PALAYAN CITY, Nueva Ecija–An international
college - which has campuses in the United States and three other foreign
countries and with a student population of at least 15,000 - is setting up a satellite
campus in this city to bring 21st century e-learning as well as
international students in this Nueva Ecija capital.
Mayor
Adrianne Mae Cuevas told reporters that the city government has forged a
partnership with Concordia International College-Philippines (CICP) for the
establishment of its first campus in the province in 2014.
“This
partnership will help bring computer education to the grassroots and afford the
people of Palayan the opportunity to avail of world-class education. It will thus put our city in the
international map insofar as computer education is concerned,” Cuevas said.
Cuevas
signed a memorandum of agreement with officials of CICP led by its president Violeta
Jerusalem and David Kang, chief executive officer of its international partner Concordia
International University, for the planned campus here which will initially
operate at the Palayan City Industrial Technology (PCIT) school.
Kang,
a Canadian-Korean, is deeply involved in research and development projects on
organic products such as oil extracts from moringa and oregano. He is planning
to put up a pilot research facility in the city which has vast hectares of
lands for agricultural production.
Jerusalem
said CIC has a global student population of 15,000, some 7,000 of whom are in
its Canada
campus which started operating in 2001. In the country, CICP, which started
operating in 2011, has 5,000 students.
Jerusalem
said the plan to put up a campus in this city was conceived when she and Kang
were invited by Cuevas and her husband, businessman Vince Cuevas to visit the
city and explore the possibility of expanding further their institution’s reach.
After
the visit, she said they approved the proposal after noting the city’s
potentials. “Palayan has very strong potentials that’s why we considered it in
our expansion plans,” she said.
Jerusalem said the Cuevas
couple has very strong commitment to push forward the development of the city.
“Mayor Cuevas,
for one, is a very committed person. But she has noticed that the community is
not that involved. She wants it involved in education,” she said, adding they share
the vision of the Cuevas administration to help the community in delivering
e-learning.
Jerusalem said
that the college - which has satellite campuses in Metro Manila, Pampanga and Baguio City
- will bring to the city a mix of traditional classroom instruction and
distance learning.
CICP, Jerusalem said, has
academic partners abroad and could bring in international students. Aside from
the US and Canada, it also operates in Australia and South Korea.
Jerusalem
said in this city, CICP will be constructing world-class facilities, including
dormitories.
Cuevas
said facilities similar to those set up at the Philippine Rice Research
Institute (PhilRice) central experiment station in the Science City of Muñoz
are being eyed in the site. She said they are eyeing at least 2,000 square
meters of land for the campus and the research complex.
Jerusalem added that they
will train qualified teachers in Palayan to become part of their team. “We
believe in the capability of the Filipino human resource and together with our
overseas faculty, we will support the dream of CICP and Mayor Cuevas in
delivering 21st century e-learning,” she stressed.
The
city government and CICP are eyeing to offer community scholarships for main course
offerings, such as English proficiency, hotel and tourism, translation and
interpretation and technical and vocational courses for culinary and
hospitality business.
Initially,
10 scholarship slots had been allocated for the school next year.
Graduates
of international courses will be issued certificates and accreditation for jobs
in Canada.
The
establishment of a CICP campus is expected to further enhance this city’s
gradual transformation into an education center in the province next to Cabanatuan City, the center of trade and commerce.
Linked to other
regions by a well-paved road network, this city, located 132 kilometers
northeast of Manila, plays hosts to other institutions of higher learning such
as a branch of the Nueva Ecija University of Science and Technology and the
Eduardo L. Joson College.
The
city government operates its own school, the PCIT, which was accredited by the
Technical Education and Skills Development Authority. (Manny Galvez)