The Makati Science Vision, the official student publication of the Makati Science High School, through its news editor, Mark Robert Benson Baldo, published its first article in the Pearl (Prepare and Educate Aspiring Reporters for Leadership) World Youth News, an online international news service managed by secondary school students from around the world.
Baldo is one of the 29 out of 34 Makati Science High School fourth year students who passed the Pearl World Youth News Reporter Certification Course in International Journalism from December 17, 2007, to January 5, 2008 and who received recommendations from Ben Frumin of the Columbia University-Graduate School of Journalism (CU-GSJ) and certifications from Anindita Dutta Roy, International Education and Resource Network (iEARN)-United States of America (USA) Membership and Youth Media Programs director, both of New York, New York, USA.
A partnership of the iEARN and the Daniel Pearl Foundation, the Pearl World Youth News promotes ethics, integrity, and cross-cultural understanding in the spirit of Daniel Pearl, the Wall Street Journal reporter who was murdered by terrorists in Pakistan in 2002.
Philippine High School Launches International Sanitation Program
By Mark Robert Benson Baldo
MAKATI, PHILIPPINES – Students from a high school in the Philippines have helped launch a sanitation program meant to help them stay healthy and in school.
A pilot school for new sanitation initiatives, the Makati Science High School received sanitation kits for all of its students and a refilling center. The program was funded by a group of organizations led by CityNet, a network of Asia-Pacific municipalities that manages human settlement. The group also included the Philippines division of Unilever, the soap manufacturer.
"It is very important to address complicated environmental problems,” said the CityNet president, Hiroshi Nakada, during the launching of the City of Makati Sanitation Program for Schools. Nakada, the mayor of Yokohama in Japan, and Jejomar Cabauatan Binay, the mayor of Makati, cut a ceremonial ribbon on the Makati Science High School Sanitation Station Refilling Center on Nov 14, 2007. Fifty members of CityNet attended the ceremony, as did students and faculty.
According to Mayor Nakada, Mayor Binay was very aggressive in proposing that the international program be piloted in Makati. And he chose Makati Science for the program.
"It is really an honor that Makati Science was chosen to pilot this very important program," said Armand Joseph Aquino, a Makati Science student. "I agree that sanitation is an underlying problem in education. So, this project is really important to us, as students."
Makati Science students and teachers attended a series of hygiene and sanitation workshops in October. This included seminars on the importance of proper hand-washing techniques. Equipped with refilling hand sanitizer kiosks, the center promotes sustainable sanitation and solid waste management programs. Students refill their sanitation kits by exchanging recyclable materials, such as newspapers and polyethylene bottles.
Mildred Castillo, an official with the Makati Department of Environmental Services, said that improper hygiene and sanitation increases absenteeism and decreases cognitive development among students. She said the program begun in Makati will be duplicated worldwide.
Visit http://www.pearl.iearn.org/pearlnews/content/view/112/36/ to see Mark Robert Benson Baldo's article in the Pearl World Youth News
Thursday, May 8, 2008
THE MAKATI SCIENCE VISION PUBLISHES ITS FIRST ARTICLE IN PEARL WORLD YOUTH NEWS
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PEARL WORLD YOUTH NEWS
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