Friday, May 1, 2015

Libuacan Cold Spring: Tagbina's Haven of Happiness


LIBUACAN Cold Spring: Tagbina's Haven of Happiness


There are lots of beautiful places in the Philippines. Some are already known internationally. Many tourists are interested to visit these places for vacation, relaxation and getting away from stress. To mention some of these places, we have the Boracay, Palawan, Baguio, Bohol, and many many more. I am a fan of these spots, hoping to go there so soon. But before I go there I will first enjoy my vacation at our local destination here in our municipality of Tagbina, the LIBUACAN Cold Spring.

Libuacan cold spring is a place where you will be able to forget all the stress and all your problems in life. The spring is located at Barangay Maglambing, Tagbina, Surigao del Sur. When you go there, you will see that the area is surrounded by many tall trees. It only proves that the area is maintained and preserved. It's clean, crystal clear  and cool water came from a cave which means that Mother Nature is really amazing.


No need to go far away for vacation, spend on great amount of money just to relax. Try to visit Libuacan Cold Spring and you will surely get the kind of vacation you want for this summer.



"36 Things Every 21st Century Teacher Should Be Able To Do"



36 Things Every 21st Century Teacher Should Be Able To Do
1. Select the right platform to communicate.
Whether you choose a text message, email, social media message, Skype session, or a Google+ Hangouts depends on who you need to communicate with and why—purpose and audience. So whether you’re sending an email to a parent when a phone call is necessary, or responding in a closed Google+ circle,choosing the right platform is everything.
Email won’t always work. You can use Evernote or dropbox; yousendit or SugarSync; OneDrive or Google Drive; a blog or a YouTube channel. Whatever you’re sending, a teacher in 2013 should be able to get it there quickly, and with minimal hassle from the recipient.
3. Take a screenshot on PC, Mac, and mobile devices.
Hit the Print Screen button near your number pad on a keyboard on Windows. Push down volume rocker and power buttons simultaneously on iOS and Android devices. Command-Shift-3 on Mac OSX.
4. Appreciate memes.
Know what it means to be Rick Roll’d, the difference between a fail and an epic fail, why Steve is a scumbag, and who sad Keannu is. (Actually, these references are already dated.) You may not care, but your students do. Even if you choose not to speak their language and instead prefer the king’s tongue, you can at least understand what they’re saying, lol.
5. Explain how and why to use technology to those who don’t use it.
Not everyone loves technology. Not only is it not necessary for learning, it’s not even the most important part of learning (how did Socrates every get along without twitter?) That being said, it can indeed transform learning given the right instructional design and learning model. Communicating this to others that may not use it is increasingly important as a network building strategy and as a tool to be used locally to change culture.
An RT as an olive branch.
6. Use digital media in light of privacy, copyright, and other legal issues.
Terms of Use, copyrights, spam, phishing, age requirements–the whole ever-evolving and hopelessly complex shebang. You may never master this, but don’t teach in the dark.
7. Communicate clearly.
Tone is lost when you type. Know this and pre-emptively address is with clarity, choosing the right platform to communicate, and even smiley faces if you have to.
8. Search for, install, organize, use, and delete apps.
This is dead-simple, but you never know.
9. How to create, open, use, and share a variety of filetypes.
What are the benefits of a PDF over a .doc file? When should you send a .wav file and when you should send an .mp3? How about a .jpg versus a png?
10. Help students share files.
Students need help “turning in” digital work. Digital portfolios help, as can blogs and social media platforms. Learning management systems can too. Whatever you use, help them figure it out.
11. Subscribe to and manage YouTube channels, podcasts, learnist and pinterest boards, and other dynamic sources of digital media.
Self explanatory, yes?
12. Create and maintain digital portfolios.
Of your own work, and for your students. The tools, habits, and strategies to do it well are accessible to anyone in the 21st century. You know, especially if you follow any blogs that cover this kind of thing.
13. Blog.
That doesn’t mean you have to blog, but blogging is the among the best ways for students to survey, combine, and share digital media. You may not have the energy—or desire—to blog, but to effectively teach your students, you should know the basics.
14. Share learning data with students.
Sharing is easy. Sharing visual and digestible data not so much. More on this one below on #34.
15. Support students in managing their online “brand.”
And this starts with what you model–your visible social media profiles, Google search results for your name. That means a professional image, and no cliché quote from Gandhi in 24 point yellow font.
16. Manage your own social media and internet use.
It’s a tool, not an end. Self-manage accordingly.
17. Plan around a lack of technology elegantly.
Not all students have access. Do all that you can to give students that lack it a similar experience.
18. Delineate the difference between academics and entrepreneurial learning for students.
And in a way that doesn’t completely undercut academic learning, but rather contextualizes it.

