest any symptoms of the disease. The PUMs are currently under monitored home quarantine. Buildings that have been visited by the PUIs are now being disinfected. On Monday night, March 9, 2020, the UP Diliman administration, led by Chancellor Fidel Nemenzo, suspended classes and limited work to a skeletal force on campus until Saturday, March 14, 2020. It met with experts from the UPHS and the UP Manila-Philippine General Hospital to come up with specific protocols on travel, events and academic programs, which it released on March 10, 2020, to the UP Diliman community. Summarizing the guidelines, Nemenzo announced that: “1) Official travel, whether local or international, will be prohibited indefinitely. . . . All members of the community returning from travel overseas will be required to self-quarantine for fourteen days; “2) All big events on campus will be called off, until further notice; “3) We are moving towards online platforms in place of conventional classroom delivery. The Office of the Vice-Chancellor for Academic Affairs, in coordination with the Deans, will soon be communicating the instructions to all faculty and students; “4) We remind the community that the most effective way of containing the spread of COVID-19 is social distancing, proper hygiene and behavioral etiquette.” Nemenzo also formed a COVID-19 Task Force, which can be contacted at uhs.updiliman@up.edu.ph (with “COVID-19” as subject), 0947-427-9281 (mobile) or 8981-8500 local 2709, to answer questions and receive relevant information. — Contact person: Elena E. Pernia, PhD Vice President for Public Affairs University of the Philippines +63 2 8981 8500 local 2507 |
https://up.edu.ph/in-memoriam-former-up-asian-center-dean-aileen-sp-baviera/ | In Memoriam: Former UP Asian Center Dean Aileen SP Baviera – University of the Philippines | In Memoriam: Former UP Asian Center Dean Aileen SP Baviera In Memoriam: Former UP Asian Center Dean Aileen SP Baviera March 21, 2020 | Written by Celeste Ann Castillo Llaneta Photo from Dr. Baviera’s Facebook page Dr. Aileen San Pablo-Baviera, UP political science professor, former Dean of the UP Asian Center, and one of the country’s foremost experts in international relations and Asian and China studies, passed away at 3:55 a.m. on March 21, 2020, at San Lazaro Hospital. She was 60 years old. The cause of her death was severe pneumonia caused by COVID-19, which she contracted during a recent trip to France, according to an announcement made by her daughter, Mayi Baviera, on Facebook. Dr. Aileen SP Baviera was a well-known resource person and media consultant specializing in contemporary China studies, China-Southeast Asia relations, Asia-Pacific security, territorial and maritime disputes, and regional integration. She was also among the country’s experts on the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea who were convened to discuss how to defend the West Philippine Sea against the incursions of China. Aside from teaching and serving as Dean of the UP Asian Center from 2003 to 2009, she was editor-in-chief of the international journal Asian Politics & Policy. She was also a lecturer at the Foreign Service Institute, National Defense College of the Philippines; President and CEO of the Asia Pacific Pathways to Progress Foundation, Inc.; member of the Board of Trustees of Economic, Social, Cultural Rights-Asia; Director of the Philippine Association for Chinese Studies; and former convenor of the UP Center for Integrative and Development Studies’ Asia Pacific program. She earned her Bachelor of Science degree in Foreign Service, her master’s degree in Asian Studies (China), and her doctorate degree in political science all from UP. In UP, she taught courses on the politics, governance, and social and economic development of China; international relations of Southeast Asia; security issues in Asia; regionalism and community building in East Asia; and Philippine foreign relations. She was editor of the book Regional Security in East Asia: Challenges to Cooperation and Community Building (2008), published by the UP Asian Center, and has contributed numerous articles and chapters in books. She has lectured and held visiting fellowships at various academic and research institutions in Australia, China, Japan, India, Malaysia, Singapore, Taiwan and the United States. Dr. Baviera is survived by her children and relatives. |
https://up.edu.ph/approved-acceptable-use-policy-for-information-technology-it-resources-of-the-up-system/# | APPROVED ACCEPTABLE USE POLICY FOR INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY (IT) RESOURCES OF THE UP SYSTEM – University of the Philippines | APPROVED ACCEPTABLE USE POLICY FOR INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY (IT) RESOURCES OF THE UP SYSTEM APPROVED ACCEPTABLE USE POLICY FOR INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY (IT) RESOURCES OF THE UP SYSTEM June 28, 2018 | Written by UP Media and Public Relations Office Approved by the Board of Regents on its 1165th Meeting, 31 October 2002. version Section 1. Policy Statement Computers and networks are powerful technologies for accessing and distributing information and knowledge. They are strategic technologies for the current and future needs of the UP SYSTEM. For now, computing facilities and network infrastructure are a costly resource and thus must be used solely for teaching, learning, research, and other officially-sanctioned activities. Also, since these technologies allow individuals to access and copy information from remote sources, users must respect the rights of others, particularly to their privacy and intellectual property. There is therefore a need for rules and regulations to ensure equitable, secure and reliable access to these resources. The following regulations will govern the use of computing facilities, networks and other Information Technology (IT) resources of the University of the Philippines System. These regulations aim to: ensure an information infrastructure that promotes the basic missions of the UP SYSTEM in teaching, learning and research; protect the integrity, reliability, availability, confidentiality and efficiency of the IT resources of the UP SYSTEM; establish processes for addressing policy violations and providing sanctions for violators; emphasize that the UP SYSTEM shall not be liable for any damages incurred from the use of IT resources and for any claims and suits arising from the unauthorized and irresponsible use of the same; warn users that use of IT resources for partisan political activities as defined in relevant rules and regulations of the Civil Service Commission or the University of the Philippines, or for any unauthorized commercial purposes is prohibited; and notify users of the existence of this Policy. Section 2. Basic Standards The same standards and principles of intellectual and academic freedom developed for university libraries shall be applied to material received from the network. The same standards of intellectual and academic freedom developed for faculty and student publication in traditional media shall be applied to publication in computer media. As constituents of the academic community, faculty, students, and academic and non-academic staff should be free, individually and collectively, to express their views on issues of institutional policy and on matters of general interest to the academic body. The constituents of the academic community should have clearly defined means to participate in the formulation and application of institutional policy affecting academic and student affairs. The actions of the constituents of the academic community within the areas of its jurisdictions should be reviewed only through orderly prescribed procedures. Section 3. Definitions Agreement Form means document in which the user undertakes to comply with this Policy. The form may be electronic. Confidential information means data or information which on its face is not intended for unrestricted dissemination. Examples include student records, examination archives, proprietary technical information, disciplinary case records, administrative records, and the like. Document when used in this Policy shall refer both to the paper and its electronic format. Information Technology System or IT System includes computers, terminals, printers, networks, modem banks, online and offline storage media and related equipment, and software, databases and other data files that are owned, managed, or maintained by any unit of the University of the Philippines. For purposes of this Policy, any other equipment, computer unit or external network, when attached to, or used to access and/or interact with any component of, the IT System may also be considered part of the IT System. Private files means information that a user would reasonably regard as private. Examples include the contents of electronic mail boxes, private file storage areas of individual users, and information stored in other areas that are not public, even if no measure has been taken to protect such information. System and Network Administrator means a person designated to manage the particular system assigned to her/him, to oversee the day-to-day operation of the system, or to preliminarily determine who is permitted access to particular facilities and resources of the IT System, whether hired on a temporary, contractual or permanent basis. UP SYSTEM means the University of the Philippines System and all its constituent units. User means any person, whether authorized or not, who makes any use of the IT System or any of its components by any means or from any location. Section 4. Scope And Applicability a. General Coverage. This Policy applies to all facilities within the IT System and all its users. All users should be aware of these regulations, and should realize that when using the computers within the UP SYSTEM, they are bound by these regulations. Users may be required to sign a form agreeing to comply with this Policy. However, failure to sign the agreement form will not release users from coverage of this Policy. b. Local and External Conditions of Use. Individual units within the UP SYSTEM may define additional “conditions of use” for components of the ITSystem under their control. These conditions must be consistent with this overall policy but may provide additional detail, guidelines, restrictions, and/or enforcement mechanisms. These units will be responsible for publishing the regulations they establish and their policies concerning the authorized and appropriate use of the equipment for which they are responsible. Copies of these policies should be given to the President, Vice-President for Development, the Intellectual Property Office and the Office of Legal Services. Where use of external networks is involved, policies governing such use will be applicable and must be adhered to. Section 5. General Responsibilities a. General Responsibilities of Users. In general, users of the IT System must: use the IT System only for its intended purpose, and refrain from misusing or abusing it; maintain the integrity, reliability, availability, confidentiality and efficiency of computer-based information resources; refrain from seeking to gain unauthorized access or exceed authorized access; respect software copyright and licenses and other intellectual property rights; respect the rights of other computer users; and be aware that although computing and information technology providers throughout the university are charged with preserving the integrity and security of resources, security sometimes can be breached through actions beyond their control. Users are therefore urged to take appropriate precautions such as safeguarding their account and password, taking full advantage of file security mechanisms, backing up critical data and promptly reporting any misuse or violations of the policy. Every member of the University community has an obligation to report suspected violations of the Acceptable Use Policy for Information Technology of the U.P. System or any of its units. Reports should be directed to the system and network administrators, Chairs, Deans, Chancellors or the President. b. General Responsibilities Of System And Network Administrators System and network administrators and providers of University Information Technology resources have the additional responsibility of ensuring the integrity, confidentiality, and availability of the resources they are managing. Persons in these positions are granted significant trust to use their privileges appropriately for their intended purpose and only when required to maintain the system. Any private information seen in carrying out these duties must be treated in the strictest confidence, unless it relates to a violation or the security of the system. System and network administrators are expected to treat the contents of electronic files as private and confidential. Any inspection of electronic files, and any action based upon such inspection, will be governed by this Policy, other university rules and all applicable laws. c. General Responsibilities Of University Administrators To be informed and knowledgeable about these policies To initiate systematic programs to inform academic and non-academic personnel of these policies Section 6. Appropriate Use a. Appropriate Use Users may only use the IT System for its authorized purposes, which is to support the research, education, clinical, administrative and other functions of the UP SYSTEM. The particular purposes of any of the components of the IT System, as well as the nature and scope of authorized incidental personal use, may vary according to the duties and responsibilities of a user. b. Proper Authorization Users may access only those facilities and components of the IT System that are consistent with their authorization coming from competent authorities. c. Specific Proscriptions on Use The following categories of use of the IT System are considered prohibited and/or inappropriate: i. Uses Contrary To Law Unlawful use. Users may not use the IT System for any activity that is contrary to any law or administrative rule or regulation, or to encourage any such unlawful activity. Violators shall suffer a penalty ranging from suspension for one year to expulsion or dismissal Infringement of protected material. Users must not infringe on the copyright and other property rights covering software, databases and all other copyrighted material such as text, images, icons, retrieved from or through the IT System. These acts shall include, but is not limited to, the unauthorized copying, reproduction, dissemination, distribution, importation, use, removal, alteration, substitution, modification, storage, unloading, downloading, communication, publication or broadcasting of such material. Users must properly attribute any material they copy from or through the IT System. Users are reminded that the infringement of intellectual property rights belonging to others through the use of telecommunications networks is a criminal offense under Section 33(b) of the Electronic Commerce Act. Violators shall suffer a penalty ranging from suspension for one month to expulsion or dismissal. Hacking. Users may not use the IT System to gain unauthorized access into or interfere with another computer, system, server, information or communication system, or to obtain any access in order to corrupt, alter, steal or destroy any such system or information within such system or to introduce viruses. Users are reminded that all of the foregoing acts constitute the crime of Hacking under Section 33(a) of the Electronic Commerce Act and are punishable by mandatory imprisonment and/or a fine. Violators shall suffer a penalty ranging from suspension for one year to expulsion or dismissal. The penalty shall carry with it permanent withdrawal of all IT privileges. ii. Uses Inconsistent With The Purposes Of The UP System Cheating. Users may not use the IT System to engage in cheating or academic dishonesty. Acts prohibited under this provision include but are not limited to the following: Copying a computer file that contains another person’s work and submitting it for one’s own credit; Copying a computer file that contains another person’s work and using it as a model for one’s own work; Collaborating on a work, sharing the computer files and submitting the shared file, or a modification thereof, as one’s individual work, when the work is supposed to be done individually; and Communicating with another person on-line during the conduct of an examination. Violators shall suffer a penalty of suspension for not less than one semester. Students found guilty of cheating shall be barred form graduating with honors, even if their weighted average is within the requirement for graduation with honors. Political use. Users may not use the IT System for any partisan political activities. Violators shall suffer a penalty ranging from suspension for one month to one year. Unauthorized Commercial use. Users