REPORT ON THE FIRST TWO YEARS
OF ST. MARY’S SCHOOL OF SAGADA, INC.
By
Rufino B. Bomasang
Chairman, Board of Trustees
I am pleased to
report that since St. Mary’s School (SMS) was incorporated into the
St. Mary’s School of Sagada, Inc. (SMSSI) just two years ago, the
school has been effectively turned around from an institution on the
verge of closure to a revitalized institution well on its way to
becoming not just the best high school in the Mt. Province and the
Cordilleras, but among the best in the entire country.
I would now like
to enumerate some of the steps we have taken to bring SMS to where
it is now.
To launch our
ambitious program to revitalize SMS, we invited no less than Dr.
Josette Biyo and her co-teachers at the Philippine Science High
School West Visayas to conduct the centennial summer science
workshop for SMS teachers and students in early 2004. We also hoped
to send a signal to the Sagada community and other stakeholders that
we really meant business in our avowed goal of revitalizing SMS.
As some of you know, Dr. Biyo became world-famous and a national
icon for winning the Intel award for science education in an
international competition in the United States in 2002 and was later
honored by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology by naming a
planet after her. Private corporations (including San Miguel),
government agencies, and educational institutions (including UP
where she was commencement speaker in 2004), were therefore all
vying to invite Dr. Biyo to speak, if only to inspire their
management and constituency. Despite her very tight schedule, she
agreed to come to SMS. In her short stay here, she inspired
teachers and students to do their best in everything they do and
even got some of the young students to like science and mathematics.
In turn, she was overwhelmed by the warm reception from the Sagada
community and impressed with the school’s potential. She has
therefore agreed to help SMS in future endeavors.
We established a
sisterhood relationship with Brent International School Manila (BISM).
The most immediate effect was that Dr. Dan Chalmers, the Chairman of
the Board, was the first one to respond to our call for donations
for the first phase of the upgrading of the physical facilities of
the school last year and he has continued to support us in our other
fund-raising activities. BISM also sent its librarian, Ellen
Valdes, who happens to be an SMS alumna, to help identify the needs
of the SMS library. Later, several members of the Board of Trustees
of BISM (including Robert Kuan, who is also Chairman of the Board of
St. Luke’s Hospital) visited SMS. One important result was that Mr.
Kuan has agreed to consider financing the renovation of one of the
dormitories to be used by visiting doctors from St. Luke’s and
teachers and students of SMS.
We successfully
effected the transfer of the school’s management from the Diocese to
SMSSI through a Memorandum of Agreement. There were initial
problems, especially with the separation of faculty members, who
were employees of the Diocese, but all problems have been ultimately
resolved to the satisfaction of both parties. Although SMS is now
independent of the Diocese, it remains very much an Episcopal
institution.
We completely
revamped the SMS faculty by bringing in fresh young blood. For the
school-year 2004-2005, we hired the best from over 150 applicants to
replace the old faculty members earlier separated by the Diocese.
For 2005-2006, we again screened over 100 applicants and chose new
teachers to replace some of the teachers hired the previous year who
had left for one reason or the other. From what I gather, we now
have a faculty of young, enthusiastic and dedicated teachers who are
not only eager to teach what they know, but are willing to keep
learning new things.
We revamped not
only the faculty, but the school administration as well. For the
school-year 2004-2005, we brought back Mr. John Guitilen, an SMS
alumnus (Class 1956), as principal. He was hired as transition
principal preparatory to the ultimate take-over by Mr. Dennis
Faustino, Assistant Principal of International School Manila (ISM)
and a long time Sagadian by choice, whom we had convinced to join
SMS after retiring. Mr. Guitilen had earlier proven himself as an
effective administrator in previous assignments at SMS and in the
public schools. Considering that 2004-2005 was the first year that
SMS was run by the corporation and there were several transition
problems, Mr. Guitilen did very well. Among others, he was able to
instill discipline.
I can now tell
you that we had struck a bonanza in hiring Mr. Faustino as his
involvement in SMS has accelerated the revitalization of the school.
Even before he retired from ISM, he prepared a five-year strategic
plan for the school, which was later enthusiastically approved by
the Board after extensive consultations with various stakeholders of
SMS (i.e. alumni, faculty, etc.). Since the American missionaries
pulled out, this was the first time a five-year strategic plan was
ever prepared. I am not even sure if there was one when the
Americans were around. The plan, if and when fully implemented,
would not only make SMS the best in the Mt. Province and the
Cordilleras, but among the best in the entire Philippines.
