LIST of ELEMENTARY TEACHER APPLICANTS for DEMONSTRATION TEACHING and BEHAVIORAL EVENT INTERVIEWING (Bel)
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Emindanao Library an Annotated Bibliography (Preliminary Edition)
eMindanao Library An Annotated Bibliography (Preliminary Edition) Published online by Center for Philippine Studies University of Hawai’i at Mānoa Honolulu, Hawaii July 25, 2014 TABLE OF CONTENTS Preface iii I. Articles/Books 1 II. Bibliographies 236 III. Videos/Images 240 IV. Websites 242 V. Others (Interviews/biographies/dictionaries) 248 PREFACE This project is part of eMindanao Library, an electronic, digitized collection of materials being established by the Center for Philippine Studies, University of Hawai’i at Mānoa. At present, this annotated bibliography is a work in progress envisioned to be published online in full, with its own internal search mechanism. The list is drawn from web-based resources, mostly articles and a few books that are available or published on the internet. Some of them are born-digital with no known analog equivalent. Later, the bibliography will include printed materials such as books and journal articles, and other textual materials, images and audio-visual items. eMindanao will play host as a depository of such materials in digital form in a dedicated website. Please note that some resources listed here may have links that are “broken” at the time users search for them online. They may have been discontinued for some reason, hence are not accessible any longer. Materials are broadly categorized into the following: Articles/Books Bibliographies Videos/Images Websites, and Others (Interviews/ Biographies/ Dictionaries) Updated: July 25, 2014 Notes: This annotated bibliography has been originally published at http://www.hawaii.edu/cps/emindanao.html, and re-posted at http://www.emindanao.com. All Rights Reserved. For comments and feedbacks, write to: Center for Philippine Studies University of Hawai’i at Mānoa 1890 East-West Road, Moore 416 Honolulu, Hawaii 96822 Email: [email protected] Phone: (808) 956-6086 Fax: (808) 956-2682 Suggested format for citation of this resource: Center for Philippine Studies, University of Hawai’i at Mānoa. -
OH-323) 482 Pgs
Processed by: EWH LEE Date: 10-13-94 LEE, WILLIAM L. (OH-323) 482 pgs. OPEN Military associate of General Eisenhower; organizer of Philippine Air Force under Douglas MacArthur, 1935-38 Interview in 3 parts: Part I: 1-211; Part II: 212-368; Part III: 369-482 DESCRIPTION: [Interview is based on diary entries and is very informal. Mrs. Lee is present and makes occasional comments.] PART I: Identification of and comments about various figures and locations in film footage taken in the Philippines during the 1930's; flying training and equipment used at Camp Murphy; Jimmy Ord; building an airstrip; planes used for training; Lee's background (including early duty assignments; volunteering for assignment to the Philippines); organizing and developing the Philippine Air Unit of the constabulary (including Filipino officer assistants; Curtis Lambert; acquiring training aircraft); arrival of General Douglas MacArthur and staff (October 26, 1935); first meeting with Major Eisenhower (December 14, 1935); purpose of the constabulary; Lee's financial situation; building Camp Murphy (including problems; plans for the air unit; aircraft); Lee's interest in a squadron of airplanes for patrol of coastline vs. MacArthur's plan for seapatrol boats; Sid Huff; establishing the air unit (including determining the kind of airplanes needed; establishing physical standards for Filipino cadets; Jesus Villamor; standards of training; Lee's assessment of the success of Filipino student pilots); "Lefty" Parker, Lee, and Eisenhower's solo flight; early stages in formation -
CHAPTER IV the JAPANESE INTERREGNUM, 1942-1945 A. The
