Monday, June 27, 2011

Organize a Larong Pinoy Sports Fest This Year



Organize a Larong Pinoy Mini-Olympics Sportsfest, and make your company event a truly unique and fun activity
 

Magna Kultura Foundation organizes Larong Pinoy Tournaments for companies like a Mini-Olympics. It's challenging and competitive, and best of all, it's fun and memorable.

It's a variety of Pinoy Games executed like a real Mini-Olympics Event with a tournament system. Inter-Department competitions on Patintero, Hula Hoop Tumbang Preso, Jumping Rope, Sipang Bilangan, Luksong Tinik, and various Filipino games. It's challenging! These are games where everyone will be able to play.


Magna Kultura organizes everything ---- from planning to implementation --- with Tournament Systems & Procedures, Referees, Marshal, Game Materials, Registration Forms, Tournament Manual with Rules for each and every game ---- so that the HRD and sports committee can sit back, relax, play with the rest of their fellow-employees. Magna Kultura  does the organizing and internal coordinating with the team of employees. 



Playing the Traditional Filipino Street Games is a unique alternative to the usual Western sports activities. Unlike western sports, Larong Pinoy is a game where everybody (young and old) will be able to easily participate in.  Even employees who don’t want play enjoy the event --- cheering, "jeering" and supporting the teams. 

 
Larong Pinoy is a true bonding experience among employees. Even before  the event day every individual find time (and have fun) discussing and practicing internally at the office.  It bridges the young and old employees, staff and clerks, as they consult everyone about the games.


Let Magna Kultura contribute to the corporate camaraderie of your employees through a Pinoy Games  activity.  We’ll  deliver a one-of-a-kind sportsfest event for your company.


Make your Sports Fest a great event experience! Call us, and together we’ll plan the event and discuss logistics details. 



FOR MORE DETAILS ABOUT THE PROGRAM, CLICK & VIEW THE SPORTS FEST PLAN THE FOLLOWING SITES:  At http://kulturapilipinas.webs.com/corporate-mini-olympics
 

TO VIEW SOME OF THE COMPANY SPORTS FEST PHOTOS, preview them at  http://kulturapilipinas.webs.com/apps/photos/album?albumid=14142715



FOR INQUIRIES:  

CONTACT DICKIE AGUADOExecutive Director - MAGNA KULTURA FOUNDATION

Mobile: 0917-8990025


WATCH THE PREVIEW OF THE LARONG PINOY GAMES

CORPORATE SPORTSFEST VIDEO PREVIEW


​​​Games Featured on ​GMA 7 NEWS TV "24 ORAS"



Corporate Olympics, Sportsfest Organizer, Company Olympics, sports fest organizer, Company Team-building, Sports Organizer, Corporate Sports Fest, Company Sports Fest, Teambuilding Sportsfest

Thursday, July 17, 2008

FOSTERING ARTS EDUCATION IN SCHOOLS


Arts education in the nation’s public schools is facing challenges despite strong public support and growing evidence of its wide-ranging benefits.

Arts partnerships have a long history of providing educational resources for schools, such as access to performances, student field trips to museums, student workshops, professional development for teachers, and artist-in-residence programs that place artists in schools for extended periods. Arts partnerships have been broadly defined as one of two types. In a simple-transaction partnership, arts organizations are providers of arts programming and schools are consumers. The school does not participate meaningfully in the design of the program, and the arts organization does little or no needs assessment for the school. This type of partnership is associated with one-time arts programs that provide students and teachers with merely exposure to the arts. In a joint-venture partnership, school staff and the arts organization work together to define educational goals and needs and collaboratively develop a program. Such collaboration is more likely to result in arts programs of greater educational value.


Partnership Goals
Schools and arts organizations shared a common goal of developing students, although both tended to express this goal in terms of exposing students to the arts rather than developing their knowledge of or skills in the arts. Schools and arts organizations also had some notably different goals for their partnerships. Schools emphasized providing professional development for teachers, a goal rarely mentioned by arts organizations. Promoting public awareness and appreciation of the arts was the goal most often mentioned by arts organizations; promoting their organizations was another frequently mentioned goal.

