Thursday, October 13, 2011

A 1derful Idea


My striving to get a Masters degree in Educational Administration is not only something that I would want to pursue for myself. Aside of course for an opportunity to also better myself in terms of knowledge in a wider setting but in a more specialized field, I would like to use what I have gained from all these for the benefit of the education sector in general. For me, there is much more to be done for the education department that has not been explored because our administrators themselves are not administrators themselves, and some even were just forced to take the position because they don’t have other choice. It is important that we focus on the education first and foremost because it is here where most (if not all) the foundations of a child’s socialization and knowledge are formed. And it is important that the child is educated holistically, and with proper guidance so as to create further impression for the child that his learning does not have to stop in the four walls of the classroom.

Curriculum planning is one of the most important facets of being an administrator. The curriculum is the heart of the subject matter. If the curriculum in itself is so inefficient, no matter how hard the teacher tries to incorporate his lecture to the child’s learning experience, it would still be a fail somewhere. There lies the role of the administrator like me to envision a sound plan with a holistic approach to the child’s learning, may he/she be a pre-schooler, a high schooler or even a college student. There lies the role of the administrator to also make it possible that the teachers who will eventually implement the curriculum plan know how to do about with it and how to use it properly. There lies the role of the administrator to evaluate the outcomes and if there are issues with it, to continually improve on the curriculum for future use.

I have learned through this course the experience, not only in creating curriculum plans, but to actually think of something I could use myself at Claret School where I am now. Like my ultimate goal to be of use in the general education sector, I would like to do something, and to also leave a legacy to Claret. A school with a curriculum for holistic learning is not only better, it may even be what Claret badly needs right now. Since I am already in the position to propose such action as curriculum planning, it’s an endeavor I would be willing to work on with the rest of the academic team.

Throughout the semester, although also pressured with a lot of workloads in Claret, especially with the commencement of the Golden Jubilee celebration, and still all the preparations for the new evaluation tool I am developing, and the projects for teacher enhancement trainings, I opted to just enlist one course, and it happened to be this course. And every Friday after office, I would unconsciously ready myself for another evening of new knowledge acquisition. Indeed, it was an enjoyable ride altogether. I couldn’t be gladder that I have enlisted in this course, even though in reality, it had actually been one of the most intensive subjects I’ve had so far in my Masters. Of course, I know that in the end, all the requirements do have their own advantages for me, as each time I reflect one more time about the reports, and then I planned about my syllabus, I do see another side of what have been said before. I enthusiastically participated in the class discussions and really do my best to come to class because I know that I will not only learn something from my professor but also from my interactions with my classmates and their different experiences and backgrounds as well. Of course I would give myself a grade of “1”, who wouldn’t want one? That’s the reason I do all my home works (preparing for the discussion), complete my requirements, and strive to be the best in whatever I present, say or do. Whatever shortcomings I may have incurred in this course, it would still be something I have put my best foot on, and just that it may did not turned out well. I believe that we all deserve to have high grades anyway, since what everyone did may also be their best efforts already. It’s just that for others, their best efforts may be better. But who says so, and who can say that one’s efforts are lesser, it was just a comparison to another’s, but compared maybe to his previous efforts, maybe it would be more objective that way. And compared to my previous efforts with my previous courses and even majors, well, this is really one of my best efforts altogether.

I think I really deserve that ONE!

Friday, September 16, 2011

With Great Power Comes Great Responsibility


Photo Credit: Pixr8
In the movie Spider Man (2002), the protagonist, Peter Parker, having acquired great power likewise displayed a deeper sense of responsibility for his co-citizens by keeping his society in constant peace. Although hesitant at first, his conscience kept him from turning evil himself and do what good he can do for everyone by pacifying lawless elements of society. Our teachers, though not at all endowed with supernatural powers, in the same way are like Spider Man – they are the one who keep the thread of the web so that our society will produce functional citizens!