19. Troubleshoot stuff that breaks.
Be MacGyver with a keyboard. If the Wi-Fi signal drops, the app freezes, or the password just won’t take, have a plan.
20. Skim and process large quantities of information.
Otherwise you’ll drown in the very thinking and resource stream you’re trying to benefit from. A powerful combination to use here? An RSS reader like Google Reader connected to Pocket.
21. Use the cloud to your advantage.
Offline access. Automatic syncing. Push notifications on apps. Writing and composition. Use the cloud.
22. Model digital citizenship.
To model it, we have to agree on what it means. We’ll talk more about this one soon, but for now, these resources should help.
23. Casually name-drop reddit.
Reddit is a downright cultish community of active and intelligent forum users that are addicted to socializing everything. And it’s awesome. If you don’t use it, try to mention it here and there as if you do (#streetcred), and when students ask just smile and nod your head a lot.
24. Support students in finding their own voice.
It’s not as simple as “band, books, or cheerleading” anymore. With visibility comes nuance. Now we have facebook groups of cheerleaders who are left-handed and prefer Fiji water over Dasani 50,000 members strong. Luckily, technology can step in and help–drawing, music, acting, writing, a charismatic YouTube channel; it’s now unnecessary for any student to be anonymous and isolated.
25. Use formal or informal learning management systems.
Whether you use a formal LMS, or just setup a Google+ Circle or community, either can help frame your curriculum for students and parents.
26. Leverage the relationship between physical and digital media.
What is the relationship between the app, the YouTube channel, the podcast, the play, and the poem? This is something you need to figure out–especially the English-Language Arts/Literature teachers among you.
27. Highlight the limits of technology.
If we don’t understand both the micro and macro impact of technology–the good and the bad–we’re doomed as a species to be completely overran by it. Sounds dramatic, but it just might be true.
28. Connect students with communities using project-based learning.
This can be one of the most powerful things you do, as it moves the learning from sterile classrooms to authentic audiences.
29. Model the value of questions over answers.
30. Understand how play leads to learning.
Play is not a whimsical recreation, but a zen-like cognitive resonance that rips learning out of the hands of well-meaning adults and seeks to self-direct children by allowing them to experiment, fail, and try again.
31. Use Game-Based Learning effectively.
That doesn’t mean to just play video games, or make students play them then ask them awkward questions about their experience, but to understand how video games support both academic and authentic learning.
32. Curate functionally.
What to save and how to save it? Great questions. And what kind of process do you have to keep from  hoarding digital resources and actually use all the crap you save? An even better one.
33. Record, process, mash, publish, and distribute digital media.
Digital media is likely the future of learning. So, begin the transition.
34. Visualize learning data for students.
This is different than just sharing an alphanumeric digit–this is about knowledge, progress, and the right data and the right time that is packaged in a highly-digestible way.
35. Connect with other educators both in person and online.
Don’t be a twitter diva; don’t be a Luddite. Find a blend.
36. Personalize learning.
To genuinely personalize learning for all of your students in a typical K-20 public school or university is impossible given the current circumstances (unless we have different definitions of personalized learning), and that’s why this is last.