may not use the IT System for commercial purposes, except as permitted under other written policies of the UP SYSTEM or with the written approval of a competent authority. Violators shall suffer a penalty ranging from suspension for one month to one year with fine. If the violator is a student, the fine shall be P1,000.00 or the amount equivalent to the earnings, whichever is higher. If the violator is a faculty member or an employee, the fine shall be one-half of his monthly salary or the amount equivalent to the earnings, whichever is higher. Personal use. Users may not use the IT System for personal activities not related to appropriate University functions except in a purely incidental manner. Violators shall suffer a penalty ranging from suspension for one month to one year. Unauthorized gaming or entertainment. Users may not play games or use entertainment software on or through the IT System unless authorized in writing by competent authorities. Violators shall suffer a penalty ranging from suspension for one week to one year; provided, that the penalty for habitual offense shall be expulsion or dismissal. The presence of game software or any part thereof may be presumptive evidence of unauthorized gaming or entertainment. Use contrary to University policy or contract. Users may not use the IT System in violation of other policies of the University, or in any manner inconsistent with the contractual obligations of the University. Violators shall suffer a penalty ranging from suspension for one week to one year in addition to the penalty of the offense facilitated through IT network. iii. Uses That Damage The Integrity, Reliability, Confidentiality And Efficiency Of The IT System Software and hardware installation and removal. Unless properly authorized, users may not destroy, remove, modify or install any computer equipment, peripheral, operating system, disk partition, software, database, or other component of the IT System; or connect any computer unit or external network to the IT System. Violators shall suffer a penalty ranging from suspension for one month to expulsion. Unauthorized or destructive programs. Unless properly authorized and part of her/his administrative or academic duties, users may not develop or use programs on the IT System that may or are intended to: interfere with the ability of the UP SYSTEM to enforce these policies; damage any software or hardware component of the system; modify normally protected or restricted portions of the system or user accounts; access private or restricted portions of the system; or interfere with or disrupt other computer users. Violators shall suffer a penalty ranging from suspension for one year to expulsion. Destructive acts. Users may not attempt to crash, tie up, or deny any service on, the IT System. Violators shall suffer a penalty ranging from suspension for one year to expulsion. Unauthorized access. Users may not attempt to gain unauthorized access, exceed authorized access, or enable unauthorized access to the IT System, or to other networks or systems of which the IT System is a part. Violators shall suffer a penalty ranging from suspension for one month to one year. Password protection. A user who has been authorized to use a password-protected account may not disclose such password or otherwise makes the account available to others without permission of the system administrator. Violators shall suffer a penalty ranging from suspension for one week to one year. Concealing access. Users may not conceal, delete, or modify information or records pertaining to access to the IT System at the time of access, or alter system logs after such access for the purpose of concealing identity or to hide unauthorized use. Users may not conceal their own identity or masquerade as other users when accessing, sending, receiving, processing or storing through or on the IT System. Violators shall suffer a penalty ranging from suspension for one year to expulsion. Prohibited material. Users may not publish (on mailing lists, bulletin boards, and the World Wide Web) or disseminate prohibited materials over, or store such information on, the IT System. Prohibited materials under this provision include but are not limited to the following: Any collection of passwords, personal identification numbers (PINs), private digital certificates, credit card numbers, or other secure identification information; Any material that enables others to gain unauthorized access to a computer system. This may include instructions for gaining such access, computer code, or other devices. This would effectively preclude displaying items such as ‘Hackers Guides’, etc.; Any material that permits an unauthorized user, who has gained access to a system, to carry out any modification of the computer programs or data stored in the system; and Any material that incites or encourages others to carry out unauthorized access to or modification of a computer system. Violators shall suffer a penalty ranging from suspension for one year to expulsion. iv. Uses That Encroach On The Rights Of The Users Wasteful and destructive practices. Users may not encroach on others’ access and use of the IT System through wasteful and destructive practices such as but not limited to the following: Sending chain-letters or excessive messages including spamming, either locally or off-campus; violators shall suffer a penalty ranging from suspension for one week to one month; spamming, includes the act of (1) repeated cross-posting the same message to as many newsgroups or mailing lists as possible, whether or not the message is germane to the stated topic of the newsgroups or mailing lists targeted, (2) maliciously sending out of unsolicited email in bulk, or (3) sending large unwanted or unnecessary files to a single email address. Printing excess copies of documents, files, data, or programs; violators shall suffer a penalty ranging from suspension for one week to one month; Running grossly inefficient programs when efficient alternatives are known by the user to be available; violators shall suffer a penalty ranging from suspension for one week to one month; Using more than one computer terminal at a time, unless specifically authorized by competent authority. Faculty members whose duties require the use of more than one computer shall be exempted. Violators shall suffer a penalty ranging from suspension for one week to one year; Locking public access computers using screen savers or otherwise, unless specifically authorized by competent authority; violators shall suffer a penalty ranging from suspension for one week to one month; Not logging out of the system to allow other users to make use of the public access computer; violators shall suffer a penalty ranging from suspension for one week to one month; and Using a service which has been identified by the System Administrator as causing an excessive amount of traffic on the IT System or its external network links; violators shall suffer a penalty ranging from suspension for one week to one year. Offensive material. Users may not use the facilities of the IT System to produce, disseminate, or display material that could be considered offensive, pornographic, racially abusive, or libelous in nature. Users may not use electronic communication facilities (such as mail, chat, or systems with similar functions) to send messages which are fraudulent, maliciously harassing, obscene, threatening, or in violation of laws, administrative rules and regulations, or other policies of the University System or its constituent universities (CU). Violators shall suffer a penalty ranging from suspension for one month to expulsion or dismissal. Inappropriate messages. Users may not send to a mailing list, including local or network news groups and bulletin boards, any unsolicited material inconsistent with the list’s purpose. Users of an electronic mailing list are responsible for determining the purpose of the list before sending messages to or receiving messages from the list. Subscribers to an electronic mailing list are deemed to have solicited any material delivered by the list that is consistent with the list’s purpose. Violators shall suffer a penalty ranging from suspension for one week to one month. v. Uses which Violate Privacy Confidential information. Unless properly authorized, users may not attempt to gain access to archives or systems that contain, process, or transmit confidential information. Authorized users may not exceed their approved levels of access, nor should they disclose confidential information to others. Users shall treat as confidential such information which may become available to them through the use of the IT System, whether intentionally or accidentally. Users may not copy, modify, disseminate, or use such information, either in whole or in part, without the permission of the person or body entitled to give it. Violators shall suffer a penalty ranging from suspension for one year to expulsion or dismissal. Encrypted information. Users shall consider as confidential all encrypted information. This includes but is not limited to passwords, digital keys and signatures. Users may not decrypt, attempt to decrypt, or enable others to decrypt such information if they are not the intended recipient. Violators shall suffer a penalty ranging from suspension for one year to expulsion or dismissal. Information belonging to others. Users may not intentionally seek or provide information on, obtain copies of, or modify files, programs, or passwords belonging to other users, without the permission of those other users. Violators shall suffer a penalty ranging from suspension for one month to expulsion or dismissal. Wiretapping, traffic capture and snooping. Unless properly authorized, users may not re-route or capture data transmitted over the IT System. Violators shall suffer a penalty ranging from suspension for one year to expulsion or dismissal. vi. In addition to the penalties provided, all IT privileges of the offender may be suspended for a maximum of the period of the penalty. If the violation amounts to a penalty punishable by expulsion or dismissal, IT privileges may be revoked permanently. vii. repeated violations of any of the acts proscribed under this policy shall be considered as gross misconduct. Section 7. Tolerated Use From time to time, the UP SYSTEM or its constituent universities may issue a list classifying certain types of use under the category of tolerated use. This list shall form part of this Policy and will be considered binding on all users. Users should consult their system and network administrators if they are not sure whether a certain type of use is considered allowed, tolerated, unacceptable or prohibited. Section 8. Enforcement Procedures a. Monitoring. The UP SYSTEM or its constituent universities may monitor all use of the IT System at all times as may be necessary for its proper management. Activities on the IT System may be automatically and/or continuously logged. System and network administrators may examine these logs anytime. All logs shall be considered confidential. b. Access to Private Files. The UP SYSTEM may access all aspects of the IT System, including private files, without the consent of the user, in the following instances: When necessary to identify or diagnose systems or security vulnerabilities and problems, or otherwise preserve the integrity, reliability, availability, confidentiality and efficiency of the IT System; When such access to the IT System is required to carry out essential business functions of the UP SYSTEM; When necessary to avoid disrepute to the UP SYSTEM; When there are reasonable grounds to believe that a violation of law or a significant breach of this Policy or any other policy of the UP SYSTEM may have taken place, and that access and inspection may produce evidence related to the misconduct; When required by law or administrative rules or court order; or When required to preserve public health and safety. The UP SYSTEM will access private files without the consent of the user only with the approval of the Chancellor except when an emergency entry is necessary to preserve the integrity, reliability, availability, confidentiality and efficiency of the IT System or to preserve public health and safety. The UP SYSTEM through the system and network administrators will document all instances of access without consent. c. Reporting Problems and misuse. Users must report to the appropriate system administrators any defects discovered in system accounting or system security, all known or suspected abuse or misuse of the IT System, and especially any damage to or problems with their facilities or files. d. User Cooperation. Users, when requested, are expected to cooperate with UP SYSTEM in any investigation of IT system abuse. e. Guidelines for Immediate Action. Notification. When any system administrator or member of the faculty or staff has persuasive evidence of abuse or misuse of the IT System, and if that evidence points to the activities or the files of an individual, he or she shall, within 24 hours of the discovery of the possible misuse, notify the Chancellor or his/her duly designated authority. Suspension. In such cases, the system administrator may temporarily suspend or restrict the user’s access privileges for a period not exceeding 72 hours. A user may appeal such suspension or restriction and petition for immediate reinstatement of privileges through the Chancellor or his/her duly designated authority. The Chancellor may extend the suspension for thirty (30) days. Removal. In addition, in such cases, the system administrator may immediately remove or uninstall from the IT System any material, software or hardware which poses an immediate threat to the integrity, reliability, availability, confidentiality and efficiency of the IT System or any of its components or if the use might be contrary to this Policy. The user shall be notified of the action taken. A user may appeal such removal and petition for reinstatement of the material within fifteen (15) days from removal. f. Investigation. The investigation and prosecution of academic and administrative personnel and students shall be in accordance with the regulations of the UP SYSTEM. The investigating committee, body or tribunal must have at least one member knowledgeable about IT. The actions the proper officer may undertake include but are not limited to the following: Extend the suspension or restriction of a user’s privileges for the duration of the investigation, or as may be deemed necessary to preserve evidence and protect the system and its users; Call and interview potential witnesses; and Summon the subject of the complaint to provide information. g. Filing of Criminal Charges. In cases where there is evidence of serious misconduct or possible criminal activity, the Chancellor shall file the appropriate criminal charges with the proper courts. Where proceedings have been instituted against a user for violation of this Policy, the Chancellor may indefinitely suspend or restrict the user’s access privileges for the duration of such proceedings. h. Cumulative Remedies. The procedures under this Policy shall not exclude any other remedy available to any injured or interested party under any relevant law, administrative rule or regulation, or other policy of the UP SYSTEM. i. External Legal Processes. The UP SYSTEM shall comply with any lawful order to provide electronic or other records or other information related to those records or relating to use of the IT System which may result from coercive processes in administrative investigations, or judicial actions or proceedings. Section 9. Waiver a. Loss of Data. Users recognize that systems and networks are imperfect and waive any claim for lost work or time that may arise from the use of the IT System. The UP SYSTEM shall not be liable for degradation or loss of personal data, software, or hardware as a result of their use of the IT System. b. Authorization. Users recognize that the UP SYSTEM provides access to the IT System only as a privilege and not a right; that they have no right to use it for any purpose other than those directly connected with the work of the UP SYSTEM; and that the UP SYSTEM may take whatever measures it deems necessary to enforce this. Users therefore waive any action they may have against the UP SYSTEM under any law or administrative rule or regulation for any act the UP SYSTEM undertakes under this Policy, specifically including, but not limited to, those acts enumerated under Section 7 hereof. |