CHAPTER IV THE JAPANESE INTERREGNUM, 1942-1945 This chapter deals with the Japanese occupation of Koronadal Valley. An alien invading force would radically change the direction of developmental process in Koronadal Valley, particularly Buayan. From an envisioned agricultural settlement serving a major function for the Commonwealth government, Koronadal Valley was transformed into a local entity whose future direction would be determined by the people no longer in accordance with the objectives for which it was established but in accordance with the dynamics of growth in response to changing times. It is ironic that an event that was calamitous in itself would provide the libertarian condition to liberate Koronadal Valley from the limiting confines of Commonwealth Act No. 441. But more than structural change, the Japanese interlude put to test the new community. The sudden departure from the scene of the two titans of the community - General Paulino Santos and Mayor Abedin - raised the urgent need for the people left behind to take stock of themselves and respond to the difficult times sans the guiding hands of its leaders. A. The Southward Thrust of Japan to Mindanao To the people of the valley, the war was received with shock, fear and trepidation. It was like a thief in the night coming when everybody was unprepared. One settler recalled: “We were afraid when we heard over the radio that the Japanese are coming. We immediately evacuated and left behind our farms and animals. We hid in the mountains of Palkan, proceeding to Glamang and then to Kiamba. Our hunger drove us to dig sweet potatoes from the farms that we passed by. -
Map of Region XII – SOCCSKSARGEN Xxi
CITATION: Philippine Statistics Authority, 2015 Census of Population Report No. 1 – P REGION XII – SOCCSKSARGEN Population by Province, City, Municipality, and Barangay August 2016 ISSN 0117-1453 ISSN 0117-1453 REPORT NO. 1 – P 2015 Census of Population Population by Province, City, Municipality, and Barangay REGION XII - SOCCSKSARGEN Republic of the Philippines Philippine Statistics Authority Quezon City REPUBLIC OF THE PHILIPPINES HIS EXCELLENCY PRESIDENT RODRIGO R. DUTERTE PHILIPPINE STATISTICS AUTHORITY BOARD Honorable Ernesto M. Pernia Chairperson PHILIPPINE STATISTICS AUTHORITY Lisa Grace S. Bersales, Ph.D. National Statistician Josie B. Perez Deputy National Statistician Censuses and Technical Coordination Office Minerva Eloisa P. Esquivias Assistant National Statistician National Censuses Service ISSN 0117-1453 Presidential Proclamation No. 1269 Philippine Statistics Authority TABLE OF CONTENTS Foreword v Presidential Proclamation No. 1269 vii List of Abbreviations and Acronyms xi Explanatory Text xiii Map of Region XII – SOCCSKSARGEN xxi Highlights of the Philippine Population xxiii Highlights of the Population: Region XII – SOCCSKSARGEN xxvii Summary Tables Table A. Population and Annual Population Growth Rates for the Philippines and Its Regions, Provinces, and Highly Urbanized Cities: 2000, 2010, and 2015 xxxii Table B. Population and Annual Population Growth Rates by Province, City, and Municipality in Region XII – SOCCSKSARGEN: 2000, 2010, and 2015 xxxv Table C. Total Population, Household Population, Number of Households, and Average Household Size by Region, Province, and Highly Urbanized City as of August 1, 2015: Philippines xxxvii Statistical Tables Table 1. Total Population, Household Population, Number of Households, and Average Household Size by Province, City, and Municipality as of August 1, 2015: Region XII – SOCCSKSARGEN 1 Table 2. -
Chapter Iii the Originals, The
CHAPTER III THE ORIGINALS, THE SETTLERS, AND THE NLSA: IN THE FORMATION OF A COMMUNITY This chapter is the story of the meeting of various cultures which for purposes of typology is dubbed in this work as the originals referring to the indigenous peoples, the Magindanaos and the Blaan; the migrant-settlers; and the NLSA employees and the consequent accommodation and interaction they underwent resulting to a new community largely defined by the three interacting groups. The meeting of the three groups could also be seen as the meeting of two worlds - the more modern world of the newcomers and the traditional world of the original inhabitants of the place. While such meeting may not be completely devoid of tension, the “boom- town-in-the-making” of the fifties and today’s “boom city of the south” before the infamous bombings, which rocked the city in 2001, indicates a successful process of accommodation and interaction. This chapter, however, only deals with the initial process of interaction since three years of settlement life before the war was too short to fully appreciate the social processes involved in the interaction of varying cultures. However, no one particular group, not even the newcomers with their more modern ways, could claim the sole credit in the formation of the new community for a community is essentially a product of the interaction of people in a given geographical zone. While Buayan (the old name of General Santos City) may have only few inhabitants at the time of the coming of the migrants, it was the original inhabitants’ reaction to the newcomers and the consequent relationship that they evolved which largely defined the character of the new community. -
