November-December Issue 2013

Page 1

FILIPINO

November-December 2013

Vol. XVII No. 5

THROUGH THE LENS

TAMBIDAS

www.feuadvocate.org

LITERARY

Sampaloc, Manila

Tams mobilize relief efforts

Several academic service offices, student councils and organizations pooled cash and in-kind donations for super-typhoon Yolanda survivors. According to Far Eastern University (FEU) Faculty Association Board Member Olive Paraiso, staff and administration collected together an estimate amount of 1 . 5 m i l l i o n p e s o s f r o m faculty members and employees’ salaries. “There are bracket of donations that professors can ask the alumni to deduct for you on which its proceeds will go to Yolanda [survivors],” she said. Paraiso added that the amounts gathered from the salaries will be doubled by the administration and that another 500,000 pesos will be donated as a product of a “tempered Christmas party.” “May Christmas party kami pero hindi kasing-garbo n’ung dati (We will have a Christmas party, but it will not be as extravagant as the previous ones). We will have savings because of a very tempered party. Another half million is also to be taken in there so most probably... all in all, it is

FEU textbooks go digital By Leonard I. Agustin

To make learning more convenient for students, Far Eastern University (FEU) administration has recently installed the new My eBooks feature in the FEU Student Portal. The new feature enables students to view and avail of electronic books (eBooks) in their accounts in the FEU Student Portal that can be accessed at http://www.feu. edu.ph. It is found along with My Grades and My Account tabs, among others. “I think it will make learning more convenient. New generation is very much attached to their phones... I think it is easier. It is less to carry,” FEU Bookstore Manager Jose Cabaltera said. “It will be easier for students, especially for those whose courses demand great money and effort on books,” AB Mass Communication junior Clarissa Alimot said. Cabaltera also said that this was done to be at par with countries that use eBooks as their sources for learning. “Textbooks going digital

Helping hands. FEU community reaches out to the super-typhoon ‘Yolanda’ survivors by collecting cash and inkind donations. (Photo by Jocas D. Lozada)

1.5 million [pesos],” Paraiso remarked. Meanwhile, as of the latest update of the Student D e v e l o p m e n t (S D ev) l ast November 21, the University had already garnered 163,894.15peso cash donation, aside from in-kind donations from students and alumni. FEU Central Student Organization (FEUCSO) and Tamaraw Volunteers (TamVol),

in coordination with student councils, also launched a project to contribute to the relief efforts of FEU. The said student groups spearheaded TAMBayani: OPLAN TUBIG which collected from students bottled water for the survivors of Yolanda. “For the survivors of typhoon Yolanda, we conducted a relief operation wherein we collected bottled waters kasi

New dean vows to raise Law’s standards

marami nang nagdo-donate ng mga foods, clothes, pero napapabayaan ‘yung water (because there are already lots of food and clothing being donated, but not much water),” FEUCSO Auditor Hurjae Lubag explained. “We have plotted another idea to make it more convenient to everyone. We even suggested calling it TAMBayani, since it is the student-initiated flagship project of FEU that aims to respond to the needs of our countrymen when disasters happen,” TamVol President Cristeta Ventura said. She added that they sent student volunteers around the campus to collect bottled water. In addition, SDev initiated “Skip a Meal, Save a Life” campaign which encouraged students to skip meals so they can donate money through coin banks placed in academic service offices. Student Discipline,

Digital learning. A student accesses her account to view ‘eBooks’, the newest feature of the FEU student portal. (Photo by Lyka R. Cabungcag)

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New man on post. Dean Melencio Sta. Maria is looking forward to the betterment of the Institute of Law. (Photo by Marione Paul G. Infantado)

Newly appointed Institute of Law (IL) Dean Melencio Sta. Maria eyes the consolidation of the University’s law program into one Juris Doctor program as well as the improvement of the Institute’s moot court system. “The FEU has a inquire improvement. Sta. Maria graduated very, very rich tradition. It has “Everybody should with Bachelor of Laws at the produced a chief justice of the contribute to the development, Ateneo de Manila School Supreme Court. We have to especially the professors, of Law and Master of Laws maintain it,” he said. especially the students, especially Degree in Banking Law at the Sta. Maria and the the administration, and especially Morin Center for Banking Law Board of Trustees are planning the members of the Board of Studies at Boston University to consolidate the Bachelor Trustees because they hold the School of Law. of Laws program offered at key,” he said. Law Professor Fretti FEU and the Juris Doctor The new dean added, Ganzon said she hopes IL and Master of Business “They must give full time support would be able to increase Administration dual-degree course to the Institute of Law.” its passing rate with the new offered jointly by FEU and De According to Sta. Maria, administration. La Salle University-Graduate the administration does not need “Even before the School of Business into one much improvement because it is new dean was appointed, Juris Doctor program. functioning well and efficiently. the school was already really “We will streamline He also said that he trying hard to increase the to a Juris Doctor where there plans to improve the moot court passing rate [in the bar] but, will be electives by the time system at IL by extending the of course, it is not a simple one reaches second semester number of hours students devote endeavor... It is not an easy of the third year, a lot more in debate. task,” she said. electives of fourth year, and a “We have to give thesis requirement for all law students an atmosphere where students,” he explained. they could feel in themselves that -Mary Grace B. Claveria Sta. Maria said he they are improving. If not, we have With reports from has seen certain things that failed as an institution,” he said. Norelyn M. Villaruel

is just a way with the future. Like South Korea, everybody has their tablet and they have their books on their tablet, even in the US (United States),” he explained. Though the eBooks will be more convenient to use, it has the same price as the printed ones. “Textbooks in the Philippines are very low compared to the international standards. We found that publishers can’t go lower. And there’s a fee for protecting the files. So that’s the technology fee that goes on top,” Cabaltera furthered. FEU Bookstore, together with some publishers, put up free eBooks to “attract” students. “We have free books in the e-books store portal I’ve asked them to put those free books to try the system out, to see how it works and to see how they like it,” Cabaltera said.

FEU aligns 87 full-time profs based on degrees By Janice C. Rodriguez and Jastine Joshua G. Reyes

Two institutes at Far Eastern University (FEU) have started “aligning” professors based on their respective postgraduate degrees to comply with a Commission on Higher Education (CHEd) memorandum. Eighty-seven regular full-time professors at Institute of Arts and Sciences (IAS) were already transferred to Institute of Education (IE) this semester as their respective degrees were more fit on the latter institute. Alignment of professors is already based on the professors’ highest educational degree. This is based on CHEd Memorandum Order No. 40, series of 2010 which states that the minimum requirement to be a college professor is a master’s degree. “Whatever the master’s degree is, you need to be there in that particular institute. In my case, I am an education graduate and my [master’s degree] is also in

education and my doctorate is also in education so I need to be there in the Institute of Education not in the [Institute of] Arts and Sciences,” FEU Faculty Association President Roberto Remotin Jr., one of the IAS professors who were transferred to IE, said.

E R R AT U M In the September-October issue, the article “FEUFA: ‘Cadetship’ may be violating CHEd manual” on page 1 misstated Mr. Ricardo Villas Jr.’s position. Mr. Villas was an associate in University Research Center, not Associate Director. Our apologies. -EIC

Forty-eight professors from Departments of Biology, Chemistry and Math and Physics were moved to IE, while 39 professors from Departments of Communication, English Language, Filipino, International Studies, Literature and Humanities and Political Science were also transffered to IE, according to data from IE Administration. According to Remotin, faculty alignment is a good tool especially if a university aims to improve its quality of education. “Now here in FEU, the management found out that there are some teachers who are not aligned,” Remotin said. Continue to page 12...


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