Partnership Interactions
Partnerships were usually simple transactions rather than joint ventures. The arts organizations developed programs without input from schools and offered them for a fee or sometimes for free. Schools selected from such programs, often using nothing more than promotional brochures. Communication between school staff and arts organizations tended to occur only after program selection and primarily to resolve logistical issues such as scheduling or transportation. Neither the arts organizations nor the schools conducted a needs assessment to inform program development, and programs were rarely linked or integrated with school curriculum. Although arts teachers can be liaison-facilitators between arts organizations and schools, arts organizations rarely consulted them and they did not advise schools on program selections.


Challenges and Facilitators of Partnerships.
Both schools and arts organizations indicated that insufficient funding and limited time for instruction and communication between teachers and organizations hindered even simple partnerships. Both cited challenges reflecting a lack of information and understanding about the others’ organizational needs and limitations. Grade-appropriate arts programs integrated with the school curriculum were the facilitator most commonly cited by schools. Arts organization directors did not cite this as a facilitator and indicated they rarely offer programs linked to school curriculum. Rather, they listed personal relationships with school staff and teacher commitment and enthusiasm as critical facilitators. School staff did not seem to be as interested in building relationships as they were in accessing individuals and information that would help them select and schedule programs.


FINDING A BETTER WAY

Given the pervasiveness of simple-transaction relationships, and the difficulties of developing more-complex interactions, schools and arts organizations should work to improve the educational value of simple transactions, even though more-sophisticated partnerships may have greater potential for educational impact.

Establish partnerships that address the goals of both schools and arts organizations.
Although the needs of students and schools have been emphasized as being central to the goals of arts education, the needs of arts organizations are of equal importance to a partnership’s growth and sustainability. The potential of arts education partnerships to establish the arts as a core subject will not be realized unless schools and organizations understand how their goals interconnect.

Focus on teachers.
Given their limited resources, schools and arts organizations should focus available resources on developing teachers. Teacher support is critical to the success of arts partnerships. Investing in teachers can also help disseminate program benefits widely to students, other teachers, members of the community, and potentially to other schools when teachers change jobs.

Use program selection to improve available programming.
As the consumers in a simple-transaction partnership, schools can shape available programming to better meet their needs through their choice of programs.

Provide comprehensive and user-friendly information.
Arts organizations require comprehensive information about schools’ needs, organizational structures and goals, curricula, and available funding in order to design educational programs. Schools require accessible and relevant information on arts organizations to select programs providing the best fit with school needs.

Enhance the “brokering” role of Liaison-Facilitators as arts advisors.
Both schools and arts organizations tend to be highly diverse and decentralized. The Liaison-Facilitators who act as promoters, as "friends of artists", who act as advisors to schools, have the potential to provide much-needed guidance to schools that are looking for ways to evaluate arts programs and to arts organizations that are working to develop programming that addresses schools’ needs.


IMPLICATIONS ON SCHOOL POLICY
The most significant implication we put forward in this article is that schools must assume responsibility for creating a coherent, standards-based arts curriculum and become better-informed consumers of arts programs. Even within the context of a well-designed and ambitious program, development of complex partnerships may be impractical and inefficient. Finding ways to make simple-transaction partnerships work more effectively may ultimately enable many schools and arts organizations struggling with limited resources to make a lasting impact on school reform.

Sunday, July 13, 2008

THE FILIPINO ARTISTS: THE SOUL OF OUR NATION


We still celebrate the figurative works of great Filipino artists who inspired our senses for patriotism. The great Filipino artists still lives in our heart. Artistic paintings created by Filipinos began in the 17th century during Spanish colonial times and continued until the present, with such revered artists as Luna and Amorsolo. Other popular artists include Hugo C. Yunzon reflecting an earthy style that touches on indigenous Malay culture in pieces such as Early Risers, Nestor Leynes with Mag-ina Sa Banig, and Tam Austria with Mag-Anak.