Source:

Thursday, April 30, 2015

SurSur: Best place for SUMMER 2015


Best places to enjoy the summer of 2015 :-)
It's more fun in SURSUR!


It's more fun in the Philippines.
It's more fun in Surigao Del Sur.

TINUY-AN FALLS, BISLIG



Approximately 18 kilometers from the city center of Bislig in Surigao del Sur is the grand and beautiful Tinuy-an Falls, a premier tourist destination of Mindanao.
Cascading from a height of 55 meters and widely stretching at 95 meters, the postcard perfect Tinuy-an Falls is a three-tiered waterfalls that is considered as one of the widest in the Philippines.
Despite the long journey to this spot, its imposing beauty continues to attract tourist to visit this amazing natural gem. A long journey indeed, but a truly worthy one.  


White Beach Resort, Cagwait

Cagwait Beach may be unheard of—but not for long. This horseshoe-shaped island is fringed with trees and glimmering waters. Swim, get tanned, and camp in this serene enclave.
Britania Group of Islands, San Agustin

If you fancy island hopping, then Britania Group of Islands is what you have been missing. Get acquainted with the 24 islets rising above the seafloor.  Marvel at the sight of Kanlota, Taguan, Minasingin, Isla Verde, and Panlanggan Forest Island among others. Then end the day by camping in Boslon Island.
Enchanted River, Hinatuan

Dive into the deep cerulean waters of the Enchanted River in Hinatuan. Its shallow part that opens to the sea has emerald waters.  At noon, feed the schools of orange fish and be mesmerized by the mystical sight of orange against blue!



Sources:





Tuesday, April 28, 2015

The history of Tagbina

History of the Municipality of Tagbina

The history of the founding of the municipality dates back to the times when new frontiers of settlement were opened by virtue of the construction of new roads by the government during commonwealth period. Sometime in the year 1936, the national road was constructed connecting the two municipalities of Lianga and Hinatuan in the southern part of the province of Surigao del Sur, so that the construction of the Lianga-Hinatuan road paved the way for the new frontiers of settlement within the 50 – kilometers span of jungle territory. Thus, the birth of Tagbina, a jungle area strategically situated at the mid-section of the 50 – kilometers line of road.
According to the traditional folklore, Tagbina was derived from the name of the river that meanders in its environs, where the aboriginal inhabitants would boat and catch fish like halo-an or mudfish, shrimps or river lobsters. Folklore has it further that the name Tagbina which the native gave to the river was coined after the word “Tagbanua”. Hunters and rivers fishermen who roamed the area way up the river came to discovered fossils of giants and skulls or bones of human beings of the prototype of giant, this type of homo sapiens were known in the kamayo vernacular as “Tagbanua” or giants of the mountains.
With the completion of the Lianga-Hinatuan road and the subsequent opening of public lands for subdivision sometime after the liberation, settlers from all over the archipelago came into the area by leaps and bounds. Tagbina then became a regular barrio of the municipality of Hinatuan in the year 1955, with the settlement of these native tribesmen. Matias Tubia (now deceased) was the first barrio lieutenant.
Within a span of about 13 years since its formal organization as a regular barrio, Tagbina rose as one of the most progressive barrios of the municipality of Hinatuan. Inspired by the rapid progress and prosperity, coupled with the intense desire for independence, the political leaders of Tagbina worked for its creation as a municipality.
Finally, the municipality of Tagbina was created as a separate Municipal Corporation from the mother Municipality of Hinatuan by virtue of Republic Act No. 5774, dated June 21, 1969, during the Sixth Congress of the Republic of the Philippines; with seat of government located at Tagbina comprising the barrios of Malixi, Sta. Juana, Manambia, Batunan, Tagongon, Carpenito, Kahayagan, Lago, Maglambing, Tagbina, Quezon, Soriano, Magsaysay, Osmeña and Mabtay. In subsequent years, ten (10) more barangays were added raising the number to 25.
From a population of about 13,000 in 1969, the new municipality of Tagbina became a blossoming and developing community with the influx of new settlers who are attracted by its rich agricultural lands. The current population is 34,057, a conglomeration of different ethnic group coming from all over the archipelago. These ethnic groups are mostly Cebuanos, Boholanos, Leyteños, Ilongos, some Ilocanos and Tagalogs. From a measly annual budget of P 15,000 in the initial stage of its organization in 1970, the municipality of Tagbina gradually rose from its category as a seventh class municipality to a third class municipality and even outranked many of the much older towns of the province of Surigao del Sur in terms of income. Its present budget is P 34,000,000.00.
The first officials of the new municipality, who were duly elected in a special election held simultaneously with the national elections of 1969 were the following: Mayor Magno S. Cuyno, Sr., Vice Mayor Agriculo Armayan, Councilors Belderio Coralde, Rolando Lapeciros, Augustilo Maligmat, Felecisimo Urquiza, Gorgonio Realista, and Pepito Otakan.
The pioneer settler and recognized leader of the native who is the nucleus of the blossoming community of Tagbina, is one Jose Potenciando, Sr. (now deceased). Collaborating with him in the pioneering venture were the following: the late Claudio Cuyno, the late Clemente Boiser; the late Pedro Serra, the late Victorio Ramas, Sr., the late Severino Otakan; the dynamic settler namely: the late Amador Mantilla, the late Federico Villar, the late Matias Tubia, the late Fancisco Quibod, Nicasio Joyo, the late Juanito Dimaano and many others.
The municipality of Tagbina enjoyed the benefits of the untiring and able stewardship of 23rd LADAP Scholar, the Honorable Magno S. Cuyno, Sr. whose tenure of office as mayor lasted for 15 years until his retirement in 1984.
source: verbatim from: http://www.wowsurigao.com/about-surigao/surigao-del-sur/tagbina