American Colonial Culture in the Islamic Philippines, 1899-1942
Western University Scholarship@Western Electronic Thesis and Dissertation Repository 2-1-2016 12:00 AM Civilizational Imperatives: American Colonial Culture in the Islamic Philippines, 1899-1942 Oliver Charbonneau The University of Western Ontario Supervisor Dr. Frank Schumacher The University of Western Ontario Graduate Program in History A thesis submitted in partial fulfillment of the equirr ements for the degree in Doctor of Philosophy © Oliver Charbonneau 2016 Follow this and additional works at: https://ir.lib.uwo.ca/etd Part of the Asian History Commons, Cultural History Commons, Islamic World and Near East History Commons, Race and Ethnicity Commons, and the United States History Commons Recommended Citation Charbonneau, Oliver, "Civilizational Imperatives: American Colonial Culture in the Islamic Philippines, 1899-1942" (2016). Electronic Thesis and Dissertation Repository. 3508. https://ir.lib.uwo.ca/etd/3508 This Dissertation/Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by Scholarship@Western. It has been accepted for inclusion in Electronic Thesis and Dissertation Repository by an authorized administrator of Scholarship@Western. For more information, please contact [email protected]. i Abstract and Keywords This dissertation examines the colonial experience in the Islamic Philippines between 1899 and 1942. Occupying Mindanao and the Sulu Archipelago in 1899, U.S. Army officials assumed sovereignty over a series of Muslim populations collectively referred to as ‘Moros.’ Beholden to pre-existing notions of Moro ungovernability, for two decades military and civilian administrators ruled the Southern Philippines separately from the Christian regions of the North. In the 1920s, Islamic areas of Mindanao and Sulu were ‘normalized’ and haphazardly assimilated into the emergent Philippine nation-state. -
'Gensan Is Halu-Halo': a Study of Muslim/Christian Social Relations In
‘Gensan is halu-halo’: a study of Muslim/Christian social relations in a regional city of the southern Philippines Lois Ann Hall B.A. (Hons) This thesis is presented for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy of the University of Western Australia, School of Social and Cultural Studies, Discipline of Anthropology and Sociology 2010 i Abstract This thesis is set in General Santos City (Gensan), a regional city in southern Mindanao, on the geographic fringe of, but largely removed from, the secessionist conflict which has continued to blight the lives of people in the South for over four decades. The land on which the city is located was originally considered to be the homeland of both lumad (originally indigenous animist peoples) and Muslim groups. However, government- sponsored migration programmes to Mindanao, post World War II, have seen the Christian population outnumber the Muslims many times over. In the years 2001-2002, the Muslims comprised just five percent of the city‟s population. While the conflict between armed Muslim separatists and government soldiers in the hinterlands provided an everyday backdrop to life, my challenge was to discover how „ordinary‟ Muslims and Christians - neither elites nor combatants - dealt with the social reality of living in close proximity to each other in an urban setting on the edge of the main conflict zone. Through interviews I investigated the various class positions of individuals as they articulated their dreams for themselves and their families and the manner in which they went about achieving them. At the same time, I recorded the ways in which they viewed themselves, and their near neighbours, in order to elicit how social boundaries were constructed, and maintained, between the two religiously defined groups. -