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https://up.edu.ph/in-memoriam-remembering-those-we-have-lost/ | IN MEMORIAM: Remembering those we have lost – University of the Philippines | IN MEMORIAM: Remembering those we have lost IN MEMORIAM: Remembering those we have lost April 6, 2020 | Posted by UP Media and Public Relations Office They died alone, with no relatives around to hold their hands as they breathed their last. Some still have to be buried, and others were cremated with no ceremony and no one to bid them goodbye. This has become the common tale of grief, sorrow and helplessness for the thousands all over the world who have fallen victim to the COVID-19 pandemic, but the story becomes even more poignant when it strikes closer to home or when the virus takes down somebody you love, somebody you know, or somebody you went to school with. It was doubly tragic for the family of Dr. Dennis Ramon Tudtud, one of the eight University of the Philippines alumni who fought and died in the frontlines of the war against the vicious viral adversary. Dr. Tudtud, a prominent Cebu City oncologist, succumb to the virus on March 31, four days after his wife, Dr. Helen Evangelista Tudtud, a pathologist at the Vicente Sotto Memorial Medical Center, expired after fighting the virus for 11 days. Their son Dennis Thomas, recalled in a Facebook post the pain of losing both parents in span of four days. He told of how their family was discriminated against; how policemen cordoned off their neighborhood; how insensitive persons had reported his mother’s death even when she was still fighting for her life in the hospital; and how his mother had worried about her husband when she learned her condition was critical. The virus, Dennis Jr. said, had made him an orphan on his birthday, ‘‘but I take comfort that they are happy together in their journey to paradise.’’ The eight UP alumni who fell in the frontlines of what has become a global war against the virus are: 1. Romeo Gregorio “Greg” N. Macasaet III (Died March 22, 2020) 2. Marcelo Y. Jaochico (March 24) 3. Raul D. Jara (March 24) 4. Francisco Avelino“Kiko” S. Lukban (March 25) 5. Salvacion“Sally” Rodriguez Gatchalian (March 26) 6. Raul D. Eslao (March 31) 7. Leandro L. Resurreccion III (March 31) 8. Dennis Ramon M. Tudtud (March 31) Five other UP alumni have died from the virus. They are: 1. Nida Cortes Paqueo (March 11) 2. Aileen San Pablo Baviera (March 21) 3. Alan T. Ortiz (March 2) 4. Prudencio “Dennis” Regis (March 24) 5. Renato Velasco (April 4) ROMEO GREGORIO MACASAET Of the UP COVID-19 warriors, Dr. Greg Macasaet was the first to fall. An anesthesiologist at the Manila Doctors Hospital, he worked tirelessly to treat COVID-19 patients until he himself became ill. Soon after, his wife Evalyn, also an anesthesiologist, also tested positive for the virus. The two had been attending to COVID-19 patients in the emergency room, which was akin to soldiers engaging the enemy in a hand-to-hand combat. Macasaet, according to his godson Renato Paraiso, made the ultimate sacrifice, “not because he was forced or obliged to do so, but because of his dedication to his craft and his constant devotion to be of service to others.” He said Greg and Evalyn chose to stay in the frontlines and made a bold sacrifice while their only child Raymond had special needs. “Our country has lost a genuine hero, and the world has lost one of the [kindest and most] selfless human beings that would ever walk its surface,” Paraiso said. The Manila Doctors Hospital cited Macasaet as a “brave man, one of the best anesthesologists in the country.” MARCELO JAOCHICO When Dr. Marcelo Jaochico lost his heroic battle against the virus, he was being true to his vocation as “doctor to the barrios.” He was the provincial health officer of Pampanga and was the first awardee as Most Outstanding Doctor to the Barrios under the rural health program of the Department of Health. Thus, his daughter Cielo said in her Facebook page, Dr. Jaochico did not deserve to be regarded as than just a statistic. Dr. Jaochico served as doctor to the barrio in Calanasan, Apayao for 16 years here he multi-tasked as obstetrician, pediatrician and family physician, treating such ailments as dengue, malaria and measles. Once, to save a baby who had turned blue after delivery, he used his mouth to suction the obstruction out of the baby’s blocked windpipe. In his latest rural health service, he volunteered to attend to victims of the Taal Volcano eruption in Batangas in January. He was also one of the first responders when Typhoon Yolanda struck in Tacloban City in 2013. “He did so much for the country,” his daughter wrote on Facebook. RAUL D. JARA Dr. Raul Jara, acknowledged as a pillar of cardiology in the Philippines, was also described by the Philippine Heart Association as a “father, teacher, mentor, poet, author, singer, colleague, friend.”He is remembered by patients as a soothing and calming healer who used music to heal the heart. In his younger days as an activist physician, he fought the dictator Ferdinand Marcos and risked his life by treating patients in the underground movement, running rings around the military by faking the names and records of the activists he treated. Later in life, he would remain steadfast and true to his oath, joining a group of doctors attending to an aging martial law figure who had been on the opposite end of the ideological spectrum. In a statement, Dr. Ling Jara-Salva, one of Dr. Jara’s five children, said: “He dedicated his whole life to constant learning and teaching and molding future doctors. He would ask the tough questions and push you to learn and persevere. He believed in his students and would think of them as his children and the hope for the future generations.” Her father, she said, was “a tower of strength and leadership and he served as the head of our family and a beacon of hope for many in the midst of this crisis. He knew the extensive battle he was facing and he kept on fighting.” She said the family would rather have her father remembered, not by how he died, but by how he lived. FRANCISCO LUKBAN Dr. Francisco Lukban was a noted geriatric cardiologist and a brilliant academician, according to the social media post of UP Manila’s Office of the Chancellor announcing his demise on March 25. Always wanting to serve his fellowmen, he was much loved by his elderly patients at the Capitol Medical Center. Like many of the UP doctors of his generation, Dr. Kiko was a courageous activist, especially during the Martial Law days. “Kiko was not afraid to die… and would have loved to volunteer as a frontline physician in PGH in these trying times,” the UP Manila statement said. His wife, Riz, a pediatric neurologist and also a UP College of Medicine graduate, said Dr. Kiko, on the day he was swabbed for testing, expressed his desire to join the heroic young PGH interns who had volunteered to the frontline against COVID-19. Tragically, it was too late. In a tribute, Riz Lukban said Dr. Kiko “had gone ahead of us because he believes he has a better chance of fighting COVID by being a ‘frontliner’ in heaven, giving supplication for us left behind.” RAUL DELLA ESLAO “I cannot stay at home, I’m a nurse” was a hashtag that went with his new profile picture in his final Facebook posting on March 19. Twelve days later Raul Della Eslao paid the ultimate price for his heroism. He died, a friend commented on Facebook, so others may live. A graduate of UP Integrated School, UP Diliman College of Architecture, and a registered nurse, he succumbed to the virus while fighting in the frontline in Michigan, USA where he worked. SALVACION R. GATCHALIAN As consultant and assistant director of the Research Institute for Tropical Medicine, Dr. Salvacion “Sally” Gatchalian was not just in the frontline of the war against COVID-19. She was fighting in the trenches. A pediatric infectious disease expert, Doc Sally most likely acquired the virus from one of her young patients at RITM, the country’s premier testing center for COVID-19. She was president of the Philippine Pediatric Society. The American Academy of Pediatrics cited her efforts in strengthening immunization and tobacco control and her work “to elevate pediatricians’ role in the Philippines and bring systemic changes to community norms and public policy.”Until a vicious nemesis called COVID-19 came to overcome her, much of Doc Sally’s life work was in defeating formidable adversaries like tuberculosis and dengue. Not only was she was a passionate advocate of child health; she was also a champion of children’s rights, lending a strong and vigorous voice to the campaign against the proposed legislation to lower the age of criminal liability among children. “Her bright and cheerful presence could fill an entire room. From her patients and their families to her mentees, colleagues friends and family—they all loved her,” wrote Cathy Babao in the Philippine Daily Inquirer. A colleague and mentee described her as the “epitome of beauty and brains with a very big and generous heart.” LEANDRO RESURRECCION III “There were no hugs, there were no kisses, and there were no goodbyes.” That, according to the family of Dr. Leandro Resurreccion III, was how the country’s foremost and pioneering pediatric surgeon signed off in his fight against the virus. To the very end, he was working on his vision for pediatric surgery, especially in liver transplants, according to the Philippine Children’s Medical Center, where he was chief of the Pediatric Surgery Division. He was the hospital’s “first fallen soldier in the battle against COVID-19.” In a statement, the PCMC said Dr. Resurreccion was “well known locally and abroad as forward looking in his vision for pediatric surgery especially in liver transplants which he was working to the end. Always smiling, friendly and very ‘cool’ he will be missed.” His son, Leandro IV, recalled that his father rejected an offer to practice in Australia after being certified at Westmead Hospital in Sydney, saying the Philippines was where he was needed most. “He always embodied a kind of fiery passion for his profession, but he always spoke of what the country needed together with such passion.” DENNIS M. TUDTUD Among the most tragic but heroic casualties of the global war against the pandemic are the husband-and-wife team of Dr. Dennis Ramon Tudtud and Dr. Helen Evangelista Tudtud. Dennis, a prominent Cebu oncologist, died on March 31, four days after Helen a pathologist at the Vicente Sotto Memorial Medical Center, died, both victims the virus they so valiantly fought. “My sister and I may never understand why God had to take them both. There are so many questions with no answers,” their son Dennis Thomas said. He asked for prayers for those who continue to fight for their lives against COVID-19. “We have a flood of tears. I also ask for your prayers of strength and of acceptance. Daddy and Mommy, please watch over us from heaven,” he said. Dennis Thomas. “My parents touched many lives and were always at the forefront of helping other people.” NIDA CORTES PACQUEO She was “PH35” on the list of those who tested positive for the coronavirus in the Philippines. Yet, neither Nida Cortes Pacqueo nor her husband Vicente had been in any place where most victims were likely to catch the virus. A few days after her 67th birthday, PH35 became the first known Filipino to succumb to the virus. It was especially painful for their US-based daughter Liza, who, according to her blog, was talking to her mother on the phone when nurses in full protective gear took her mother away to the isolation room in the hospital. That video call on March 8 was the last time she saw her mother. Three days later, on March 11, “she died in the silence of isolation.” “She died alone without her loving family and friends around her. She was cremated alone, without ceremony or tribute. My father is alone as well,” Liza announced on Facebook. Her father, Dr. Vicente Pacqueo, a former World Bank economist and UP economics professor, also had the virus and was in isolation when his wife of 47 years died. As of Liza’s latest post, the 72-year old patriarch of the family was stable and probably well on his way to recovery. AILEEN SAN PABLO BAVIERA The country’s top China expert, Dr. Aileen San Pablo Baviera, was coming home on March 12 from an engagement in France, but she never made it home. From the airport, she was taken straight to the San Lazaro Hospital where she succumbed to COVID-19 nine days later. As political science professor and former dean of the UP Asian Center, Dr. Baviera was one of the country’s foremost experts in international relations and Asian studies. While she was a staunch advocate of Philippine-China relations, she insisted that, “if one has to take a side, one must take the side of the Filipino people.” As a keen China watcher, she was an expert on the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea, especially as it applied to Chinese incursions into the West Philippine Sea. She described herself as ”an academic, an armchair activist, a government analyst, an author, an editor, a policy adviser, a public speaker on international relations, an advocate of people’s diplomacy, a keen observer of global affairs—sometimes nationalist, sometimes internationalist.” Once, on a cruise on the East China Sea, Dr. Baviera pondered on the overlapping territorial interests of the countries claiming all or part of the China Sea—China, Japan, Taiwan, the Philippines and other Southeast Asian states. She wrote: “It seems that governments have let their primordial territorial instincts rule them. There is folly in this. They seek control of the waters, as if oceans could be tamed, claimed and fenced off like the land. In truth, no one knows exactly what they are claiming….I envy the free creatures of the sea, for we creatures of the land have become captive of our own illusions of conquest and control.” ALAN ORTIZ Leaving in early March for an international security event in Paris on the invitation of the French government, Dr. Alan Ortiz never made it back. He died on March 23 in a Paris hospital of complications from COVID-19. He is believed to be the first Filipino to die of the ailment abroad. Ortiz was the president of the non-profit Philippine Council for Foreign Relations and he was a leader in finance, banking and industries such as water and power utilities. A friend, AmCham Philippines consultant John Forbes, described Ortiz as a “larger-than-life hero of our times” and a “game changer in both his public and private sector careers.” Former Finance Secretary Roberto de Ocampo, who had worked with him in the Finance Department and in the Development Bank of the Philippines, also paid tribute to Ortiz as a hard-working man of integrity. “I relied on him because of his ability to make things happen, and happen well. It came as no surprise to me that he continued to succeed in various capacities in the private sector and rise in the esteem of his peers with his incisive and respected views on the nation’s economy and its future in an ever global setting,” De Ocampo said. GEN. PRUDENCIO REGIS A ranking official of the Philippine National Police until his retirement, Gen. Prudencio “Dennis” Regis became active in golf, becoming president of the Eastridge Seniors Golfers Association. He attended UP Prep in high school (Class 1969) and entered the Philippine Military Academy (Class 75). He died on March 24 at the Veterans Memorial Medical Center. RENATO S. VELASCO Dr. Renato S. Velasco, another former Cabinet member, is the latest member of the UP community to succumb to the virus. He died on April 4; he was 66. An associate professor in political science in UP where he graduated cum laude in history and later acquired his master’s degree in Asian Studies and doctorate in political science; he was a product of the public school system. He lent his intellectual expertise to the government in 2006 in various capacities under then President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo, serving as chief of the Presidential Management Staff and director general of the Philippine Information Agency. Rene, as he was called by friends, returned to the academe after his stint in the government. His Alpha Sigma fraternity brother, former Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas deputy governor Diwa Guinigundo, called Velasco ”a comrade in the struggle against martial rule.” He will be missed in various circles in which he moved, in advancing the advocacies he championed. Officials of the PIA paid tribute to their former chief as a humble, generous and dedicated public servant who “steered PIA with his unique brand of firm yet compassionate and intelligent leadership.” The list was based on publicly available information as of April 4, 2020 and may not be comprehensive. ERRATUM: In this article “IN MEMORIAM: Remembering those we have lost” published on April 6, 2020, we erroneously included the names of Ambassador Bienvenido Arceo Tan, Jr., a UP alumnus who passed away on March 10, and Ms. Zenaida F. Salas, long-time administrative staff of the UP Diliman Department of Political Science who passed away on April 2. The UP community mourns their loss and condoles with their bereaved families and loved ones; however, Amb. Tan and Ms. Salas passed away due to causes other than COVID-19. The article also contained an error in Arch. Raul D. Eslao, RN’s name. These corrections have been made to this updated web post. The UP Media and Public Relations Office regrets the errors. |