Arts in our country has transformed the Philippine artscape. In the nearly 30 years, the arts in the Philippines have exploded. Our writers, dancers, musicians, actors, visual artists, photographers, animators, video and filmmakers have provided our country with wondrous creations, with an inspiring view of The Philippines.


In addition to what they contribute to society as a whole, the arts continues to enrich our lives. They inspire the Filipino youth and promote learning. They bring our communities and cities to life. They bring us together. They are part of us all. The current breed of Filipino artists nourishes our imaginations and our dreams.


As I have surveyed in cyberspace, and even here at Multiply, there more arts organization today. These organizations have sprouted to tap the rich potential of creative talent and to satisfy the desire of Filipino artists for their own art and their own stories. The rise of these organizations is a bold and visionary statement about the future --- a declaration of independence and an expression of confidence in the future of a rising cultural revolution in our country.


As social purpose organization, it is our un-shakeable belief that our Filipino artists are the soul this nation! They propagate culture and remind us of our cultural identity. They are our sole hope for protecting and changing our culture --- as they continue shape our cultural landscapes and hold the symbols of national identity.

We all know that culture can strengthen social cohesion, increase personal confidence, improve life skills, improve people’s mental and physical well-being and strengthen people’s ability to act as democratic citizens. Artists creates the spark to all of these and burn it within our souls.

The ultimate creative activity is the uplifting of the human spirit. It is our responsibility to bring art back into the hands of the people and to do so in an accessible manner.

The current differentiation between art, architecture, craft, and design is false, it is a false schism promoted by the art world. This unnatural taxonomy has crippled the artists and turned those who participate or attempt to participate into victims of fashion. There is no essential difference between the artist and the crafts-person. The artist is an exalted crafts-person. The conscious cooperation and collaboration of artists and craftspeople must be re-introduced to rise above the current constriction and strangulation extant in the art world.

This artistic differentiation and intolerance, based on prejudice and fear of commerce, must stop. We must take matters back into our own hands and return to the idealism of our youth. Art schools filled us with impossible dreams and gave us no concrete way of supporting ourselves except through teaching, working at odd or related jobs Or that most coveted and jealously desired
possibility, hitting it big. It is time to take back the power inherent in our decision to become artists and to work at a grass roots level to create objects for use and contemplation that uplift the spirit. Participate in craft fairs. Great art at the right prices, if possible, at an achievable price for even the common mass citizen . Explore unexpected venues. Embrace commerce. The most important artists throughout history were adroit business people.

When Albert Einstein discovered the theory of relativity, he wanted to explain it so that a school child could understand it. Let our work become that clear. Our ideas can be
challenged and clarified by a direct experience with the public.


We believe in the superiority and excellence of our Filipino Artists. They make useful, beautiful, interesting, and or challenging objects. They have the talent and intelligence to educate an inquisitive public in a very unique way.

To our artists: make a living doing what you love to do. Be irreverent. Get up. Get going. There is a revolution going on in science, math, economics, sociology and psychology that is recognizing the parallel experiences of all the disciplines. Invite the public --- not just the rich or the middle class, but the ordinary "Juan". Stir their inspiration. Stir their souls.



.

BUILDING THE RIGHT DREAM IS THE MAIN THING



Remember the movie "Field of Dreams" with famous whispering voice in the wind that said, "If You Build It, They Will Come!." I am not a baseball ball fanatic and don't recognize much of the characters there, but I like the motivational drift that the movie conveys. It's all about building a dream, something worthwhile that you have been deeply yearning for that you always wanted to achieve. And it well be what God has purposed you to achieve in your lifetime.

