Showing posts with label education and poverty. Show all posts
Showing posts with label education and poverty. Show all posts

Friday, May 30, 2014

Kim Fajardo: Ready for First Grade

Kim Rando Fajardo attends
the moving-up ceremony of
VOHCS Irawan with his parents. 
 On March 29, 2014, five-year-old Kim Rando Fajardo took a long walk to the barangay hall in Irawan, Puerto Princesa City to attend a moving-up ceremony. But unlike his daily two-kilometer treks to school, he was walking with his parents this time, and was garbed in barong. He graduated from the CCT-Visions of Hope Christian School (VOHCS) Irawan along with 35 other children that day.

Around summer last year, Kim’s parents – a carpenter and a homemaker – signed him up for morning classes after hearing an announcement at a local Christian church that VOHCS was offering free preschool education to indigent children.

Kim was always the earliest to arrive at school when classes began. Although he determinedly came to class, he was initially shy and uncooperative. However, he started opening up when he saw that he was genuinely cared for at VOHCS. His teachers found out that he was undernourished and most of the time, his family could not afford to let him bring baon (packed snacks) to class, so they shared food with him out of their own pockets. Kim’s classmates gladly pitched in as well.

Kim (fourth from left, first row) joins his classmates in a special presentation on their moving-up day.
Also, on two separate occasions in November, Kim was hurt while walking home from school – he was bullied by an older child and attacked by a dog. His teachers were quick to pray for, comfort, and assist him with medical needs until he was well enough to come back to school.

Within months, Kim’s confidence grew. He learned to mingle with others, led prayers and joined class activities, and surprised his parents by independently working on school projects. He finished the school year as one of the class’s top five pupils!

Kim is ready to enter grade school in the coming school year. He plans to walk to the public school with his big sister, who will be in third grade.

Friday, March 22, 2013

9-Year-Old VOHCS Child Finishes Preschool

Ryan Gayo (center, second line) graduates with brothers Roy (leftmost), Rene (second from left), and Jeran (fourth from left) from
VOHCS Iloilo in March. Behind the VOHCS children are their teachers and VOHCS Principal Cristina Gellor (second from left, third line).
“My dream is to finish school so I will be able to support my family someday,”  declares nine-year-old Ryan Gayo in Ilonggo. A Visions of Hope Christian School (VOHCS) student from Sitio Ilaya, Tabuc-suba, Jaro, Iloilo, Ryan finished a year of preschool education in March, along with three younger brothers.

VOHCS teachers in Iloilo first met Ryan and his brothers – Jeran, 7, Rene, 6, and Roy, 5 – when they surveyed the community for potential students in mid-2012. Asked if they would like to go to school, the brothers, with sun-burnt skin and bald heads, hesitated. After a minute, Rene said aloud what they were thinking, “We don’t have slippers to wear to school.”

Ryan has eight younger living siblings; three others passed away because of poor health. Sickly himself, Ryan lives with his family in a bamboo house by the river. His father is a pandesal vendor, and his mother washes laundry for a living. His mother only bathes them every two weeks and shaves their heads to save on soap. The family does not even have a toilet. Ryan quit school in the middle of first grade, preferring to go scavenging with his brothers to help out. He got bullied in school, anyway, he says.

Ryan’s parents agreed to send the brothers to VOHCS after they were assured that slippers and school uniforms could be sourced from donors. Teachers raised funds and bought slippers, school shoes, and socks for the Gayo boys and 20 other preschool children. They also bought second hand clothes, and some CCT micro-entrepreneurs donated clothes for the brothers.

The boys’ father brought them to school on the bicycle he uses when hawking pandesal. At their classroom door the boys would pause to put on their slippers, carefully carried from home. After school, they would hang the slippers on a wall at home as if these were prized treasures.

It is customary for VOHCS children and teachers to share food during recess. Ryan and his brothers seldom had snacks to share except on rare times when their father had pandesal leftover from his morning rounds. No one seemed to mind, though.

Despite their lack, the brothers brought their teachers happiness (and sometimes tears of joy) with their zeal for learning. Ryan would gladly read aloud whenever asked. His brother, Roy, volunteered a lot too.

Today, Ryan does not see his poverty as an obstacle to making himself better. He is certain of two things – poverty is transient, and his heavenly Father is able to meet his earthly needs. Hopefully, he carries these truths as he moves forward in life.

Saturday, December 8, 2012

Javines Siblings Find Hope through VOHCS

Siblings Carmela, Mahal, Allan, and Marie Javines wander the streets no more --
 they are cared for at a boarding school in Laguna run by Visions of Hope Foundation. 
(Photo by Arthur M. Trinidad)


Allan, 18 years old, Carmela,11, Marie, 7, and Mahal Javines, 6, who used to wander the streets of Metro Manila with their mother to look for food and shelter, find hope as they go to back to school through the help of the Center of Community Transformation (CCT) Visions of Hope Foundation.

Allan says he was seven when his parents parted ways because of financial struggles. Homeless, his mother Esmeralda worked as a cashier in a public market while Allan collected and sold junk to help feed Carmela. Then, for a time, the children found an adoptive father and a new home when Esmeralda had a relationship with another man named Rodel. Rodel, who is Marie and Mahal’s father, later became abusive. Esmeralda had to leave him and, with her children, dwell in the streets again for the next five years.