https://up.edu.ph/constituent-universities-weekly-bulletin-week-2/ | Constituent Universities’ Weekly Bulletin (Week 2) – University of the Philippines | Constituent Universities’ Weekly Bulletin (Week 2) Constituent Universities’ Weekly Bulletin (Week 2) April 3, 2020 | Written by UP Media and Public Relations Office Constituent Universities’ Weekly Bulletin (Week 2) (Week 2 | Updates as of 31 March 2020) UP Diliman Bayanihan spirit swells for constituents Individuals, organizations, and university units offered services, facilities, and resources to help UP constituents cope with the COVID-19 pandemic and the enhanced community quarantine. UP alumna Shamcey Supsup-Lee headed Miss Universe Philippines in donating food to stranded students through the Pedro and Coi’s “Biyaheng Busog” program. In a separate initiative, Bounty Fresh donated 1,000 kilos of chicken to the stranded dormers and personnel on campus. The University Food Service for its part remained open to provide meals for stranded dormers and student athletes. For students, the faculty, and staff, the UPD Psychosocial Services started offering “telepsychotherapy”. COVID-19 frontliners can avail of the services for free, after signing up at bit.ly/PsycServ, or calling 09167573157, or emailing psycserve.upd@up.edu.ph. Journalist and faculty member Kara David distributed 200 washable face masks and alcohol refill to household helpers, street sweepers, security guards, grocery workers, and vegetable sellers. The College of Fine Arts housed 100 Lumad children in its new building. The Bakwit School teachers, however, expressed apprehension over their limited supplies and social distancing. Constituents stepping up aid to frontliners, patients Academic units are reaching out to one another, to the COVID-19 frontliners, and to government in fighting the COVID-19 menace. The College of Engineering (CoE) created a COVID-19 response team headed by Dean Ferdinand Manegdeg, and is currently raising funds and resources for its proposals. These include: 3D Printing for frames of face shields for frontliners using CoE 3D printers to be pooled in the EEEI building. Designing a prototype adult ventilator for quick and cost-effective production. Tracking high-risk individuals in coordination with government agencies and telecommunciation companies. Fabricating a mobile plasma treatment apparatus, in coordination with UP Manila (UPM) College of Medicine and Philippine General Hospital (PGH), to disinfect buildings, utilities, and equipment. Fabricating a cleaning chamber prototype that will be used to disinfect used personnel protective equipment (PPEs) using UV light. CoE also proposed a project for the Patient and Health Care Worker Flow for PGH, a PGH COVID-19 Donation Tracking System, and a Knowledge Center, according to Technology Transfer and Business Development Office Director Luis Sison. At the same time, UPD is collaborating with UPM and alumni in the De La Salle University faculty to provide coveralls, headgear disinfection, “SaniPod”, a negative pressure system, disinfection of PPEs, disinfection of intubation kits and telemonitoring team, a telepresence triage, telemetry of admitted patients, and teletracking of sent-home patients. The College of Science (CS) reported providing assistance in COVID-19 testing through its equipment and personnel; and the College of Human Kinetics (CHK), to frontliners through production of “sanitents” or sanitation tents. Some CoE, College of Fine Arts, and CS alumni designed sanitents to be used in hospitals and establishments, composed of PVC pipes, plastic cover, and matting. The design and chemical solution was being finalized. The Department of Public Works and Highways has chosen UPD open areas as one of the plots for installation of prototype tents. 5.5 million seniors at high risk – UP Population Institute According to the research done by the UP Population Institute, in collaboration with the Demographic Research and Development Foundation, among the estimated 9.5 million Filipinos aged 60 and above, 5.5 million have existing high-risk conditions, higher among women and among the rich segment of the population. The study also analyzed data from the first 38 recorded deaths from COVID-19 and an overwhelming majority (89%) are in the age group 55 and older, most of them male. UP Los Baños UPLB continues to support its stranded students As of March 26, UP Los Baños has continued to provide two meals per day to the 1,505 students who are still stranded in their dormitories and in private dormitory facilities in Los Baños and in Bay, Laguna. The UPLB Administration continues to appeal to everyone to help sustain the initiative for UPLB students. In-kind donations are being accepted every day at the UPLB Main Gate at 9-11 AM and 2-4PM. For financial support, please course financial donations to the following bank accounts used solely for this purpose: Land Bank-UPLB Branch Account Name: UPLB Foundation, Inc Account No: 1892-1003-29 Bank Swift Code: TLBPPHMMXXX PNB-UPLB Branch Account Name: UPLB Foundation, Inc. Account No: 2464-7000-1642 Bank Swift Code: PNBMPHMM BPI (Current Account)-Los Baños Branch Account Name: UPLB Centennial Fund Account No: 0911-0139-83 Bank Swift Code: BOPIPHMM Please email a copy of your deposit slip to osado.uplb@up.edu.ph or send a message to the UPLBOfficial Facebook Page. UPLB thanks everyone who have supported and continues to support its students. Art Relief Mobile Kitchen helps feed 500 stranded UPLB students Laguna-based veteran photojournalist and documentarian Alex Baluyot is helping feed 500 students stranded in UPLB through his mobile kitchen, Art Relief Mobile Kitchen (ARMK). Art Relief Mobile Kitchen is a group of volunteers who believe in feeding the hungry through community kitchens. Their description in their Facebook page states that “we can and will cook food for the hungry. This is our creed.” According to an article published in the Manila Bulletin, on Saturday, March 21, Baluyot and the ARMK cooked stir-fried vegetable chop suey to feed the estimated 500 students stranded inside UPLB. The following day, his team prepared hundreds of viands as well as nearly 200 ham sandwiches for both in-campus dormers and students living around the campus. On March 23, Baluyot and his team made 593 pork sinigang meals for the students, in addition to the meals they offered for the municipal frontline workers of Barangay Batong Malaki. The next day, they served the students chicken pochero and pork steak. According to the same Manila Bulletin article, ARMK operates in different parts of the country. ARMK co-founder, Precious Leano, is also leading a mission drive in Batangas, where they are serving hot meals for the frontline workers at Batangas Medical Center. Art Relief Mobil Kitchen can be contacted through Alex Baluyot (09989791629), Precious Leano (0917 828 8690), and Giselle Montero (0917 500 8836). Follow them on Twitter via @Art_Relief. Another representative from the private sector, Bounty Agro Ventures Inc. (BAVI), also donated goods to stranded UPLB students, while the Armed Forces of the Philippines 2nd Battalion, UP Rural High School Alumni Group, and the UPLB Office of the Vice Chancellor for Student Affairs (OVCSA) implemented “Oplan Hatid” to help students reunite with their families. UPLB escorted 94 students to their homes in NCR and CALABARZON. According to Rocky Marcelino, officer-in-charge of the Office for Student Activities, more trips will be made by the university in the coming days. UP Beta Sigma-Los Baños Chapter calls for volunteers to make DIY PPEs Resident members of the UP Beta Sigma Fraternity-Los Baños Chapter started working on DIY PPEs project last March 23 and has called upon volunteers for help. The Fraternity, in partnership with the SM Foundation, Inc., also donated additional basic necessities such as food, toiletries, and other hygienic supplies to the dormitory residents inside the University premises. According to the UP Beta Sigma Fraternity-Los Baños Chapter’s Facebook page, their donations were made possible through the continuous partnership of the Fraternity and SM Foundation, Inc., with the goal of spreading #SocialGood in the community. “The UP Beta Sigma, together with its partners, will stand committed on helping the community amidst the CoVID-19 outbreak,” the Fraternity said in its Facebook post. UP Visayas UPV strengthens support for constituents amid COVID-19 crisis Four days after the community quarantine directive was elevated by the provincial government of Iloilo to enhanced community quarantine on March 20, UP Visayas (UPV) announced the availability of psychosocial support services to its community. Guidance specialists and psychology teachers may be contacted from 8:00 am to 5:00 pm via six mobile numbers: 0926-746-5671, 0917-486-1042, 0999-223-6498, 0908-131-4461, 0998-982-7383, and 0922-869-1097. Members of the UPV community may also send an email to upv.psychosocial.sup@gmail.com. For physiological ailments and concerns, the UPV Health Services Unit (HSU) started offering online medical consultations on March 27 via its Facebook account, UPV HSU Miagao Campus. Emails may also be sent to hsu-mia@upv.edu.ph. Alternatively, these numbers may be called from 8:00 am to 5:00 pm for health advice: 315-8301, 0918-564-1942, and 0945-699-4613. The HSU also issues digital or electronic prescriptions to UPV constituents and their families for non-emergency and mild medical cases. For urgent medical attention and emergency situations needing consultations in person, the HSU is open 24/7. To help residents acquire basic necessities and run essential errands, UPV has allotted Wednesdays as transport day for those living in the staff house and dormitories. Staff house residents have the 7:00 to 9:00 am schedule, while dormitory residents have the 1:00 to 3:00 pm schedule. UPV’s COVID-19 Task Force has also established the UPV COVID-19 Complaint Unit, where members of its community may relay their concerns, file complaints, or ask about UPV’s COVID-19 response. The Complaint Unit may be reached through mobile number 0919-002-3698 or email at covid19.upv@up.edu.ph or upvcovid19response@upv.edu.ph. The mechanism has been in place since March 31. UP Cebu UP Cebu FabLab and other FabLabs in the Visayas race to produce face shields for medical frontliners Around March 23, 2020, the UP Cebu FabLab began designing and 3D-printing face shield frames to contribute to the supply of personal protective equipment (PPE) desperately needed by medical frontliners in the war against COVID-19. The team of faculty members and staff at the UP Cebu FabLab who have been making the face shields consist of College of Communication, Art, and Design dean Prof. Palmy Marinel Tudtud, Prof. Mona Alcudia, Prof. Jay Nathan Jore, Fidel Laurence Ricafranca, Mark Argel Simacon, and Prof. Raymund Fernandez. The face shield frames they make using a laser cutter is attached to a sheet of plastic or acetate to create a face shield to protect frontliners against the coronavirus. According to an email interview with UP Cebu Information Officer Vanessa Guerrero, the UP Cebu FabLab belongs to a network of fabrication laboratories where technology and innovation is shared. “Together with other Fablabs in the Visayas, the UP Cebu FabLab joined the community of maker-spaces in developing and producing PPEs for our brave Filipino medical frontliners working through the COVID-19 pandemic. UP FabLab opted to do the face shield as its materials can be easily sourced and mass production can be done fast and efficiently,” she said. The UP Cebu’s face-shield production was initially backed by funds from UP Cebu Education and Research Foundation, Inc. (UPCERFI) and the laboratory’s own resources. The UP Cebu FabLab is being supplied materials by the Department of Trade and Industry (DTI). The aim, according to Guerrero, is to produce 500 face shields per week. But with the increasing number of requests for face shields from hospitals and frontliners in Cebu, the UP Cebu FabLab has joined forces with the other FabLabs across the Visayas. “The need is overwhelming, and what we need now is to collectively help produce PPEs,” said Guerrero. UP Cebu has posted on their website a how-to guide for other FabLabs seeking to fabricate five-minute face shields. Since it started production, the UP Cebu Fablab has continued to donate the much-needed PPEs to hospitals and frontliners in need: On March 25, the UP Cebu FabLab donated 150 face shields to Vicente Sotto Hospital. The following day, March 26, 150 more face shields were donated to Chong Hua Hospital, Cebu Doctors Hospital, and Visayas Community Medical Hospital. On March 27, 50 face shields were given to Perpetual Succor Hospital. On March 28, 200 face shields were donated to Eversley Childs Sanitarium, Mandaue City Community Hospital, Lapu-Lapu Community Hospital, Sacred Heart Hospital, and Talisay District Hospital. On March 30, 300 face shields were donated to Mactan Doctors Hospital, North General Hospital, Velez Hospital, Cebu City Medical Center, Arc Hospital, Mandaue City Community Hospital, and Lapu-Lapu Community Hospital. And on March 31, 260 face shields were donated to St. Vincent Hospital, Sogod District Hospital, Guba Community Hospital, Pulang Bato medical frontliners, Emergency Rescue Unit Foundation, St. Anthony Mother & Child Hospital, and the DTI Cebu. The UP Cebu FabLab has been seeking support from the Cebuano community so it can continue production of the lasercut face shields and meet the demand. Please course donations of materials for these PPEs through pptudtud@up.edu.ph. The UPCERFI also welcomes financial support given through: Account Name: University of the Philippines Cebu Educational and Research Foundation Incorporation Bank: Bank of the Philippine Islands (BPI), Lahug Branch Account Number: 3611 0061 43 |
https://up.edu.ph/constituent-universities-weekly-bulletin-week-1/ | Constituent Universities’ Weekly Bulletin (Week 1) – University of the Philippines | Constituent Universities’ Weekly Bulletin (Week 1) Constituent Universities’ Weekly Bulletin (Week 1) April 3, 2020 | Written by UP Media and Public Relations Office Constituent Universities’ Weekly Bulletin (Week 1) (Week 1 | Updates as of 24 March 2020) UP Diliman One deceased, 2 tested negative for COVID-19 among UPD faculty Four faculty members of UP Diliman registered as afflicted, person under investigation (PUI), and under monitoring for coming in from travel from a COVID-19-infested country or for being in direct contact with a COVID-19 patient. One went straight to San Lazaro Hospital upon arrival in Manila on March 12, 2020 for a checkup after traveling to France to attend an academic conference. The faculty member tested positive and was confined in a medical quarantine facility, eventually passing away from complications from the disease. Two were declared persons under investigation for showing symptoms after attending an academic conference in Japan. Tests on them revealed negative results. Another faculty member was declared person under monitoring (PUM) after coming in direct contact with an individual with COVID-19. Task force, measures set vs COVID-19 The UP Diliman administration created a task force on March 8, 2020 to draw up preventive measures and coping mechanisms on COVID-19 for students, faculty members, researchers, staff, and the UPD residents. Headed by Chancellor Fidel Nemenzo, the task force is composed of officials and experts from the offices of the vice chancellors for academic, community, and student affairs, and for research and development; the University Registrar, Information Office, Health Service, the Office of Community Relations, Computerized Registration System; the colleges of Science, Law, and Social Sciences and Philosophy; the Institute for Small Scale Industries; and the University Student Council. UPD set out to track all faculty members with travel history outside the Philippines in the 14 days before the community quarantine. It adopted guidelines and mechanisms on where to go and what to do in case an individual or a dormer shows symptoms. An information dissemination platform, upd.edu.ph/covid-19-advisory, was created. Information materials were also posted on the UPD website, Facebook, and Twitter pages. Smart Infocast was used for constituents who do not have access to the Internet. Earlier, Nemenzo addressed the community a number of times through published and broadcasted statements, one immediately after the declaration of enhanced community quarantine of the National Capital Region on March 17, 2020, briefing the latter on the campus situation and actions. Calls for donations issued for UP Diliman’s student volunteers, affected residents, and UPHS Calls for donation have been made by UP Diliman on behalf of student volunteers for donations for affected