When I was an executive in an advertising agency that handled the Milo advertising account in the the 80's, we sparked a blue ocean of possibilities in youth sport development.
We triggered Nestle Philippines to take some of its advertising budgets into supporting grassroots school for sports now known as the MILO Summer Sports Clinics. In my time during the 1970's we barely had clinics or workshops to attend to during summer. It was really boring and the only workshop available was the "devil's workshop". When we finished college, that frustration moved us to spark sports educators (P.E. teachers) to pursue a dream, to build mini-schools for a variety of sports activities outside of school. Our mantra was: Conceive. Believe. Achieve. We evangelized the dream and sold the idea like it was a franchise business. We built it, and they came. And it was never the same again. Only a few know how it all began, and to many it just seemed like an advertising campaign. But however way people perceive it to be, the one main thing is that children today enjoy many worthwhile activities every summer. And today, everybody seem to be doing the same thing. We didn't mind if new faces now run the the various clinics, and didn't remember how it all started. The important thing was it was running. We enjoyed the thought of knowing that it is possible.


We experimented with our mantra over and over again, beyond sports --- with the Bear Brand Kite Festivals that went nationwide, with the grassroots cultural activities like theater and music events, with livelihood programs among tricycle and jeepney drivers cooperatives --- and even with the 100th Independence Day in 1998 (that was a big historical thing). With the right dream, with the right goals, everything was possible! These 'experiments' has even brought us to even think that a peaceful cultural revolution is possible, and it could transform people and places.


But what made it possible? It was the unselfish sharing of the dream. The kind of dream that sparked hope among citizens who have been longing for change. It was by freely sharing the dream, at the same time creating advocates who could to create an ecosystem of transformation. People simply needed a springboard. Once they owned the dream... they will build it.


I cited in one of the post-message here in this cyber-site, that any dream worth living is worth sharing with others. The person who shares his dreams gets to watch it grow. The synergy of shared ideas often takes it to a whole new level. The dream becomes greater than the person launching it ever imagined it could be. And those who participate in it often adopt it as their own dream.

I believe that each of us has a dream placed in the heart. I'm not talking about wanting to win a lottery --- that kind of idea comes from a desire to escape our present circumstance, not to pursue a heartfelt dream. I'm talking about a vision deep inside that speaks to the very soul. It's the thing we were born to do. The one thing that draws on our talents and gifts. The one that appeals to our highest ideals. It sparks our feelings of destiny. It is inseparably linked to our purpose in life. The kind of dream starts us on the success journey.

A dream does many things for people:

- A dream gives us direction.

- A dream increases our potential.

- A dream helps us prioritize.

- A dream adds value to our work.

- A dream predicts our future.


Everybody has a dream. Everybody tries to move in closer to achieving that dream day by day. The great thing in this world is not so much where we are but in what direction we are moving.


This is also one of the great things about having a dream. You can pursue your dream no matter where you are today. And what happened in the past isn't as important as what lies ahead in the future. As the saying goes, "No matter what a person's past may have been, his future is spotless."


You can begin pursuing that dream today. If you build it they will come... and later you'll wake us to celebrate your dream, with eyes wide open.

But remember, you can't build everything on your own: you have to share the dream. Don't be afraid to spread it. If you have the right kind of dream, "we are more than conquerors".

Neither be afraid about people "stealing" your ideas. Of course there will be times when you don't know if people around you are just 'posers'. I always keep in mind what Rudyard Kipling once said, "They copied all they could, but they couldn't steal our minds. So we left them sweating and stealing... a year and a half behind."


Dream on. And make it the right dream. If possible, one that you could even present to our great boss in heaven. If you do that, everything will work together for good!

The right kind of dream is one that can build our society. Spread it out. One day you'll be happy to wake up a better society. And see how beautiful it is too walk into places that has been transformed by people who shared your dream.

Until then... all this is but a dream. We have to work it out and build the right dream with our fellow citizens.


It's 12 midnight now. I'll sleep on it... Enter my dream... and there, visit it online. Tomorrow when I wake, I'll pray to my boss up there for things to go beyond reality. If He wills it to be... it will be done.



.