Teachers’ power inside their classes is so vast that they can make a student lose hope or take heart, go bad or do well, be inspired or be discouraged. There are a lot of things that can happen inside a classroom. And the teacher, being at the heart of it all, has this power in their hands to somehow shape a world that could be better, or worse. They have even bigger responsibilities because it is not even the present that are being molded, but the future of the country. The new breeds of leaders are in their hands, the new generation of experts. What could be more powerful than that? For at least eight (8) hours, the students have to listen to them, learn from them, and make use of what is being taught to them. For most of the day, they are being bombarded by lectures, experiments, laboratories, etc. Most of their waking hour is spent at school. And the teachers act as their guardian, their mentors, and their second-parents. One of the things why I love teaching is because of I am able to influence my students to be better in their lives. I want to make a difference; I want to leave something, a legacy to my students.

It is therefore highly important that a teacher knows how to make of this power in order to put it to good use. Once a teacher knows how to make his or her power more worthwhile for his students, it will not only impact their students themselves, but even those around them. When a teacher makes a mistake, a whole community suffers. On the other hand, if a lawyer makes a mistake, one person goes to jail while the other lives on freely. The teacher who made a mistake, whether by not doing his part in educating young minds may be making another corrupt official, or another drop-out who beats his wife and produces a bunch of children who don’t have anything to eat. Yes, if only the teacher knows how to use this power for the greater good. A teacher must teach his/ her students with passion for learning. This passion will motivate him to not only do things mediocre, but to aspire for greater goals. How will I be able to retain what I’m teaching to my students? How will I make my class fun, interesting and lively so they will not get bored? How will they be able to be better persons because of what I’m teaching? And most of all, how am I faring with what I am teaching to them? These were my thoughts whenever I plan for a class. I want them to remember as much as possible everything that I’ll be teaching them. And I want them to put these to good use. I know History is boring to some, but I make it a point that they will appreciate the importance of what I’m teaching to their everyday lives.

I don’t know about Gagne’s instructional events before, when I was still teaching. But I believe I was able to imbibe them in my teaching method that’s why I am confident that my students were able to really learn something from all our meetings. Even I as a student appreciates it when my professor exerts an extra effort to, more than teaching his subject, really look into the needs of the students and start there. Gagne’s model may even be true not only in the classroom setting but even in mentoring a successor for example. We can even use the stages he proposed that moves around learning while we are dealing with our co-workers. There are really stages. We can not just go into the topic altogether. We have to start somewhere. In writing, we can’t just write about it and that’s that. There is a process of giving a few introductions before dwelling on the topic at hand and then after, maybe summarize or conclude on what has been pointed out. Our lives do have a bunch of stages with it. So it’s not uncommon that in almost everything, we have a series of things to do in order for us to be able to move on to the next.

In the same way, I firmly believe that following Gagne’s learning model of nine instructional events will help us, not only teachers, to engage in a deeper understanding of things, to help us be more sensitive to the needs of others, and to be more passionate in whatever we are doing. I have always believed that in everything that I do, I work at it not to gain the favor of those around me, but to please my God, who is the Master of All. Gagne’s instructional events are also flexible enough so that we will not be too keen on following a step-by-step procedure, but rather only picking those that needed to do and do away with the others without really sacrificing the intent. In my few years in the military academy, I have learned to be disciplined in my ways, from waking up to eating to sleeping to even talking with my superiors and with my fellows. Maybe that is why I was able to easily appreciate Gagne’s model. There is discipline in strategizing your moves in order to get to what you intend to achieve. If you want your students to listen to you, you have to do something with your voice maybe, or with your materials. If you want them to really learn from you, make them feel like what your teaching is valuable information they won’t be able to live without. If you want what you taught them to still be in their minds even after they have played computer games and watched a dozen TV programs, you have to make it a priority to make your lesson and the way you taught it to be memorable enough that even though this may not be their every thought in their every waking hours, they will remember that you have taught them that. It is important that the teacher being the executioner of the curriculum will also take part in making the curriculum more than what it is, a set of lessons to teach; it is their responsibility to make the curriculum the meat of the pie, the heart of their student lives.