An integral part
of the five-year plan is a very extensive upgrading of the school’s
physical facilities. The upgrading program includes the following:
renovation of all the classrooms to make them more conducive to
learning; installation of security grills; construction of new
modern toilets; construction of a water cistern; construction and
equipping of science laboratories (biology, chemistry, and physics);
construction and equipping of a computer laboratory; upgrading of
the library; construction of a sports complex; and renovation of the
boys and girls dormitories. The upgrading of physical facilities was
to be done in phases, presumably starting during the school year
2005-2006 when Mr. Faustino would take-over.
Even before he
formally became principal, however, Mr. Faustino expressed his
strong desire to have some of the upgrading projects completed by
the time formally started. Accordingly, I initially started asking
a few of my close friends in Manila for donations and as I had
earlier mentioned, Mr. Dan Chalmers immediately responded with a
check for the construction of modern toilets for boys and girls.
After I informed the alumni about the upgrading project and the
favorable response from Mr. Chalmers, pointing out that he was not
even an alumnus of SMS, I got an outpouring of commitments from
alumni and their families, especially for the room renovations. The
first to respond were the Killip and Gulian families in the United
States. Certain alumni sub-groups, such as Class 1960 and SMSAA
Metro Manila Chapter and locally based alumni, such as the Capuyan
family, likewise responded and pledged to finance specific projects.
Thus, by December, 2004, when we had the centennial alumni
homecoming, the 1st phase of the upgrading program was
almost finished and we were over a year ahead of schedule.
The next major
project after the room renovations was the construction and
equipping of the science laboratories. Thanks to Dr. John Alipit,
who financed the construction of the laboratories and Mr. Faustino
himself who helped equip them with microscopes, these laboratories
were completed before the school opening last June and are now
being used.
Also, before Mr.
Faustino went up to Sagada to assume his duties as principal, he
told me that the computer laboratory had already been finished but
there were no computers. He wanted to have the computer laboratory
also running by school opening in June. When I told him that I could
organize a golf tournament to raise money purposely for the computer
project, but it would take months to organize said tournament, he
offered to advance the money for the computers provided we pay him
before the end of the year. I immediately accepted his offer and the
computer laboratory was up and running by the opening of classes.
Today, I am
pleased to report that even before the tournament is held (it is
scheduled for November 7), we have raised more than enough money
from donations to the golf tournament not only to pay back Mr.
Faustino for the cost of the 18 computers, but to pay for three
additional computers and the installation of the internet
connection. I believe we succeeded way beyond our expectations
primarily because we had a good story and we asked almost all the
donors to send their donations directly to SMSSI and not to the
tournament organizers. I am pleased to report that all sponsors for
18 golf holes are SMS alumni, and their friends and families. Said
alumni are mostly members of the newly organized St. Mary’s School
of Sagada Alumni and Friends Foundation (SMSSAFF) in the United
States. They are led by Mr. Raymond Alipit whose family and network
of friends and classmates are sponsoring 8 of the 18 holes. They all
deserve our heartfelt gratitude.
Supplementing
the alumni donations are corporate sponsors, mostly my friends in
the energy and mining sectors, whose donations match the alumni
donations. I am pleased to report that the two biggest corporate
donors (platinum sponsors) are Shell Exploration B.V. and Middle
East Petroleum Services Ltd. The former is the operator of the
famous 4.5 billion dollar Malampaya gas-to-power project (the
largest single industrial undertaking in Philippine history) and is
a partner of PNOC-Exploration Corporation, the company I used to
head as President. The latter is the owner of AustralAsian Energy
Limited, a small private oil and gas exploration and production
company which I currently head as Chairman.
For the computer
laboratory, however, we thank not only Mr. Faustino and the donors
for the golf tournament, but Mr. Kent Sinkey, the computer expert
from the University of Cincinnati who has opted to live in Sagada
like Mr. Faustino. He is now teaching teachers and students not only
from SMS, but from nearby high schools as well, on how to use and
maintain said computers. Some SMS alumni have said that Messrs.
Faustino and Sinkey are God’s gift not just to the people of Sagada,
but of the whole Mt. Province and I fully agree. After all, “aditako
bokodan di gawis.”
Finally, I am
pleased to report that mainly through the continuing fundraising
efforts of the SMSAFF in the United States, enough funds have been
raised to renovate the Stapleton Hall as an interim dormitory for
teachers and students from outside Sagada. The ability of SMSAFF to
raise funds has been substantially enhanced after it got a
much-coveted tax-exempt status, thanks to the hard work and valiant
efforts of some of its key officers and members, especially Lambert
Sagalla, Inez Killip, and John Alipit.