campus residents; and by the UP Diliman Health Service for personal protective equipment (PPEs). Alternatives proposed in UP Diliman in wake of class suspensions UP Diliman identified several platforms such as the UPD Virtual Learning Environment (UVLE), Zoom, Google Classroom, and Microsoft Office as remote modes of learning in lieu of regular classes. Colleges were asked to consider, evaluate, and suggest open-source versions as alternatives for their students. Online classes endorsed earlier in lieu of regular classes were suspended along with regular classes in consideration of students without proper Internet and computer access. UP Los Baños UPLB brings stranded student-dormers home The declaration of enhanced community quarantine over Luzon left many UP Los Baños (UPLB) students stranded in their dormitories, with no way to go back home. The UPLB Administration established a system wherein parents of stranded UP dormers are contacted first for consent and to confirm address. The students are then ferried to their respective municipal halls at pre-arranged drop-off times, with the parents expected to be physically present receive their child. UPLB officials accompanying the students take pictures of the students with their parents to document that they are safe and have been delivered home without harm. However, there is still a substantial number of stranded UPLB dormers still on-campus. As of March 21, 2020, there are still 517 students in the University dorms. More is being done to help support and care for these remaining UPLB students. To find out, read here: SOS for stranded students UPLB sends out a call for help for its student dormers UP Los Baños currently has 106 student dorm-residents on campus, including international graduate students. Along with students staying in other housing facilities of partner institutions within campus, such as DMST, FNP, NCPC, YMCA and in SEARCA (International Graduate Students), a total of 623 students are staying in the UPLB dorms. With the enhanced community quarantine, the normal canteens, cafeterias and eating places for these students have been closed, leaving the students with no food. The UPLB Administration sent out a call for donations to supply the UPLB students with food—at least P1.9 million a week for three meals a day for students inside and even outside the campus, who number over 900. Aside from food, students are also in need of vitamin C supplements to boost their immune system and protect their health. UP Open University UPOU launches portal for University COVID-19 updates Inspired by the UP System’s portal for its COVID-19 updates, the UP Open University (UPOU) launched its own web portal on March 24. It contains the updates from the UP System and UPOU’s own advisories, announcements, memoranda, and news, as well as emergency numbers that can be contacted by the community. Apart from the web portal, UPOU also sends out pertinent information to its community via email, social media, and MyPortal. As early as March 9, UPOU has posted information materials on open and distance e-learning as an alternative to classroom-based education. And when there was a call to shift to online modes of education because of class suspensions due to the COVID-19 outbreak, UPOU conducted web seminars on the conversion to online classes. While classes have since been suspended by the University, putting an end to the short-lived conduct of online classes by its constituent universities, UPOU’s purely-online classes have continued. As the leading open and distance e-learning institution in the country, UP President Danilo Concepcion referred to UPOU in its anniversary celebration last month as the “most high-tech” constituent in the UP System in terms of using information and communication technologies in teaching and learning. Its administration, some faculty, and staff, who previously reported for work in their headquarters in Los Baños, Laguna as well as in learning centers across the country, have been rendering service from their homes. UPOU’s learning materials may be accessed through its repository, UPOU Networks. Massive open online courses are also available at UPOU MODeL. In a report submitted the UP System dated 24 March 2020, UPOU states that it conducted a survey in its community on COVID-19-related concerns and 62 responded. Of the 62, three students disclosed that they are persons under monitoring. A 34-year-old male abroad has finished his 14-day quarantine period at the time of his response. A 31-year-old female in the country said that she is being monitored daily by the Department of Health. And a 23-year-old female, also in the Philippines, is in self-quarantine. UP Mindanao UPMin to offer diagnostic program for free COVID-19 testing, models maximum possible no. of cases in Davao UP Mindanao recently proposed a diagnostic program that can give free testing for COVID-19 in the Davao Region. The program includes establishing a Php15-million biosafety molecular lab that would be linked to a hospital. The proposal was authored by Philippine Genome Center (PGC) Mindanao director Dr. Lyre Anni Murao, who is also a professor of virology in UP Mindanao. A recent, still-unpublished study on COVID-19 by Dr. May Anne Mata, a bioinformatics expert from UP Mindanao, shows the need to test even the asymptomatic patients. Dr. Mata’s research also discussed her disease model’s projection on the maximum possible number of cases in Davao, given the testing rate of 0.1% per day. However, Dr. Mata’s research has found that if the testing rate were to increase from 70% to 100%, the number of COVID-19 carriers will reach 0 within a faster period compared to the current testing rate. UP Baguio Students cared for, ferried home UP Baguio reached out to students boarding within and outside campus who were stranded by the enhanced community quarantine declared over Luzon on March 17, 2020. It extended assistance to them including transportation arrangements for those who wished to go home. One hundred and fourteen “care packs” containing food, hygiene kits, and medicine were distributed to stranded students on March 19 and 20, 2020. Donations for the care packs were pooled and distributed by faculty members. Calls for monetary donations to purchase care packs are spearheaded by the UPB Ugnayan ng Pahinungod. The Guard House has been designated as the drop-off point for donations in kind. The administration arranged for transport in accordance with travel policies and guidelines dated March 21, 2020. Following a UP System memorandum, UPB suspended all classes, including online and alternative learning activities, from March 17 to April 14, 2020. The deadlines for dropping and leave of absence for the second semester of 2019-2020 were also lifted. Work was suspended in all offices except those performing vital service, such as finance, health, security, systems and network service offices in the same period. UP Cebu UP Cebu ensures work continuity and support for its staff As of March 23, 2020, administrative offices and units in UP Cebu have been required to monitor their daily schedule rotation and ensure work continuity within a work-from-home regime. This is in accordance with a memorandum (CLCD-2020-056) from UP Cebu Chancellor Liza D. Corro. Earlier, UP Cebu employees submitted their approved staff work schedule and program of work deliverables to their heads of office/units, while faculty members submitted to their deans a 40-hour work week certificate in lieu of teaching. The salaries of regular, UP- and non-UP contractual personnel have also been released early to provide a safety net for UP employees during this period of quarantine. |
https://up.edu.ph/up-pgh-preparing-to-operate-as-covid-19-referral-center/ | UP-PGH preparing to operate as COVID-19 referral center – University of the Philippines | UP-PGH preparing to operate as COVID-19 referral center UP-PGH preparing to operate as COVID-19 referral center March 24, 2020 | Written by Celeste Ann Castillo Llaneta UP-Philippine General Hospital, a unit under UP Manila. Photo by Jun Madrid, UP MPRO. The University of the Philippines-Philippine General Hospital (UP-PGH) has been designated by the Department of Health (DOH) as one of the three COVID-19 referral centers in the National Capital Region (NCR), with the concurrence of UP President Danilo L. Concepcion and UP Manila Chancellor Carmencita D. Padilla. The director of UP-PGH, Dr. Gerardo “Gap” Legaspi, made this announcement during a March 23 virtual press conference of the DOH. The other two hospitals designated as COVID-19 referral centers in the NCR are the Dr. Jose M. Rodriguez Memorial Hospital in Caloocan City and the Lung Center of the Philippines in Quezon City. Preparing for a potentially protracted battle Government hospitals under the DOH, major private hospitals, and the different offices of the DOH were tasked with coordinating the management of the COVID-19 public health emergency, Dr. Legaspi said. “The stakeholders agreed that one of the solutions to this complex problem was to organize the hospitals in a manner that will rationalize the clinical approach and the utilization of resources in order to equip and enable the designated referral centers for a potentially protracted battle,” the UP-PGH statement added. Representatives of the hospitals, both private and government, met and discussed the issues and have committed financial, manpower, technical and technological assistance to the three COVID-19 referral centers. The DOH and the University of the Philippines also pledged to extend full support. The statement added that “a scaling-up system of preparation was agreed upon so as not to severely hamper the COVID-19 referral centers’ services to their currently admitted patients.” Under the referral system, the coordinated transfer of patients can be done only after official acceptance by the receiving hospital. Admission to the referral center will initially be limited to mild PUIs (patients under investigation) who are at high risk of deterioration (above 60 years of age and/or with co-morbidities) and moderate to critical PUIs. Director Legaspi clarified that not everyone with suspected symptoms of COVID-19 would be admitted to UP-PGH, but patients will at least be seen at the hospital triage, where they are prioritized according to the degree of their ailment and the urgency of their treatment. Eventually, when testing for COVID-19 has been made readily available, only confirmed COVID-19 patients will be sent to the referral centers. Those designated as mild PUIs shall be triaged to their local health units and a quarantine plan shall be strictly implemented. One week to prepare The UP-PGH, Director Legaspi said in the virtual press conference, requested a week to fully prepare the hospital for its role as a COVID-19 referral hospital. Planning began as early as March 20 and hospital officials have designated a location exclusively for COVID-19 patients. The designated COVID ward will be distant from and have very little contact with the hospital’s more than 400 other, non-COVID-19 patients. During the first meeting of UP-PGH officials and department heads, it was decided that 130 beds would be committed to COVID-19 patients, although this number may be increased depending on the number of incoming patients. Director Legaspi also said coordination had been made with private hospitals, which could share the lessons and experiences in dealing with their own COVID-19 crisis. He also noted the willingness of other government hospitals under the DOH to accept non-COVID-19 patients that UP-PGH might not be able to handle because it would be focusing on COVID-19 patients during this public health crisis. Not an exclusively COVID-19 hospital But Dr. Legaspi stressed that “I repeat, UP-PGH will not be an exclusively COVID-19 hospital,” citing the more than 400 patients at the hospital who need the different specializations of UP-PGH’s experts. He noted, however, that the number of these patients had been dwindling because of the lockdown. He was addressing concerns about the continued operations of the Cancer Institute. He said the Cancer Institute is still open and will continue to provide patients with services, including radiotherapy. Another essential service of UP-PGH is the Emergency Room, which will also remain open. COVID-19 patients will have a separate Emergency Room. However, Director Legaspi said when testing becomes adequate and regular, there will be no more need for a separate Emergency Room because the COVID ward will be accepting only COVID-positive patients. “There are challenges, many challenges,” said Director Legaspi. These include the lack of Personal Protective Equipment (PPEs) and testing kits. However, UP-PGH is preparing itself to handle a number of patients up to 10 times greater than the expected number. “With the help of the private sector, donors, and the DOH, we are hoping that before we formally open our doors to COVID-19 patients, we will be ready to take care of these patients for even as long as a month… UP has accepted this challenge and we will face up the difficulties together and hopefully be a part of the solution of the DOH to this problem,” Director Legaspi said. (co-author Fred Dabu, UP MPRO) |
https://up.edu.ph/the-bayanihan-spirit-burns-bright-in-the-university-of-the-philippines/ | The bayanihan spirit burns bright in the University of the Philippines – University of the Philippines | The bayanihan spirit burns bright in the University of the Philippines The bayanihan spirit burns bright in the University of the Philippines March 26, 2020 | Written by UP Media and Public Relations Office No task is too big nor too small in UP’s fight against COVID-19. This is the rallying spirit behind the various UP bayanihan efforts that range from science and technology to humanitarian efforts, leading the way in social responsibility for its students and staff. Responding quickly to the developing crisis, UP scientists, led by Dr. Raul V. Destura, went ahead and developed the diagnostic COVID-19 test kit, GenAmplify COVID-19 rRT-PCR Detection Kit. But this initiative by UP Diliman’s Philippine Genome Center (PGC) and the UP Manila-National Institute of Health (UPM-NIH), funded by the Department of Science and Technology-Philippine Council for Health Research and Development (DOST-PCHRD), is only one of many. Recently, the UP Administration accepted the challenge of making the UP Philippine General Hospital (UP-PGH) one of the three referral centers for COVID-19 patients in the National Capital Region. This means that UP-PGH will have a COVID-19 ward, located far from the hospital’s more than 400 other, non-COVID-19 patients.UP-PGH is preparing itself to handle a number of patients up to 10 times greater than the expected number.True to the UP spirit of honor and excellence, over 100 interns at UP-PGH volunteered to go back on-duty to help the patients and the remaining healthcare workers in the hospital. The frontline personnel at UP Manila’s Philippine General Hospital will soon be joined by faculty, staff, and students of the UP Diliman College of Science (UPD-CS), who will undergo training and accreditation at the Research Institute for Tropical Medicine (RITM)before being deployed to the various testing centers. Meanwhile,the UP Diliman College of Engineering (UPD-CoE) and the UP Cebu’s FabLab (under the College of Communication, Arts and Design) are both working on mass-producing face shield frames for the Personal Protective Equipment of the frontliners. The UP Cebu FabLab is also designing a bodysuit prototype for the PPE. Moreover, the UPD-CoE and UPD-CS are currently developing disease transmission modeling and a more cost-effective adult ventilator to aid the breathing of COVID+ patients. In Southern Philippines, UP PGC Mindanao director Dr. Lyre Anni Murao is proposing the setting up of a laboratory that can give free testing for COVID-19 in the Davao Region to supplement the ongoing tests in the Southern Philippines Medical Center (SPMC). SPMC is currently the only medical facility in Mindanao recognized as a subnational reference laboratory that can test for COVID-19. The proposed lab will be made from two container vans—the easiest way to set up the facility—and equipped with a real-time polymerase chain reaction or PCR detection system and other equipment. Apart from rallying its science and technology, the University is also taking the lead in online education and humanitarian practices and programs. Prior to the enhanced community quarantine, UP led the initiative to shift to virtual classrooms. UP was also the first among educational institutions that opted to suspend online classrooms as this would create the need for some students to go to computer rental shops. As directed by the UP System leadership, constituent units were among the first higher education institutions to process and release in advance the salaries of its faculty and staff, including contractual personnel, to help them during the quarantine period. UP President Danilo Concepcion, UP Manila Chancellor Carmencita Padilla, and UP Philippine General Hospital Director Gerardo Legaspi are also spearheading the establishment of a UP PGH Bayanihan Na! COVID-19 Operations Center to formalize the system and structure that will facilitate the University’s reception of support for its frontline workers. Furthermore,the UP community continues to undertake various initiatives to address social problems that have arisen because of the enhanced community quarantine. For example, the UP Vanguard has stepped forward to assist indigent students stranded in the Diliman and Los Baños campuses by giving them and the dorm staff free brunch and dinners, a laundry facility, and a cash allowance. The constituent units’ Office of Student Affairs have also been coordinating with other groups to deliver various forms of assistance for the stranded students in the various UP campuses. *Featured image courtesy of Tulong Kabataan UPM Facebook page |