Monday, June 30, 2008

ARTS --- For Learning

The arts and art education are important because they:

• have a creative interpretative, expressive function;

• help us to find out who we are and express who we are. Somehow they cut across all social barriers;

• are a very powerful way to express ourselves and to be understood;

• are important as a means of cultural understanding;

• educate the heart;

• are one of the most potent ways to create empathy;

• develop creativity; however there are dangers of talking about the arts in this way because they do not have a monopoly on developing creativity;

• are important because they have been part of civilisation for a long time; they provide a cultural background to understand the past;

• can help young people and adults learn about our collective histories;

• are a tool for social change because they educate people about important issues;

• teach individuals to become artists, helping them to “create” their lives by acquiring and using observational, analytical and technical skills.

• are integral to life.

Learning in, through and about the arts

• We must make an argument for using all three approaches: learning in, through and about the arts. We increase the level of the dialogue when we are inclusive rather then exclusive.

Let arts education incorporate all three forms.

• The three approaches need to be balanced. One approach should not be privileged over another: they must work together.

• The arts are used to teach other subjects or are integrated into other subjects. Arts education is about the ability to learn physically. A class of students learn more if they are engaged visually, auditorially and physically. Integrated learning, using the arts to teach, brings learning to a higher level. Arts education engages the mind, body, spirit and emotions.

• The arts can be infused into the curriculum in the same way a specific language can be, similar to immersion programs.

• For some the arts have more importance when they are integrated into other subjects because it makes them part of the whole curriculum

• The arts support learning, inquiry and critical study.

• It is important to define and teach the arts for their own sake.

• Arts are about the human condition and what we are. For example, a music piece can teach history, as can a painting.

• The arts are always about something. There is always a context. It is a bit superfluous to talk about integrating the arts because they do not occur in a vacuum.

• It is important to teach the arts for arts’ sake but they should be more socially and culturally based.

• The arts should be taught along with cultural studies. They should not be separated, nor should arts be subsumed under culture.

Challenges and Opportunities in Arts Education


Arts education faces many opportunities and challenges at all levels and contexts: in communities, governments, institutions, arts organizations, schools and school boards. The following comments were made in a recent survey conducted by the Magna Kultura Foundation, as follows:

1. Research to date is still not sufficient and focused enough to establish the full benefits of arts education in the school curriculum.

2. There is an erosion taking place in arts education, especially in arts programs from Grades 1 to Grade 6 --- and even worse in high school departments.

3. There is a problem in the way we organize arts education. We must change the way we manage arts education and the way we hire teachers. The arts should not be an add-on in the schools.

4. We need more time and money for the arts (Art materials and activities may be expensive but it's worth it. It builds the soul of people!)

5. Cultural and artistic expression is not sufficiently valued. The arts agenda is minute in the public’s eye and student-teacher ratios are considered more important than the arts.

6. Arts education is a bit subversive and this makes policy makers uneasy. (We cannot be 'leftists' or 'rightists'! ---- we are artists! If possible stay in the middle and artfully show all sides, and still, make people think!)

7. In many school boards there is a lack of qualified art teachers. (For some teachers --- it's just another job, right. That's not the way it should be)

8. Filipinos live in a bubble. They are not connected to what is going on in other communities and countries in the world and this has implications on the arts and arts education in our country.

9. Young activists are using art to change things and help communities in need. (This is all right, just don't turn them into rebels that would turn their children into orphans)

10. There is much talk about cultural exchanges but not enough support for it yet. Support for cultural exchange would help the arts. (if people can do it for basketball, why can't we dribble the same for for arts?)

11. It is important to maintain a very broad view of our concepts of art and the role of arts education. Some have a more romantic or western view of the arts. We can learn from cultures in which the arts are more about tradition, preservation and participation.

12. Assessment in the arts can be viewed as a problem. Children and adults like competitions but it depends on how it is done. There are many art practices in society that need assessment.