The renovation
of the Stapleton Hall was not part of the original 5-year plan, but
Mr. Faustino recommended and the Board approved it because we expect
that with the new SMS, we expect an influx of students from other
places starting next school year. Here again, “aditko bikodan di
gawis
SMSAFF is also
actively raising funds for the library upgrading project and in fact
has almost raised the total amount needed. Half of the money raised
came from an anonymous donor (who I understand is the husband of an
SMS alumna married to a Hungarian). This was the same donor who
donated money for computers when SMS was still under the Diocese.
May God continue to bless this anonymous couple.
Finally, we are
all grateful to Dr. Faustino for renovating this room where we are
now from the ordinary auditorium that it once was to a first class
theatre and multi-purpose hall, using his own personal funds as
another og-ogbo contribution on his part. Among others,
it has much
better acoustics and illumination.
Today,
therefore, I am once again pleased to say that we are over a year
ahead of schedule in our program to upgrade the physical
facilities. In my 40 years implementing projects in the private
sector and in the government I can say that this happens very very
rarely. I like to believe that it has happened in SMS because as a
small corporation we have the ability to make bold decisions and
move quickly without being stifled by government, or even church,
bureaucracy. We have been able to do this in turn because of the
trust, confidence, and support from all the stakeholders of SMS,
particularly the members of SMSSAFF and SMSSI. Thank you for your
trust and confidence.
Just as
important as the upgrading of physical facilities, if not more so,
is the upgrading of the faculty and the curriculum, which are being
done on a continuing basis under the leadership of Mr. Faustino
himself. We can see all of these in his weekly reports. I just came
from a business trip around the world and in the process have also
been able to meet with SMS alumni worldwide, most of whom are
members of the SMS yahoo group. Without exception, the feed back
that I got from them are very positive.
Even as I am
pleased to report about these accomplishments, I would like to point
out that a lot of work still needs to be done. On the physical
facilities, we still have to undertake the renovation of the
Stapleton Hall, the library upgrading, the construction of the
sports complex, and the renovation of the boys and girls
dormitories. The two big projects, the sports complex and the two
dormitories, will need millions of pesos. I am confident that on the
basis of what has been accomplished so far, I believe these amounts
can be raised, if we all work together.
For the long
term, I believe that the continuing challenge for the corporation is
to ensure the sustainability of financial support for SMS. The needs
of the school are unlimited, but the one that I would like to
especially highlight is the need to continually develop the faculty
and to pay them a compensation that encourages them to stay in SMS.
I strongly believe that they should be paid more than those in the
public schools. SMSAFF is doing something about this through an
endowment campaign, although it is still a long way from raising its
targeted amount. I am sure that other chapters of SMSAA can be
organized and encouraged to follow the lead of the Metro Manila
Chapter, which conducted a pledging session for its members to make
regular contributions to support SMS. I hope they fulfill their
pledges. We are also all looking for corporate donors who can help
SMS on a regular basis and/or make substantial contributions to the
endowment fund.
Ladies and
gentlemen, I am confident that these efforts will succeed if we can
demonstrate indeed that SMS is not just an ordinary high school but
is the high school that provides the best education for Igorots in
this part of the world to survive and prosper in the fast changing
world of the 21st century. This will make SMS the school
of choice and I have no doubt that parents will be willing to pay a
lot more for tuition and other school fees for quality education of
their children. This will substantially lessen, if not eliminate,
the school’s dependence on outside donors.
Finally, I would
like to share with you a dream that Mr. Faustino and I share. We
look forward to the day (hopefully five to ten years from now) when
SMS will be part of a confederation of Episcopal schools in the
Cordilleras, particularly St. James in Besao, St. Alfred’s in
Tamboan, St. Paul’s in Balbalasang, and All Saints in Bontoc, all
providing the quality education that can not be provided by
government schools due to their inherent limitations. We think this
is only possible if said schools are incorporated following the SMS
model. I personally think Mr. Faustino himself could well be the
overall coordinator of said schools as some sort of Superintendent
of Schools. After all, “aditako bokodan di gawis.”
Mr. Thomas
Friedman, author of the book “The World is Flat,” a best seller,
says that our dreams must exceed our memories if we are to survive
and prosper in this flat new world. For us here at SMS, I have no
doubt that this is so. Mr. Friedman, however, hastens to add that it
is not enough to have dreams. We must act to realize our dreams.
Thank you.