https://up.edu.ph/up-pgh-to-continue-treating-non-covid-19-patients-even-as-a-covid-19-referral-center/ | UP-PGH to continue treating non-COVID-19 patients even as a COVID-19 referral center – University of the Philippines | UP-PGH to continue treating non-COVID-19 patients even as a COVID-19 referral center UP-PGH to continue treating non-COVID-19 patients even as a COVID-19 referral center March 26, 2020 | Written by Celeste Ann Castillo Llaneta UP-Philippine General Hospital, a unit under UP Manila. Source: UP PGH Child Protection Unit website The University of the Philippines-Philippine General Hospital (UP-PGH) will continue serving non-COVID-19 patients even while operating as a COVID-19 referral center as designated by the Department of Health (DOH). “Uulitin ko po, hindi po exclusively COVID hospital ang UP-PGH. [I repeat, UP-PGH is not an exclusively COVID hospital],” Director Legaspi stressed during a DOH virtual press conference on March 23. Addressing concerns about the Cancer Institute, Director Legaspi said that the Institute will remain open and will continue to provide patients with services, including radiotherapy. The Emergency Room, another example of an essential service of UP-PGH, will also remain open. COVID-19 patients will have a separate Emergency Room. UP-PGH is the biggest modern government tertiary hospital and referral center in the Philippines, with 19 clinical departments and attached units that offer excellent facilities for comprehensive care for Filipinos seeking specialty and subspecialty care. The hospital currently has over 400 patients who are being treated for conditions other than the viral disease currently spreading across the globe. In his recent message to the administration and staff of UP-PGH, UP President Danilo L. Concepcion also stated that UP-PGH agreed to become a COVID referral hospital on the condition that it “may continue to serve other patients with other ailments, and that the COVID Wing be exclusive and segregated from the rest of the hospital, with its own ER.” President Concepcion also said in his message that UP and UP-PGH agreed to the DOH’s request for the hospital to become a COVID referral center “on the condition that the DOH will give us additional medical personnel for the Wing and that all its needs, e.g. PPEs (personal protective equipment), will be provided. If these conditions are not met, we shall restrict admission of cases to keep them at a safe and manageable level.” Additionally, the UP president assured UP-PGH that the University will undertake measures to protect and care for all hospital personnel, such as: securing enough PPEs and instituting proper Infectious Control Measures in the hospital; ensuring a strict one-week tour of duty followed by a two-week period of quarantine; arranging for free lodging and accommodation as well as transport for all UP-PGH healthcare workers during the crisis; providing adequate nutrition and physical and psychosocial support, especially to frontliners and those in the clinical areas; and ensuring full support from the DOH and the national government as well as partner private hospitals for the augmentation of UP-PGH’s manpower, technical, technological, and financial needs. President Concepcion also emphasized that only UP-PGH personnel and staff who are fit will be allowed to volunteer and join the Ward. UP-PGH has requested a week to prepare before beginning operations as a COVID-19 referral center. It is one of the three COVID-19 referral centers in the National Capital Region (NCR) designated by the DOH, the other two being the Dr. Jose M. Rodriguez Memorial Hospital in Caloocan City and the Lung Center of the Philippines in Quezon City. *Featured image courtesy of UP PGH Child Protection Unit website |
https://up.edu.ph/free-online-biosafety-training-for-laboratorians-who-will-be-handling-sars-cov-2/ | Free Online Biosafety Training for Laboratorians who will be handling SARS-CoV-2 – University of the Philippines | Free Online Biosafety Training for Laboratorians who will be handling SARS-CoV-2 Free Online Biosafety Training for Laboratorians who will be handling SARS-CoV-2 March 27, 2020 | Posted by UP Media and Public Relations Office The National Training Center for Biosafety and Biosecurity (NTCBB) of the National Institutes of Health (NIH), UP Manila is offering a free Online Biosafety Training for Laboratorians who will be handling SARS-CoV-2 on March 30 – April 3, 2020. Lecture Topics (approximately 1 1/2 hours per lecture) Introduction to Biorisk Management with Focus on Biosafety Risk Assessment Biocontainment Facilities Biosafety Cabinet Use Personal Protective Equipment Disinfection, Sterilization, and Decontamination Waste Management of Biological Materials Mode of Teaching Online and distance education modes will be used. Distance teaching will be used by providing relevant materials, including the pre-recorded lectures, handouts, book chapters, journals, that are essential to the Covid-19 response. Further, discussion forums and quizzes will be utilized to evaluate the participants formatively and summatively. Online teaching will be utilized for the open forum (April 1 and 2 (2 – 4 PM PST) Live via Zoom, choose one only) Registration: https://tinyurl.com/ntcbb-online. For more information, please contact ntcbb.upm@up.edu.ph. About the National Training Center for Biosafety and Biosecurity, National Institutes of Health, UP Manila The National Training Center for Biosafety and Biosecurity (NTCBB) was created on February 22, 2018 by the UP Board of Regents as the national training center for training and practice of the principles of biosafety and biosecurity among research, academic and healthcare institutions in the Philippines and the region. Its mission is to create a culture of biosafety and biosecurity in all laboratories working on biological hazards. Specifically, the Center envisions to be a source of relevant information and expertise related to the practice of biosafety and biosecurity in the Philippines, to provide the capacity for training for biosafety and biosecurity practitioners in the Philippines, and to be the focal training center in the country that will link with counterpart organizations globally. The programs, projects, and events of NTCBB were developed and implemented in line with the center’s major functions of advocacy and leadership, training and awareness, development of applicable biosafety standards tailored to the capacity of the country, generation of best practices and standards in laboratory biosafety and biosecurity, and creation of mechanisms for both degree (in partnership with a degree granting college) and non-degree programs that will enhance the professional practice of biosafety and biosecurity in the Philippines. The Advanced Biorisk Officers Training & Certification Program is the flagship program of NTCBB. For the past 10 years, this 6-weeks advanced certification program has produced 120 certified biosafety officers all over the country. For more information visit www.ntcbb.com.ph. |
https://up.edu.ph/sos-for-stranded-students/ | SOS for stranded students – University of the Philippines | SOS for stranded students SOS for stranded students March 27, 2020 | Written by Arlyn VCD Palisoc Romualdo UPLB students stranded in dorms are provided food to eat through donations from sectors of the UPLB community. Photos by the UPLB Community Affairs. More in their Facebook photo album. Donations and other forms of assistance continue to pour in for UP students stranded in campus and off-campus housing. Food, hygiene needs, and even transport going home are being facilitated by University offices and concerned groups and organizations. Members of the UP community across its constituent universities—alumni, students, faculty, administration, and staff—as well as private individuals, businesses, government units, and the armed forces have been pitching in to help. In UP Diliman (UPD), the administration has called for donations and volunteers. The University Food Service remains in operation to prepare meals for dormitory residents on campus and donations of ingredients are being received. UPD psychosocial services are still being provided through PsycServ. The mode of counseling has been shifted from face-to-face to online. The UPD University Student Council (USC), meanwhile, launched IskoOps: COVID-19 to help not only the more than 250 students, but also the vendors and jeepney drivers affected by the enhanced community quarantine. UPLB’s Oplan Hatid sends UP students safely back home to their families. Photo from the UP Los Baños Facebook page. Oplan Kawingan and Oplan Hatid were initiated in UP Los Baños (UPLB). There are 517 students in University-administered dormitories, 106 in UPLB partner institution housing facilities on campus, and more than 900 who live off-campus. UPLB needs at least P1.9 million per week to provide three meals per day to all of its stranded students. Oplan Kawingan is a food drive from the consolidated effort of UPLB, Every Nation Campus, Serve the People Brigade Task Force Community Unit Response, Chelsea’s, volunteers, and independent contractors, with support from Barangay Batong Malake. The UPLB Dairy Training and Research Institute delivered and has committed to deliver milk and white cheese to the campus dorms twice a week. The Institute of Plant Breeding has also provided produce to the dorm residents. Those stranded continue to be the beneficiaries of alumni as well as organizations like the UPLB USC, UPLB All UP Academic Employees Union, Bounty Agro Ventures Inc., and Art Relief Mobile Kitchen, among others. The call of those who wanted to go home was also heeded through Oplan Hatid. As of March 23, 94 students have been reunited with their families through the initiative of UPLB, UP Rural High School Alumni Group, and the Armed Forces of the Philippines Second Battalion. Hygiene kits and other essentials have also been received and the University continues to provide stable internet connectivity so students can remain in contact with their families and relatives. UPV students stranded in dorms make excellent use of their time by making improvised face shields. Photo by Joyce Ann Clavecillas, ABS-CBN News, shared on the UPV University Student Council FB page. UP Danay, a play on the Ilonggo word “updanay,” which means coming together or fellowship, is the UP Visayas (UPV) Community Donation Drive. UPV dormers have received donations from alumni, facilitated by I am UPHi. The UP Iloilo College (UPV’s former name and status) Class of 1961 has also given assistance. In return, the UPV stranded have decided to pay it forward. Mobilized by the UPV USC, they have been making improvised face shields for distribution to health facilities nearby. They have created around 1,500 face shields from March 18 to 20. In a UPV bulletin released on March 20, the administration will be facilitating the transport of Panay-based UP students so they can go home. Protocols for implementation are currently being studied. UP Baguio’s Task Force “Out of Baguio” assists students and faculty who are stranded in Baguio and would like to go home. Photo from UP Baguio’s official Facebook page. In UP Mindanao (UPMin), the Office of Student Affairs (OSA) has been spearheading the donation drive for its dorm residents. UPMin faculty, students and student organizations, alumni, and friends of UP have provided needed assistance. OSA’s Health Services and Student Housing units have also remained on duty. UP Baguio (UPB) has also distributed what they referred to as “care packs” to its dormers and students living outside the campus. Faculty members have volunteered to distribute these. Donations are facilitated by the UPB Ugnayan ng Pahinungod. Transportation for those who want to leave Baguio and return home are being facilitated by the UPB administration, subject to the protocols of the local and national government during the enhanced community quarantine period. Photo from the UP Mindanao Office of Student Affairs Facebook page. All in all, the various UP constituent units have been demonstrating concern and compassion for the UP students and other sectors who have been most impacted by the enhanced community quarantine, in keeping with the bayanihan spirit of the UP community. If you would like to give a donation to help support our UP student-dormers and the other members of our UP community during this difficult time, please consider donating to Give to UP: UP Fights COVID-19! *Featured image courtesy of Gulay Lang PH Facebook page |
https://up.edu.ph/announcement-on-the-release-of-upcat-2020-results/ | Announcement on the release of UPCAT 2020 results – University of the Philippines | Announcement on the release of UPCAT 2020 results Announcement on the release of UPCAT 2020 results March 28, 2020 | Posted by UP Media and Public Relations Office The University of the Philippines Office of Admissions is postponing the release of the UP College Admissions Test (UPCAT) 2020 results, which was originally scheduled on 30 March 2020. Please wait for further announcement. The University of the Philippines has always been committed to ensuring the integrity and timely release of the UPCAT results. However, its decision to postpone the release of the results is prompted by two considerations: 1) the reality that the UPCAT applicants will have different levels of access to online results in light of the Enhanced Community Quarantine; and 2) the need to suspend UPCAT processing after 16 March 2020 in consideration of the welfare of the large team of employees working on the pre-release validation of UPCAT results—who live in various locations within and at the outskirts of Metro Manila. Thank you for your kind understanding. |
https://up.edu.ph/up-personnel-to-receive-emergency-allowance/ | UP personnel to receive emergency allowance – University of the Philippines | UP personnel to receive emergency allowance UP personnel to receive emergency allowance March 28, 2020 | Posted by UP Media and Public Relations Office The University of the Philippines Administration has announced the release of an Emergency Allowance amounting to P5,000.00 each for all UP faculty and Professors Emeriti who are in active service as of March 17, 2020; research, extension and professional staff (REPS); administrative staff, whether regular, permanent, temporary, UP contractual/casual or substitute; and Contract of Service (COS) and Job Order (JO) workers who are rendering full-time service. The release of the Emergency Allowance was announced in a memorandum from UP Executive Vice-President Teodoro J. Herbosa, dated March 27, 2020. The Emergency Allowance will be sourced from the UPSA Reprogrammed Funds from prior years’ unexpended balances, and payment will be made not earlier than April 03, 2020. This additional measure is meant to provide immediate economic relief to UP personnel during this period of enhanced community quarantine, which was declared first in Luzon, and which set precedence for similar declarations across local government units in Visayas and Mindanao. |