13. There is a question of ethics when it comes to corporate sponsorship. One must ask from where and from whom support is obtained. (arts should not be bastardized by people who don't really have a heart for art)

14. The Government never match corporate sponsorships and hardly contribute funding in the regions.

15. Some Arts organizations are often in the position of applying every year for funds in order to survive. Others don't even know where to get funds to make their organization live, to make their artwork reach the public.

16. Arts organizations are also in need of financial advisers when dealing with sponsors. It is important not to sell themselves too cheaply.

17. Traditional arts are evolving and transformations in materials and styles are taking place. It is important to evolve but traditional arts are based in oral history and this history must be preserved.

18. Another important challenge is equal access for all students in all areas. Regional and financial disparities still need to be addressed. These include Visayas and Mindanao, north and south Luzon, rural and urban, and differences even within urban areas. (Must it always be imperial Manila?)

19. Art programs and projects very often have limited spaces available to them. The message often received is that there is a scheduling problem but it is much greater than that.

20. Many school boards are now using space as a cost-recovery mechanism. Even buildings that are empty are not free. This can be a deterrent for arts groups with limited income.

21. There is a need to understand the importance of good, healthy artistic spaces to work in. It is also very important to integrate architectural design and functionality. Greater mobility and flexibility should be provided in classroom architecture in order to accommodate various activities.

* * * The Role of Artists, Specialists and Teachers In Arts Education * * *

We know how important art is in terms of contributing to learning and building national culture. Art can transform people, transform places. Art can inspire our countrymen towards a strong sense of national culture.

Unfortunately, our 'centers' for art in the country rarely reach our countrymen in the provinces. Art leaders in 'national shrines' and universities are reluctant and complacent with salaries that make them happy not to be 'starving artists' --- they have great minds, but have become technocrats happy with the status-quo.

But what about artists in the regions.... And much more, what about youth and adults who hunger to experience art to touch their life and their communities?

Let us briefly review the art scenario and programs that have been made over the last decade... and possibly, arrive at some recommendations.

Many art programs exist in every province that draw on artists to teach students. These programs exist both in and outside of the formal school structure. This situation gives rise to many questions and concerns. Some of these were expressed by participants as follows.

1. We need to explore, discuss and facilitate a better understanding of the role of the artist, the art specialist and the teacher in our school system.

2. Policies at the government and school board level and guidelines within teacher associations have not explored the full implications or possibilities of using artists in the schools. This situation often causes tension.

3. Inviting artists into the schools is not a fix for inadequate funding of arts education programs in the school system.

4. There are many issues to be addressed which include accreditation, salaries and legal aspects.

5. There is a need for a conceptual change in the way we view the artist, the art specialist and the teacher. We should celebrate the value and power of having all three.

6. The artist and teacher often have a similar role but they have different responsibilities and are accountable for different things.

7. Art teachers and generalist teachers do not have expertise in all areas of the arts. Experts in the field should be allowed to come in and teach.

8. The artist can be a role model for students. We must find ways of encouraging young artists to work with young people.

9. Arts specialists are a separate breed and their role is to make the connection between the student and the artist. They need to know how to teach and more specifically how to teach art. The arts specialist is well equipped to teach in and about the arts.

10. Art specialists exist at the secondary level but are rare at the elementary level.

11. Many great teachers were not certified teachers.

12. Organizing summer institutes for artists, art specialists and teachers would be beneficial.

13. There is a need for support services for artists who want to work within the school system. A mentor-ship program could be useful.

14. When teachers and artists work together, it is a “win-win” situation.

15. We need to focus on the role of the artist within the context of our programs and on the importance of building capacity within the arts community.


Bottom-line: There is so much to fix in Philippines with regards arts and artists. We cannot just sit down and brood over inspiration then let our art rot in dust. People can learn from arts. We cannot wait for art leaders in the "metro shrines" and "centers" to think for us while they service on a few. Many citizens, knowingly or unknowingly , are waiting to be blessed and touched by arts. Arts can touch people, build communities, and transform a way of life for communities. We cannot wait for art technocrats whose plans never arrive at the grassroots. Let's start the fire!