Really, it’s not that easy being an educator. What with the kids full of energy, or the teenagers full of raging hormones, it won’t be a no sweat feat! Since I began teaching, and I’ve taught both elementary and high school already, I have always told myself, it will never get better. But every end of the school year, I feel really blessed to have been part of these lives who I know will be the future of our country. I feel blessed that in my own way, I was able to do something positive; I was able to inspire someone with my teachings. I know I’m not yet perfect; my teaching skills still has a long way to go. But every time I also learn something new from my own studying, from my also being a student, I continue to hope that someday, I will be able to use them, not only to my child, but to more people. I may or may no longer be a teacher anymore; it will depend on where the Lord will place me next. But I know that these knowledge that I acquire in my studying are still relevant no matter what my future role will be. I have been given this knowledge. And with it comes the power – to change lives, to inspire people, to believe in someone. Yes, I know that with great power comes great responsibility. I have my teaching experience to testify on that. But more so, I was also reminded by a verse in the Bible which says that to whom much is given, much is also required. Does that mean I need to make an even greater effort to teach more? I reckon so!

Friday, September 02, 2011

For Better or Best


There is power in positivity. This is one of the things I have always believed and that was re-enforced after the discussion on evaluation and assessment. Early on in life, I learned to be positive about all the issues that come my way. I learned to be positive even amidst my heart bypass operation and the many problems (mostly financial) in our family. And indeed, it helped me and others around me to see things more lightly, to deal with problems more calmly.

In evaluation and assessment, it is also important to dwell more on the positive notes of evaluation rather than on the negative points especially on the person being assessed. Of course, not all the time, the evaluation will come out positively, but in the field of education, the positive assessment must always be presented while the negative ones be given discreetly, discussed privately, no need to elaborately write on the paper. Evaluation should be done with the goal of guiding and nurturing the teacher, and not to shame or defame a person. I like this principle very much and I wish our country would emulate.

Think of the standard marriage vow in a wedding ceremony, “for better or for worse, for richer or for poorer,” and note the sequence of events go from positive to negative. It should not be the case for us. Rather, we should go from better to best. I am not saying however that we forget about the negative comments of a child or an evaluator because it too can help us become better people after all. What I want is the negative things to be discussed orally with the person involved and in private rather than put it in detail in his or her record and be a part of his or his history.

I remember my first regular stint as a teacher in a progressive school, I was observed by my superior on my first day and her observation created a lasting impact in my mind and in my teaching profession altogether. I even remembered the day she discussed with me her findings. I know I am neither a perfect person nor perfect teacher but because of her gentle and loving approach in discussing to me her assessment of my teaching, I became more passionate of teaching after that encounter. To this day, even if I’m no longer teaching professionally, I know I will still love teaching for life as I am also a student of thought.

I was also evaluated a number of times while I was still teaching at a science high school although I don’t get to know the results of these evaluations as it were never discussed with me, whether in writing or in person. However, I am confident that I have fulfilled my responsibilities as a teacher-adviser. Maybe, my evaluation results during my teaching in the science high school were no longer discussed to me because I have passed their expectation and maybe because I already have previous teaching experience, however, I would rather they discussed these results with me because I know that these kinds of assessments will help me improve myself to be a better person. I know that improvements are a continuous process of changing and re-changing yourself, and that I can never really be perfect, unless I’m already with my Savior. So, as long as I’m here in this world, I know I still have things to work out for in myself. And I firmly believe a good evaluation and assessment is a key in order for someone to continuously strive to be better.

Evaluation is necessary in nearly every aspect of our lives in order for us to strengthen our weaknesses, improve our skills and to look for innovations. And as much as possible, we should do our daily tasks as if we are being evaluated at the end of each day. There are a few people who do this, who only perform well when they know they are being evaluated. This result to false evaluation and instead of being able to help, this kind of evaluation may cause further harm to the person than good. Some other times, this kind of evaluation leads to the person being evaluated holding grudges to the evaluator himself or even to his or her co-teachers being evaluated.