https://up.edu.ph/video-how-the-up-developed-covid-19-test-kits-aid-hospital-work/ | [Video] How the UP-developed COVID-19 test kits aid hospital work – University of the Philippines | [Video] How the UP-developed COVID-19 test kits aid hospital work [Video] How the UP-developed COVID-19 test kits aid hospital work April 1, 2020 | Written by KIM G Quilinguing Video recorded and edited by KIM Quilinguing, UP Media and Public Relations Office. Test kits are essential for rationalization in hospital work. This is what University of the Philippines-Philippine General Hospital (UP-PGH) Director, Dr. Gerardo Legaspi said in a press conference on March 12. This, he said, allows them to provide their patients proper advice when they consult them about their health. Talking about the COVID-19 test kit developed by the UP Manila National Institutes of Health and the Philippine Genome Center, Legaspi said it would help in identifying which patients have contracted the virus. He also expressed faith in the quality of the kit, as it was made by UP scientists with safety and efficiency in mind. Dispelling misconceptions, Legaspi said the kit is merely for diagnosis and not treatment. It is not a drug against COVID-19. If people also want to fight against the virus, he added, one can start by considering treatment at home by strengthening one’s immune system. Recently, Dr. Legaspi announced online, the designation of the UP-PGH as a COVID-19 referral center by the Department of Health. With this, the Hospital designated a portion of its facilities, undertook the necessary preparations and rallied its personnel to prepare for its role in fighting the disease. [Related: UP-PGH begins operating as COVID-19 referral center] On March 30, the UP-PGH also launched Bayanihan Na! COVID-19 Operations Center, a contact hub where the public may call for information regarding the virus and the disease. Experts from the university will provide assistance for queries on COVID-related medical concerns, and even ways to volunteer and donate to UP-PGH. Interested parties may call the center via 155-200. [Related: Bayanihan Na! UP-PGH launches COVID-19 Ops Center] On the same day, Department of Science and Technology (DOST) Secretary Fortunato dela Peña announced on Facebook how the locally-produced test kit was nearing testing completion and would be deployed to different hospitals in the country. An initial batch of 120,000 test kits will be produced. For more information on the UP-developed COVID-19 test kits, please visit the COVID-19 UPdates. |
https://up.edu.ph/up-pgh-begins-operating-as-covid-19-referral-center/ | UP-PGH begins operating as COVID-19 referral center – University of the Philippines | UP-PGH begins operating as COVID-19 referral center UP-PGH begins operating as COVID-19 referral center April 1, 2020 | Written by Celeste Ann Castillo Llaneta The University of the Philippines-Philippine General Hospital. Source: Philippine General Hospital Facebook Page. Preparations have been completed, and on March 30, the University of the Philippines-Philippine General Hospital (UP-PGH) begins operations as a COVID-19 referral center. According to UP-PGH director Dr. Gerardo “Gap” Legaspi, readying the UP-PGH to accept COVID-19-positive patients was a joint effort by the University of the Philippines, the public sector through the Department of Health (DOH) and with the help of DOH-retained hospitals, and the private sector, including the construction industry and St. Luke’s Medical Center. Speaking during the official launch of the UP-PGH Bayanihan Na! COVID-19 Operations Center on March 30 from the Nurses Home, PGH Compound in UP Manila, Director Legaspi gave a brief report on the preparations undertaken by the hospital, which began on March 23. [Watch the livestream here] UP-PGH director Dr. Gerardo “Gap” Legaspi. Screenshot from the Launch of UP-PGH COVID-19 Bayanihan Operations Center. “Sa isang linggo po ay na-convert ang anim na bahagi ng ospital para tumanggap ng mga pasyenteng COVID. [In one week, we converted six sections of the hospital to ready them to receive COVID patients],” Director Legaspi said during his message to the UP community and the public. Partners in the private sector He thanked their partners in the private sector who helped with the daunting task of retrofitting two wards in the UP-PGH into a facility able to handle COVID-19 patients. The retrofitting of the wards was completed in record time by the DM Consunji, Inc. (DMCI), with the help of Architect Dan Lichauco, founding partner and principal architect of Manila-based Archion Architects. An article published by the Philippine Star quotes a statement by DMCI president and chief executive officer Jorge Consunji: “We thank our workers who rose to the challenge of delivering this project on time and in accordance with social distancing and sanitation protocols. We also commend the management of the UP-PGH, architect Dan Lichauco and Bloomberry Foundation for supporting our workers.” Director Legaspi also reiterated that an initial 130 beds with ICU units have been dedicated for COVID-positive patients “para po mas maganda at organisadong-organisado ang paggagamot ng mga COVID-19 patients, at pinaka-importante po, mas safe sa ating mga health workers [so that treatment of COVID-19 patients will be effective and organized and, most importantly, our health workers will remain safe.]” With that, the first COVID-19 ward in the UP-PGH has been launched and will gradually be occupied by COVID-19-positive patients. The ward, Director Legaspi added, also houses new electric beds, which are more comfortable for the patients and easier for the health workers to handle. He thanked St. Luke’s Medical Center and its Board of Directors for transferring 48 of these electric beds to the UP-PGH. 48 Hillrom beds were donated by St. Lukes Medical Center. Source: Philippine General Hospital Facebook Page Director Legaspi describes feeling overwhelmed by all the help that has come in from both the private and the public sector. Aside from the infrastructure retrofitting and the equipment, he also cited the financial and material support such as personal protective equipment (PPEs). Easing the burden on UP-PGH personnel He also thanked the volunteers, reporting that a personnel schedule good for three weeks has been drawn up. “Ang prinsipyo po nito ay hindi sila tuloy-tuloy na pagtatrabahuhin,” he said, “una nga dahil mahirap at mainit ang nakasuot ng PPE; pangalawa, dahil siyempre may takot ng konti dahil kakaiba ang mga pasyente; at pangatlo, ang psychological effect ng nasa area na ganito.” [The principle behind it is not to allow them to work continuously because, first of all, the PPEs are hot and uncomfortable to wear; second, because they are also dealing with anxiety about being around COVID-positive patients; and third, the psychological impact of being in an area like this.] Director Legaspi also reported that, to ease the burden on the UP-PGH’s personnel and to provide them sufficient comfort to rest in, Citystate Tower Hotel president D. Edgard A. Cabangon allowed the UP-PGH personnel to use 200 beds of the Citystate Tower Hotel on AA Mabini Street, Ermita. “Ang ating pong mga manpower services ay atin ding sinisiguro na kumportable,” said Legaspi. “Marami pong hotel na nag-donate din ng kanilang mga kwarto, at ang pagkain po nila ay organisado pareho ng mga pribado at ng ating Dietary Service headed by Ms. Emelita Lavilla.” [We are also ensuring that our manpower services are also provided comfort. Many hotels have donated the use of their rooms, and food for our personnel is being organized by both private entities and our UP-PGH Dietary Service headed by Ms. Emelita Lavilla.] PGH: People Giving Hope “Sagana po ang resources na ating mga natatanggap. Papantayan po ito ng UP-PGH ng tapat na serbisyo sa ating mga pasyente. [UP-PGH has received a bounty of resources. We will match that with our dedicated service to our patients]” Director Legaspi vowed. Most of all, Director Legaspi thanked the UP-PGH personnel—the doctors, nurses, paramedical staff, field-care and janitorial services, and security services—for their dedication and courage in continuing to hold their posts and serve the people, no matter the circumstances. In his written message to the UP-PGH community, which was posted on the UP-PGH Facebook page on March 26, he called back to the same courage of the doctors, nurses and staff of the UP-PGH during World War II, when it became the only hospital that remained open during the war. “We have always responded, time and again, to the call of our countrymen when needed. This is that time again.” This sentiment was echoed in UP President Danilo L. Concepcion’s own message to the UP-PGH community, also published on March 26. “‘PGH’ has become synonymous with hope and caring, with compassion and commitment, even in the direst circumstances. I have no doubt that once again, the brave men and women of UP-PGH will rise to the occasion and respond to their country’s call with steadfast courage, abounding talent, and exemplary professionalism.” |
https://up.edu.ph/upd-college-of-science-responds-to-covid-19/ | UPD College of Science responds to COVID-19 – University of the Philippines | UPD College of Science responds to COVID-19 UPD College of Science responds to COVID-19 April 1, 2020 | Written by Jo. Florendo B. Lontoc UP Diliman College of Science Building. Photo by Nadine Lim, UP Photography Society. The UP Diliman College of Science (UPD-CS) expressed its appreciation for its constituents who are actively helping the country respond to the COVID-19 pandemic. In a Facebook post, the College enumerated their efforts, which include lending equipment for COVID-19 testing, producing personal protective equipment (PPEs), donating supplies for frontliners and public hospitals, modeling disease transmission and ventilator production, and deploying personnel to testing centers. “In this time of crisis, we are all called to help our fellow countrymen. The College is lucky to have students, faculty, researchers and staff who are willing to lend a hand in any way they can,” the Facebook post dated March 23, time-stamped 6:47 PM, said. “All these efforts are being done because our standing mandate as UP scientists is to make science serve the people. We offer our expertise, services, and laboratories to the Filipino people in the hope of providing solutions to our current crisis,” CS Associate Dean Lillian Jennifer Rodriguez told the UP Media and Public Relations Office. Experienced personnel According to Rodriguez, the Institute of Biology (IB) and the National Institute of Molecular Biology and Biotechnology (NIMBB) of the College have been tapped by both public and private sectors for experienced personnel who can be trained to perform COVID-19 tests. “We are proud of our people who will be joining the frontline in the fight against this virus,” the College’s Facebook post read. It added that the personnel will be trained for accreditation by the Research Institute for Tropical Medicine (RITM) of the Department of Health (DOH) before deployment to different testing centers. “We are asking the UP Diliman community and the Filipino people to please pray for their safety,” the College said. Meanwhile, Dr. AC Yago and Dr. Emily Castriciones of the Institute of Chemistry (IC) have been tapped by the Quezon City local government for advice on disinfection and cleaning strategies. Equipment for COVID-19 testing “The NIMBB, through Dr. Rey Garcia, and the Natural Sciences Research Institute (NSRI), through Dr. Cora de Ungria, have lent or will be lending their qPCR machines to satellite testing centers,” Rodriguez said. The machines are needed side by side with the test kits currently being used by the RITM. To ensure the quality of the tests, these qPCR machines are recalibrated by CS personnel upon transfer to the satellite testing centers, Rodriguez added. PPE and supplies At the National Institute of Physics(NIP), CS Dean Giovanni Tapang leads 3D printing of disposable face shields for donation to public hospitals. He is also trying out designs to facilitate the printing. “We also have Dr. Chelo Pascua and Dr. Cherry Ringor working with Dr. Mahar Lagmay and UP Resilience Institute (UPRI) on the 3D printing of face masks,” Tapang said. Laboratories of the IB, IC, NIMBB, NSRI, and Marine Science Institute (MSI) are also donating supplies needed by public hospitals and frontliners. These include surgical masks, gloves, and disinfectants such as alcohol and bleach. “We have donated a first batch of these supplies to the UP Health Service, a second batch to PGH [Philippine General Hospital],” Dr. Rodriguez reported. “We have a third batch that we will most likely give to either PGH or RITM.” MSI professor and former UP System vice president for academic affairs Dr. Gisela Concepcion also donated naso-oral sprays to PGH. Disease transmission modeling “When we first met with several experts of the College, our initial objective was to provide a disease transmission model to try to suggest the next best move to UP administration and the national government administration,” Rodriguez said. Dr. Aurelio delos Reyes of the Institute of Mathematics reported: “The Modeling and Applications group of the IM is currently working on modeling and applying optimal control theory. Estimation of basic reproduction number (R0) and flattening the curve through different simulations are simulated.” Modeling is also being done by NIP faculty and students led by Dr. Johnrob Bantang. Preliminary results have been communicated to Lagmay of the UPRI. “Of course, Dr. Mahar’s work in UPRI is another story altogether,” Tapang added. The CS dean is also involved in a modeling initiative for ventilation of public hospitals. Care and advice from experts The CS is making sure its own home is safe. “We are making sure that people from our College are following the guideline to stay at home by restricting access to the buildings from March 11, 2020 until April 14, 2020,” Rodriguez said. “Only people with an extraordinary need to go to Diliman, such as researchers maintaining live animals and cell cultures, are allowed entry into our buildings.” Rodriguez added that CS students in dormitories in and outside the campus and guards on duty are being provided food packs and toiletries. She offered an expert’s opinion on outbreaks such as COVID-19: “We biologists know that viruses like SARS-CoV-2 are abundant in nature. But if we continue invading animals’ natural environments or forcibly taking animals outside of nature, we only increase the risk of exposing ourselves to new strains or new types of viruses that we have never encountered before,” Rodriguez said. “In light of this crisis, my call as an ecologist is to leave Nature be. We have already taken too much from her.” |
https://up.edu.ph/upd-food-tech-students-produce-ginger-calamansi-concentrate-for-pgh-and-lung-center-frontliners/ | UPD food tech students produce ginger-calamansi concentrate for PGH and Lung Center frontliners – University of the Philippines | UPD food tech students produce ginger-calamansi concentrate for PGH and Lung Center frontliners UPD food tech students produce ginger-calamansi concentrate for PGH and Lung Center frontliners April 2, 2020 | Written by UP Media and Public Relations Office Frontliners from the UP-Philippine General Hospital receive bottles of Lucal drink. Photo courtesy of Meghan Sevilla. Meghan Sevilla and Sofia Tagle, 4th year BS Food Technology students from UP Diliman’s College of Home Economics (CHE), formulated and produced a ginger-calamansi concentrate called Lucal. Lucal can easily be consumed when mixed with warm or cold water. Ginger and calamansi are Lucal’s main ingredients. Photo courtesy of Meghan Sevilla. They were able to achieve this through the guidance of UP Food Science and Nutrition Professors Abigail Rustia, Lotis Francisco, Blanca Villarino, and Bee Dumelod, who checked on their process flow, gave advice, and connected them with raw material suppliers. Meghan and Sofia’s families also supported them. Vanessa Tangcueco, another BS Food Technology student and a good friend of Meghan and Sofia, also created an infographic for Lucal. Infographic by UPD BS Food Technology student, Vanessa Tangcueco. Because of the team’s collective efforts, they were able to produce 40 bottles of Lucal, which is equivalent to 466 glasses of the vitamin C-enriched drink. These bottles were distributed to the Philippine General Hospital and Lung Center of the Philippines. Currently, they are working on a second batch of Lucal, to be distributed to frontliners of other hospitals. Frontliners from the UP-Philippine General Hospital enjoy their Lucal drink. Photo courtesy of Meghan Sevilla. Meghan Sevilla and Sofia Tagle, 4th year BS Food Technology students from UP Diliman’s College of Home Economics, formulated the ginger-calamansi concentrate Lucal. Photo courtesy of Meghan Sevilla. |