Philippine South
Run Date: 09/01/2021 Kiwanis International Page 1 of 11 Run time: 2:47:02PM Monthly Membership Comparison CUS9004 Club Id Club Name Cntry/St Sts Sep Oct Nov Dec Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep % Chg Trend 20 21 K42 Philippine South K4201 1a-Cebu K19653 Abag Liloan PHL 26 32 32 32 35 35 35 35 35 35 35 27 3.85 +1 K19842 Alegria PHL CR 27 27 27 27 27 27 27 0.00 -27 K06435 Cebu PHL 28 26 26 32 32 32 32 32 32 32 32 32 14.29 +4 K15246 Cebu Mandaue North PHL 26 26 23 26 26 26 26 26 26 26 26 26 0.00 K19680 Cebu-Thra Metro PHL PR 21 21 21 21 21 21 21 21 21 21 21 0.00 -21 K19679 Cebu-Thra South PHL CR 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 0.00 -16 K20283 Jades Cebu PHL 19 19 19 19 19 19 19 19 19 19 19 19 0.00 K19811 UC Banilad-Brichmus PHL CR 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 0.00 -15 1a-Cebu Totals: 178 182 179 188 191 191 191 133 133 133 133 104 -41.57 -74 K4205 2A Negros K19664 Bacolod Alliance PHL CR 22 22 22 22 22 22 22 0.00 -22 K18706 Buklod PHL 29 29 29 29 29 29 29 29 29 29 29 29 0.00 K16643 Dumaguete Buglas PHL 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 0.00 K16140 Dumaguete Sandurot PHL 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 0.00 K18641 Dumaguete Sidlakan PHL PR 16 16 16 16 16 16 20 20 20 20 20 25.00 -16 K20134 Global Bacolod PHL 23 23 23 23 23 23 23 23 23 23 23 23 0.00 K18986 Kasanag, Bacolod PHL CS 23 23 23 23 23 23 23 23 23 23 23 23 0.00 K11907 Metro Bacolod PHL 32 32 32 32 32 30 30 30 30 30 30 30 -6.25 -2 K19657 Pasad Negros PHL 22 22 22 22 22 22 22 22 22 22 22 22 0.00 K19665 Phoenix Diamond Region-Bacolod PHL 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 26 26 73.33 +11 K07843 San Carlos -
52083-002: Malolos-Clark Railway Project
Environmental Monitoring Report Semi-annual Environmental Monitoring Report No. 1 March 2020 PHI: Malolos-Clark Railway Project – Tranche 1 Volume V September 2019 – March 2020 Prepared by the Project Management Office (PMO) of the Department of Transportation (DOTr) for the Government of the Republic of the Philippines and the Asian Development Bank. CURRENCY EQUIVALENTS (as of 30 March 2020) Currency unit – Philippine Peso (PHP) PHP1.00 = $0.02 $1.00 = PHP50.96 ABBREVIATIONS ADB – Asian Development Bank BMB – Biodiversity Management Bureau Brgy – Barangay CCA – Climate Change Adaptation CCC – Climate Change Commission CDC – Clark Development Corporation CEMP – Contractor’s Environmental Management Plan CENRO – City/Community Environment and Natural Resources Office CIA – Clark International Airport CIAC – Clark International Airport Corporation CLLEx – Central Luzon Link Expressway CLUP – Comprehensive Land Use Plan CMR – Compliance Monitoring Report CMVR – Compliance Monitoring and Validation Report CNO – Certificate of No Objection CPDO – City Planning and Development Office DAO – DENR Administrative Order DD / DED – Detailed Design Stage / Detailed Engineering Design Stage DENR – Department of Environment and Natural Resources DepEd – Department of Education DIA – Direct Impact Area DILG – Department of Interior and Local Government DOH – Department of Health DOST – Department of Science and Technology DOTr – Department of Transportation DPWH – Department of Public Works and Highways DSWD – Department of Social Welfare and Development -
General Santos City
2000 CENSUS OF POPULATION AND HOUSING Report No. 2 Volume I Demographic and Housing Characteristics GGGEEENNNEEERRRAAALLL SSSAAANNNTTTOOOSSS CCCIIITTTYYY NATIONAL STATISTICS OFFICE REPUBLIC OF THE PHILIPPINES HER EXCELLENCY PRESIDENT GLORIA MACAPAGAL-ARROYO NATIONAL STATISTICAL COORDINATION BOARD Honorable Romulo L. Neri Chairperson NATIONAL STATISTICS OFFICE Carmelita N. Ericta Administrator Paula Monina G. Collado Deputy Administrator Josie B. Perez Officer-In-Charge Household Statistics Department ISSN 0117-1453 FOREWORD One main factor to consider in achieving development in a country, whether social or economic, is the population. The government makes plans and programs for the achievement of a better quality of life for the people. These programs include better health services, adequate nutrition, free education, housing for all, and social welfare for the needy. These programs can only be achieved, however, if there are sufficient and reliable