Monday, April 27, 2015

Advantages and Disadvantages of Integrating ICT in the classroom

Advantages and Disadvantages of Integrating ICT in the classroom
By Ronald Edinson

Today, several technologies are present throughout the world. That’s why I decided to tell you about the integration of ICT in the classroom since it is a subject that many teachers will face. As a teacher, we must rely on strategies that must be used to integrate the tics in the classroom. We must change our way of teaching based on several kinds of technological devices. To enable students to get by in all areas where they need ICT, it is necessary to inform them about these technological tools. Today, most young children are using. It is important to attract the interest of students from multiple sources of reliable and organized. Learners, from the use of technology, will be able to express their creativity.


The benefits of integrating ICT in the classroom
Today, many believe that technology improves considerably and that is why, I suppose we must, as a future primary school teachers, to know the mode of operation thereof. This reality challenges us more, because teachers modify their learning in relation to educational technology. We must, as soon as possible, to face this reality. Even today, we can see that some educators do not include little or virtually no ICT in their teaching. The reason for which they do not use them, is possibly because they do not yet see the value. That’s why the company should provide new markers to better understand the future generation.
The disadvantages of integrating ICT in the classroom
The integration of ICT in classrooms can also bring disadvantages. Teachers may have difficulty in relation to the integration thereof. They ask some préparation.Celle must be strong so that children do not use technology for purposes other than education and learning. The teacher must have control at all times on the navigation of students during school hours. It can make them understand that all websites are not reliable or acceptable. In short, students need to make better use.
In addition, researchers believe that when integrating ICT, children who have access to this information, are more likely to isolate themselves from the rest of the group since they can hardly play when children are team. When writing on the computer, it can not be two people at once. Therefore, the integration of technology has its limits.
To conclude, I strongly believe that the integration of educational technology and communication is a good way to attract the interest of young students. With all kinds of tools, we are able to control what children are doing but we must keep a constant watch for it does not use their technological tool inappropriately during school hours.

Taken from the post of Ronald Edinson (January 21, 2011)