https://up.edu.ph/up-pgc-visayas-satellite-facility-shares-equipment-for-covid-19-testing/ | UP PGC-Visayas Satellite Facility shares equipment for COVID-19 testing – University of the Philippines | UP PGC-Visayas Satellite Facility shares equipment for COVID-19 testing UP PGC-Visayas Satellite Facility shares equipment for COVID-19 testing April 6, 2020 | Written by Arlyn VCD Palisoc Romualdo A medical staff at Western Visayas Medical Center inspects the reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) machine and its accompanying laptop lent by the UP Philippine Genome Center-Visayas Satellite Facility. Photo from UP Visayas Information and Publication Office. It has not been formally launched, but it has already shared its resources in a big way. The UP Philippine Genome Center-Visayas Satellite Facility (PGC-VSF) has lent its reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) machine to the Western Visayas Medical Center (WVMC) to strengthen the hospital’s capability in testing patients for COVID-19. PGC-VSF also lent its digital dry bath and provided nuclease-free water to WVMC to enable the use of a different set of testing kits the hospital has received. The PCR device from the UP Philippine Genome Center-Visayas Satellite Facility already in place at the Western Visayas Medical Center testing laboratory. Photo from UP Visayas Information and Publication Office. The initiative was made possible with the help of the local and provincial governments, the Department of Health-Region VI, UP alumni, and University partners. PGC-VSF, which is scheduled to be inaugurated on April 28, is the expansion of the PGC in the Visayas, following the launch of its Mindanao Satellite Facility last year in UP Mindanao, Davao City. It is strongly supported by UP Visayas (UPV) and is located at the Regional Research Center in UPV’s main campus in Miagao, Iloilo. PGC-VSF’s program director is Dr. Victor Marco Emmanuel Ferriols of the UPV College of Fisheries and Ocean Sciences Institute of Aquaculture. UP established the PGC in 2009 to harness the use of genomics research for applications in health and medicine, food security, environment and biodiversity, ethnicity, and bioinformatics, among others. (With report from UPV-Information and Publications Office) Related: UPV PGC beefs up WVMC CoViD testing center |
https://up.edu.ph/up-tacloban-produces-alcohol-based-hand-rub-for-frontliners/ | UP Tacloban produces alcohol-based hand rub for frontliners – University of the Philippines | UP Tacloban produces alcohol-based hand rub for frontliners UP Tacloban produces alcohol-based hand rub for frontliners April 6, 2020 | Posted by UP Media and Public Relations Office UPV Tacloban College’s URUGUP has produced 75% isopropyl alcohol and 80% ethyl alcohol as donation to healthcare facilities and other frontline service providers in Eastern Visayas. Photo from UP Visayas Tacloban College Facebook page. Through its URUGUP public service initiative, UPV Tacloban College has produced an alcohol-based hand rub following World Health Organization standards for donation to healthcare facilities and other frontline service providers in Eastern Visayas. On 3 April, 20,000 mL, 5,000 mL, and 2,500 mL of the URUGUP 80% ethyl alcohol hand rub were donated to the Eastern Visayas Regional Medical Center (EVRMC), Maasin City Hospital, and Abuyog District Hospital, respectively. The UPVTC Security Office received two 300 mL bottles of 75% isopropyl alcohol and 1 gallon (about 3300 mL) of 80% ethyl alcohol hand rub on the same day. Photo from UP Visayas Tacloban College Facebook page. On 4 April, 1500 mL of the URUGUP 75% isopropyl hand rub was turned over to personnel manning the entry and exit points of Tacloban City at San Juanico Bridge, Marasbaras, and Diversion Road near Imelda Village. Photo from UP Visayas Tacloban College Facebook page. The local production of the alcohol-based antiseptic hand rub by a team of Chemistry faculty, researchers, and a volunteer alumnus is part of UP Tacloban’s URUGUP public service program in response to the COVID-19 public health crisis. The first batch was produced with funding support from the UP Tacloban and UP Visayas administration through the UP, Magbubunga Tayo!initiative, a collaboration with the UPV Foundation, Inc. With support from generous donors, the project team and the UPVTC community hope to produce more and help meet the need for disinfectants and hand sanitizers in healthcare and other frontline facilities in Region 8. Mr. Rigelio G. Pagpaguitan receives the URUGUP hand rub for Maasin City Hospital. Photo from UP Visayas Tacloban College Facebook page. The UPVTC security personnel with their URUGUP hand rubs. Photo from UP Visayas Tacloban College Facebook page. (This article was originally published on the UP Visayas Tacloban College Facebook Page.) |
https://up.edu.ph/up-cmc-battles-covid-19-infodemic-through-fact-checking/ | UP CMC battles COVID-19 ‘infodemic’ through fact-checking – University of the Philippines | UP CMC battles COVID-19 ‘infodemic’ through fact-checking UP CMC battles COVID-19 ‘infodemic’ through fact-checking April 17, 2020 | Posted by UP Media and Public Relations Office FactRakers is a fact-checking initiative of journalism majors at the University of the Philippines Diliman. The UP College of Mass Communication Journalism Department is joining the fight against COVID-19 through fact-checking. Initiated and supervised by Associate Professor Yvonne T. Chua of the Journalism Department, FactRakers is battling the infodemic by actively verifying COVID-related information. Fact-checked information can be accessed through its website and social media accounts on Facebook and Twitter. They can also be retrieved through Google’s Fact Check Explorer, a tool to easily browse its database of fact checks. Since the beginning of the Enhanced Community Quarantine, FactRakers has produced 23 fact checks on false or misleading claims circulating amid the pandemic among Filipinos on social media platforms and mobile community chats. Panelo’s anti-poor quote concocted—FactRakers. Read fact check here. The initiative began last year as part of the Journalism Seminar course on fact-checking (Journ 196). It won the special projects category of the Philippine Journalism Research Conference in early March. The World Health Organization defines an infodemic an “over-abundance of information, some accurate and some not that makes it hard for people to find trustworthy sources and reliable guidance when they need it.” Infodemic poses a serious problem for public health because people are bombarded with erroneous or confusing messages on actions to take to protect themselves and others and mitigate the impact of a disease such as COVID-19. #UPFightsCOVID-19 #UPBayanihanNa |
https://up.edu.ph/up-students-given-options-in-complying-with-course-reqs-safety-nets-against-failing-grades/ | UP students given options in complying with course reqs, safety nets against failing grades – University of the Philippines | UP students given options in complying with course reqs, safety nets against failing grades UP students given options in complying with course reqs, safety nets against failing grades April 17, 2020 | Written by Celeste Ann Castillo Llaneta In light of the global pandemic and enhanced community quarantine declared across most of the country, the University of the Philippines has decided to end the second semester of AY 2019-2020 on April 30, 2020, instead of the original May 23, 2020. This decision was made during a meeting of the UP Board of Regents (UP BOR) held on April 16, following deliberations and revisions of a proposal submitted by the President’s Advisory Council, a committee composed of the UP System vice presidents and the chancellors of all UP constituent units. The details of the final decision and corresponding guidelines will be issued in an official memo that will soon be made available and cascaded through proper channels. With this decision, UP students in all constituent units are given two options. They can choose to complete their course requirements until May 31, 2021, and upon compliance shall be given a numeric grade under a “deferred grade” scheme. Instead of receiving a failing grade, students who find themselves unable to complete their course requirements by May 2021 will be considered dropped and will have to retake the course in the succeeding semester. However, students whose circumstances allow them to work on course requirements during quarantine, can choose to complete these requirements, following the adjusted syllabus and the deadlines set by their constituent university. They will then be given a numerical grade based on faculty assessment of their performance. Moreover, students who enrolled in a course that is a prerequisite to a higher course will be allowed to enroll in the latter for credit, despite the “deferred grade” for the prerequisite course. To help students catch up with their courses, departments, units and institutes shall offer bridging programs during the first semester of AY 2020-2021. Departments and faculty have been urged to prepare necessary course requirements that will allow them to assess academic performance, taking into consideration the crisis conditions the students are working in. These adjusted course requirements must be communicated to the students by May 1, 2020. For postgraduate students, their departments, units and institutions shall determine how best to proceed with the courses and how to assess students’ academic performances, in consultation with the students and in consideration of the current crisis situation. UP is also waiving academic rules as well as policies on scholastic standing and student financial assistance. Specifically, the deadlines for the dropping of subjects and for filing Leave of Absence for the second semester of AY 2019-2020 are lifted. As for the maximum residency rule, residence for this semester shall not be counted in the years of residence of a student. A student who incurred a grade of incomplete (INC) during the second semester of AY 2018-2019 shall be allowed to remove the INC until first semester AY 2020-2021. Similarly, a student who incurred a grade of 4.0 during the same period shall also be allowed to remove the 4.0 until first semester AY 2020-2021. Rules on scholastic standing (delinquency), including rules on warning, probation, dismissal and permanent disqualification, are suspended for the second semester AY 2019-2020. Policies on student financial assistance, which are tied to scholastic standing, are similarly suspended. The University will continue to explore alternative modes of instruction, requirements and assessment methods that are consistent with its mandate as national university, and with the principles of honor and excellence, all while taking into account the extreme conditions, unequal life circumstances, and high levels of anxiety, stress and suffering that UP faculty and students are enduring. |
https://up.edu.ph/call-for-blood-donations-red-cross-love-bus-goes-to-up-diliman-dorms/ | Call for blood donations: Red Cross ‘Love Bus’ goes to UP Diliman dorms – University of the Philippines | Call for blood donations: Red Cross ‘Love Bus’ goes to UP Diliman dorms Call for blood donations: Red Cross ‘Love Bus’ goes to UP Diliman dorms April 20, 2020 | Posted by UP Media and Public Relations Office Dahil sa COVID-19 at sa umiiral na enhanced community quarantine, maraming mga mass blood donation ang nakansela. Nahihirapan din ang mga walk-in donors dahil sa limitasyon sa public transportation, kahit na bukas ang ibang blood donation centers. Kaya’t ang Red Cross ang pupunta sa UP Diliman kasama ang kanilang “Love Bus”. Ang Love Bus ay paparada sa parking lot pinakamalapit sa mga dorm sang-ayon sa schedule na ito, mula 9:30 am hanggang 5:00 pm: April 20-21 : Sanggumay Residence Dorm (for Sanggumay and Kalayaan Dormers) April 22-23: Between Acacia Dorm and the Parish office (for Acacia, Ilang-Ilang and Ipil dormers) April 24/27: Kamagong and Centennial Dorms April 28 : Sampaguita Dorm For non-dormers who are interested to donate, please send a message to 0928 503 8628. Red Cross’ ‘Love Bus’ goes to UP Diliman dorms for blood donations. Atty. Ma. Gabriela Roldan-Concepcion donates blood through Red Cross’ ‘Love Bus’. |
https://up.edu.ph/up-baguio-produces-ethyl-alcohol/ | UP Baguio produces ethyl alcohol – University of the Philippines | UP Baguio produces ethyl alcohol UP Baguio produces ethyl alcohol April 20, 2020 | Written by Jo. Lontoc, UP Media and Public Relations Office A UP Baguio faculty member measures an ingredient in ethyl alcohol production for the campus and for public health care facilities in the locality. Photo by UP Baguio Office of Public Affairs A team from the UP Baguio College of Science (UPB-CS) is producing 70-percent ethyl alcohol in response to the COVID-19 pandemic, UPB announced through an official Facebook post on April 8, 2020. Using campus laboratories, the team composed of Chemistry professors Ofelia Giron and Reymark Ereje, CS administrative staff Joeran Valdez, and Biology alumni and research assistants Donna Castro, Jen Manglinong and Bea Palaganas produced almost 50 liters of the alcohol in the first two days. The project initially intended to produce alcohol for the University’s own need to disinfect personal protective equipment (PPE). UPB had composed Task Force PPE to produce these in efforts to help in the fight against the COVID-19 pandemic. The team produced 10 liters on the first day, April 7, 2020. To help address the need for disinfection solutions particularly of public health care facilities in the locality, it decided to produce more. On the second day, an additional 37 liters was produced. Three members of a UP Baguio team producing 70-percent ethyl alcohol present the finished product straight from the campus laboratories. |
https://up.edu.ph/dilg-endorsed-upou-mooc-begins-in-may/ | DILG-endorsed UPOU MOOC begins in May – University of the Philippines | DILG-endorsed UPOU MOOC begins in May DILG-endorsed UPOU MOOC begins in May April 20, 2020 | Written by Arlyn VCD Palisoc Romualdo Image from the UPOU Facebook page. Image from the UPOU website. Enrollment is ongoing for the UP Open University (UPOU) Master of Public Management (MPM) program’s massive open online course (MOOC) on interlocal cooperation. It is free and open to the public. The course was even endorsed by the Department of the Interior and Local Government (DILG) through Memorandum Circular No. 2020-069, signed and issued by DILG Secretary Eduardo Año on April 3. The memo encourages local government heads and officials to enroll and directs DILG regional directors as well as the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region of Muslim Mindanao Minister for Local Government to widely disseminate the memo. It is a redeveloped version of the PM 265 course that has now been packaged as a stand-alone MOOC by the Faculty of Management and Development Studies, to which the MPM belongs. It is an initiative that aims to help harness the capabilities of local governments in working together to accomplish common goals that will benefit the larger Philippine society. The mettle of local governments is being tested by the current COVID-19 pandemic, and this MOOC proves a timely opportunity for these units to beef up their knowledge stores and skill sets. The MOOC on Interlocal Cooperation is a four-module course, with each module consisting of three weeks. It is scheduled to begin on May 18 with Module 1: General Course on Interlocal Cooperation. The first module ends on June 5. Module 2: Legal Ingredients will be conducted from June 8 to 26. Module 3: Institutional Ingredients will be on June 29 to July 17. Module 4: Financial Ingredients will be on July to August 7. Enrollment for Modules 2 to 4 will be announced prior to their conduct. Original article published at https://www.upou.edu.ph/announcement/massive-open-online-course-mooc-on-interlocal-cooperation-ilc/. |
https://up.edu.ph/get-help-on-how-to-teach-learn-and-work-remotely/ | Get help on how to teach, learn, and work remotely – University of the Philippines | Get help on how to teach, learn, and work remotely Get help on how to teach, learn, and work remotely April 20, 2020 | Written by Arlyn VCD Palisoc Romualdo Physical or social distancing have been buzzwords since the COVID-19 pandemic broke out more than a month ago. Traditional classes have been suspended. Work has been reduced to skeleton forces and confined to industries of basic goods and services. Being the only virtual constituent university in the UP System, the UP Open University (UPOU) has more experience in physical distancing in education delivery. And as the leading open and distance e-learning (ODeL) institution in the country, its expertise has been widely acknowledged. Faced with the possibility of distance education complementing the usual classroom setup and continued work-from-home arrangements because of this pandemic, UPOU has put together a web page where people can read, watch, and listen to curated materials on teaching, learning, and working remotely. UPOU Networks is the repository of all UPOU-produced materials. UPOU MODeL is platform for all its massive open online courses. Open UP Connect is the official blog of UPOU, where faculty, staff, and students share their expertise and experiences. The UPOU YouTube channel has video lectures on various subjects. For its faculty members, UPOU has the Office of Academic Support and Instructional Services microsite, which aims to assist in the development of modules and in teaching in the ODeL environment. Whether or not remote teaching, learning, and working become the new normal because of COVID-19, UPOU is sharing its resources to help people prepare. Just in case. |
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