data as bases for planning. The Census of Population and Housing (CPH) is one of the major activities undertaken by the National Statistics Office (NSO) every ten years. It takes an inventory of the total population of the country and a stock of the housing units, not to mention other demographic and housing characteristics that can provide the necessary data to planners. This report is the first of two parts of the provincial publication for the 2000 CPH that was conducted on May 1, 2000. Demographic data presented herein consist of population distribution according to age, sex, marital status, religious affiliation, disability, education, ethnicity, residence five years ago, household size, overseas workers, citizenship, literacy, place of school, language or dialect generally spoken, ever married women, number of children ever born, and age at first marriage. -
Pioneering in the Cotabato Frontier: the Koronadal Valley Project During the Prewar Years
Campado, A. V. 2005. Banwa 2 (1): 7-37. PIONEERING IN THE COTABATO FRONTIER: THE KORONADAL VALLEY PROJECT DURING THE PREWAR YEARS Andrea V. Campado Abstract This study tells of the opening of the Cotabato frontier under the auspices of the National Land Settlement Administration (NLSA) starting 1939, and the consequent formation of a community by both the newcomers and the original inhabitants of the Koronadal and Allah Valley (now the SOCSKSARGEN area comprising South Cotabato, Sultan Kudarat, Sarangani, and General Santos City) during the period 1939 to 1942. The methodology of this study is qualitative, that is, it is not guided by hypotheses but by issues and problems that the study seeks to answer. Data were obtained through varied research techniques. These include in-depth interviews of key informants; the collection and review of secondary and primary sources; and the collection of case studies as illustrative cases to establish a linkage between the stories of the individual and the wider community. The major findings of the study include: one, that the general poverty in the country was a powerful “push” factor for migration; two, the social processes of accommodation, assimilation, and amalgamation were all involved in the formation of a “melting pot” community; and three, the success of the Koronadal Valley Project could largely be attributed to the good relationship developed between the migrant-settlers and the NLSA officials on one hand, and the original inhabitants, on the other. Keywords: pioneering; Cotabato frontier; IP (Indigenous Peoples); Koronadal Valley Project; melting pot; migration; National Land Settlement Administration Abbreviation: IP (Indigenous Peoples) 7 Campado, A. -
Province, City, Municipality Total and Barangay Population COTABATO
2010 Census of Population and Housing Cotabato City Total Population by Province, City, Municipality and Barangay: as of May 1, 2010 Province, City, Municipality Total and Barangay Population COTABATO CITY 271,786 Bagua 18,050 Kalanganan 14,810 Poblacion 18,857 Rosary Heights 13,031 Tamontaka 11,669 Bagua I 7,036 Bagua II 19,301 Bagua III 6,802 Kalanganan I 5,718 Kalanganan II 5,115 Poblacion I 4,463 Poblacion II 6,241 Poblacion III 2,807 Poblacion IV 6,406 Poblacion V 2,929 Poblacion VI 5,096 Poblacion VII 15,485 Poblacion VIII 6,580 Poblacion IX 5,893 Rosary Heights I 4,708 Rosary Heights II 4,742 Rosary Heights III 9,123 Rosary Heights IV 4,304 Rosary Heights V 3,994 Rosary Heights VI 5,107 Rosary Heights VII 7,566 Rosary Heights VIII 6,523 Rosary Heights IX 6,008 Rosary Heights X 13,025 Rosary Heights XI 6,027 Rosary Heights XII 4,554 Rosary Heights XIII 4,500 Tamontaka I 3,743 Tamontaka II 4,034 Tamontaka III 2,679 Tamontaka IV 2,446 Tamontaka V 2,414 National Statistics Office 1 2010 Census of Population and Housing Cotabato (North Cotabato) Total Population by Province, City, Municipality and Barangay: as of May 1, 2010 Province, City, Municipality Total and Barangay Population COTABATO (NORTH COTABATO) 1,226,508 ALAMADA 56,813 Bao 7,338 Barangiran 3,991 Camansi 1,523 Dado 9,733 Guiling 5,284 Kitacubong (Pob.) 5,183 Macabasa 1,634 Malitubog 2,146 Mapurok 2,128 Pacao 1,944 Paruayan 2,579 Pigcawaran 3,778 Polayagan 2,226 Rangayen 2,793 Lower Dado 1,532 Mirasol 1,351 Raradangan 1,650 CARMEN 82,469 Aroman 2,188 Bentangan 3,748 Cadiis