Now that I am in the position of being the one to evaluate the teachers and personnel of Claret School of Quezon City where I’m currently the head of Marketing & Research Center, I have with me my previous experiences of being evaluated and the knowledge to be objective as much as possible in doing my evaluation. What exactly is my goal? Do I want to know those who are not performing so I can fire them, or do I want to help them become better teachers? My main goal right now is to present a school with quality as may be seen in the student performance and other indicators. I know that evaluation is one of the key in order to achieve this goal. If I know the main assets of the school and the main weaknesses, I would know which programs to incorporate that can help us improve these weaknesses and further strengthen our assets.

These coming months, I’m scheduled to do our school evaluation, one of product evaluation and then on process evaluation. It is important that I make sure we have a firm foundation towards the quality education we are aiming in the school that is not far from the vision/ mission of the school. I just wish that the teachers as well as the personnel would not fear the evaluation, rather, that they should gladly entertain being evaluated. Also, evaluation should not be tied up with monetary equivalence.

So evaluation must be done to make them better teachers if not the best. The choices are clear, for better or best!

Photo Credit: https://losedabooze.wordpress.com/2013/11/20/striving-to-be-my-best/

Monday, April 25, 2011

Jean Jacques Rousseau: Educating the Natural Person


(Excerpts from paper submitted for EDFD 201: Psycho-Philosophical Foundations of Education)

Photo Credit: posterlounge.co.uk

Rousseau’s Theory of Education

Rousseau's system of education was based on the goal of moving societies back into the idealized natural state. Education of children demanded their removal from the corrupting orders of society as it had become. In this state of separation, children would, in his view, revert to the state of perfect freedom. Child-rearing and education exclude rules that fostered a do or don't orientation as children would have to learn the lessons of life through both the good and negative consequences of their own actions. Likewise, he believed that children would learn in accordance with what came naturally by them.

Rousseau’s educational theory does not concern itself with particular techniques of channeling information and concepts, but rather focused on developing the pupil’s character and moral sense so that he may exercise self-mastery and remain morally excellent even in the unnatural and imperfect society in which he will live in. Books had no place in Rousseau's system of education since he believed that "books only teach us to talk about what we do not and cannot know." He stressed that boys in particular were to be taught to be observant of the world around them, and to learn the consequences of freedom and choices.

The hypothetical boy, Émile from his famous book on education Émile, or On Concerning Education, is to be raised in the countryside, which, he believes, is a more natural and healthy environment than the city, under the tutelage of a tutor who will be his guide through the various learning experiences arranged by the tutor. Protected from the stilted and subtle influences of contemporary society, Émile would not develop unrealistic ambitions and feelings of jealousy or superiority with regard to other men (amour propre). The tutor is to make sure that no harm comes to Émile through his learning experiences. In such a way, the tutor would encourage the child's physical development, shield him from social and religious institutions, prevent the formation of bad habits and prejudices, and preserve his natural inclination of self-interest (amour de soi).

Rousseau was one of the first to propose a developmentally appropriate education. He divides childhood into three stages: (1) to the age of about 12, when children are guided by their emotions and impulses; (2) from 12 to about 16, when reason starts to develop; and (3) from the age of 16 onwards, when the child develops into an adult. He commends that at the young age, the child has to learn a manual skill such as carpentry, one which requires creativity and thought, to keep him out of trouble, and to supply as a fallback means of living in the event of a change of circumstances. Educated free from the manipulations and desires of others up to this point, Rousseau wanted Émile to remain ignorant of social duty and only to understand what was possible or impossible in the physical world. In such a way, his student would learn to obey the immutable laws of nature. For instance, if Émile were to break the window to his room, he would face the consequences of sleeping with a cold draft. If Émile were to ignore his astronomy lesson, he would endure the panic of losing his way in the woods at night. Through this kind of trial and error, the child would gradually develop reason, adapt to different situations, and become an autonomous man.