A pastor from the CCT Group of Ministries met them around 2010 and brought them to the Kaibigan Community Center, CCT's drop-in center for street dwellers. There, their basic needs were provided and they learned about God through Bible studies and discipleship sessions. The Javines siblings joined the Visions of Hope Christian School (VOHCS) in Laguna a few months later. A boarding school, VOCHS  is a place where their character is molded, according to Allan. He said he personally grew in humility and in loving others.

In July 2012, Esmeralda died of cancer. "It was a trying time, but I drew strength and comfort from the Lord," Allan says. Now serving as a sole parent to his sisters, he says he prays  they will have a good future and a dedication to serve God.

Shortly after he passed the high school equivalency examination administered by Department of Education earlier this year, Allan was accepted as a scholar of the Angelita V. del Mundo Foundation, Inc. where he is currently enrolled in a two-year hotel and restaurant services course. Mahal and Marie are in kindergarten, and Carmela is in first grade.

Allan dreams of becoming a teacher to children someday. He said he hopes other children in need will also experience how he and his sisters were given a chance and  new hope (“Sana maranasan ng ibang bata kung paano kami binigyan ng pagkakataon at bagong pag-asa”).

The Javines siblings are just a few of the children who receive physical, emotional, and spiritual care through the Visions of Hope Foundation and the Visions of Hope Christian School. To learn more about VOH, go to www.visionsofhopefoundation.org and like us on Facebook (www.facebook.com/visionsofhopefoundation).

Friday, July 6, 2012

VOHCS: Off to Great Start in School Year 2012 - 2013


The Visions of Hope Christian School (VOHCS) got off to a wonderful start in the new academic year with a total of 718 students in 29 schools  --  14 schools in Luzon, five in the Visayas, and 10 in Mindanao.

In the pre-schools (composed of more than 600 children from the poorest families in the communities) morning and afternoon sessions are held from Monday to Thursday, with the more advanced students attending the morning sessions. "One of the school goals for the year is for all children who are five years and younger to be readers by December," said Tina Gellor, principal. 

Children at the Visions of Hope Christian School in Intramuros, Manila recite 
Psalm 112:5, "A good man will guide with discretion," led by Teacher Angel Lazaro.

On Fridays, the children attend joint classes consisting of Children’s Brigade marching drills and lessons in music, arts, and physical education. While the children attend these sessions,  their parents learn how to do follow-up work on lessons taught during the week, pick up homework for the weekend,  and attend discipleship meetings. "Doors are opened for ministry to parents as well," said Principal Tina.  "We still have parents from last school year coming back for Bible study this year!" 

Aside from the pre-schools, VOHCS has started first grade in Intramuros, Manila, and in Malungon, Saranggani on the southern island of Mindanao.



Children sing, "Jesus is best and all to me, He is the One  who died for me so from sin I could be free."



In the  boarding school program for former street dwelling children, VOHCS has 52 children in grade school and 21 boys in high school.  The grade schoolers are temporarily housed at the Training and Development Institute campus in Magdalena, four towns from Bay, Laguna, where construction of a chapel, dormitory, academic building, and pool are nearing completion.  VOHCS hopes to move the children back to Bay in October.

Some 150 students in the towns of Midsayap, Aleosan, and Libungan, also on the island of Mindanao, have signed up to attend Alternative Learning System classes. The program has modules on all subjects in formal grade schools and high schools.  The classes prepare out--of-school youth to take grade school and high school equivalency tests.  "This is one way of bringing hope to  underprivileged youth, and even to adults," said ALS teacher Zuraida Alih.  "One of our students is a woman who is over 50 years of age. It is also an easy way to share the Gospel.  Our classes include Bible readings and devotions," Zuraida added.


Photos by Vivian Ataylar and Angel Lazaro

Friday, April 20, 2012

501 VOHCS Children Complete Kindergarten

Kindergarten children sing during the Visions of Hope Christian School moving up ceremony in
Magdalena, Laguna.


Children from Cabrera St. in Pasay City all looking handsome and lovely in Filipino traditional clothes.
 Also in photo is Tammy Wang (in white cardigan), chief operating officer for
endPoverty.org, guest speaker for the VOHCS-Cabrera moving up ceremony,

 and VOHCS teacher Belinda Domingo.   
 A total of 501 children from poor communities recently completed the kindergarten level at several  pre-schools overseen by the Visions of Hope Christian School and are eligible for enrolment in first grade.   


"These children have a definite edge over other children entering public schools because they are already readers," said Cristina Gellor, VOHCS principal. "More importantly, the seed of God’s Word has been planted in their young hearts; VOHCS staff pray it will bring powerful and blessed results as these children grow and become salt and light in their schools and communities."  


During school year 2011- 2012 VOH operated a total of 29 pre-schools in the following places:
  • Intramuros, Manila 
  • Tondo, Manila
  • Muntinlupa City
  • Bagong Silangan, Quezon City
  • Payatas, Quezon City
  • Malibay, Pasay City
  • Cabrera, Pasay City
  • Taguig City
  • Cainta, Rizal
  • Bay, Laguna
  • San Pedro, Laguna
  • General Trias, Cavite
  • Cabanatuan City
  • Puerto Princesa, Palawan
  • Oton, Iloilo
  • Roxas City
  • Mandaue City
  • Placer, Surigao
  • Butuan City
  • Midsayap, North Cotabato
  • Cotabato City
  • Ulas, Davao
  • General Santos City
  • Cagayan de Oro City
March is the month when the Philippine school year ends,  and classes begin in June. During the school break, VOH offers Daily Vacation Bible classes,  reading classes, and youth development programs in poor communities where the Center for Community Transformation Group of Ministries operates.