In early adolescence the emphasis would be on self-reliance. And to assist Émile's self-reliance, Rousseau exposed his student to a variety of artisan trades. Thus, the child would not crave things he could not get, nor would he engage in a vain desire to control other people. An independent and rational young man, Émile learned to accept what was available to him. It is important to note, however, that although the tutor was always behind the scenes, he constantly manipulated conditions to give Émile the illusion of freedom.

Also on the early adolescent stage, Rousseau permits the introduction of a literary text in the form of Defoe's Robinson Crusoe as it depicted the independent activities of a man isolated in a natural setting. And during the adolescent years Rousseau sought the importance of friendship and self-sacrifice in the interest of others. Rousseau believed that it was only when individuals shift their personal needs that communities were built and remained strong. It is only in this point of adolescence that Rousseau encourages readings of literature and philosophy.

Having the power to reason by the age of fifteen, the child is then necessitated to develop his morality by recognizing society and God. Through the secure and detached means of historical study, Rousseau wanted his pupil to construct his understanding of human character. Detailed historical reports of men's spoken words and actions would consent Émile to recognize the universality of natural human passion. As a rational adolescent with confidence, he would neither envy nor disdain those in the past, but would feel compassion towards them. This was also the time to foster the growth of Émile's religious faith. Rousseau did not want him to be an anthropomorphic atheist. Nor did he want his pupil to come under the authority of a particular religious group, with its formal rituals and doctrines. Instead, Émile was to distinguish the restrictions of his senses and to have faith that God–the supreme intelligent will that made the universe and put it into motion–must in fact exist.
In the final stage of education, his pupil needed to travel throughout the capitals of Europe to learn directly how different societies functioned. Émile also needed to find an appropriate mate, Sophie, who would support him emotionally and raise his children. Rousseau relegated Sophie to the role of wife and mother. In direct contrast to Émile's isolated upbringing for developing his reason and preparing him as a citizen, Sophie's education immersed her in social and religious circles from the outset, thereby ensuring that she would not become a citizen. Despite this inequality, Rousseau believed that Émile and Sophie would comprise a harmonious and moral unit in the ideal state and produce future generations who would uphold it.

Although his ideas heralded that of modern ones in many ways, in one way they do not: his program of education was distinguished differently for males and females. Rousseau believes in the moral superiority of the patriarchal family on the antique Roman model. Sophie, the woman Émile is supposed to marry, as the representative of an ideal womanhood, is educated to be governed by her husband while Émile, as representative of the ideal man, is educated to be self-governing. For girls, Rousseau advocated an education that would enable women in effect to be a submissive companion to their husbands. A woman's education was meant to help her learn how to think, make judgments, develop her mind as well as to keep her appearance and run a household. He was very much opposed to the recommendation that Plato had made centuries ago that women be allowed to take on exercise and athletics. This is unlikely an accidental feature of Rousseau's educational and political philosophy; it is in fact essential to his account of the distinction between private, personal relations and the public world of political relations. The private sphere as Rousseau conceives of is dependent on the subordination of women, in order for both it and the public political sphere to function as he imagines it could and should. Rousseau expected the modern notion of the bourgeois nuclear family, with the mother at home taking responsibility for the household and for childcare and early education. In Rousseau's ideal, natural and egalitarian society (as in the case of "corrupt" societies) the differentiated education of women had yet to be seen as a contradiction of Rousseau's own polemic on human equality.

Rousseau's critiques have blamed him for everything they do not like in what they call modern "child-centered" education. John Darling's 1994 book Child-Centered Education and its Critics for example, argues that the history of modern educational theory is a series of footnotes to Rousseau, a development which he regards as bad. Good or bad, theorists and educators such as Rousseau's near contemporaries Pestalozzi, Mme de Genlis, and later, Maria Montessori, and John Dewey, which have directly influenced modern educational practices do have significant points in common with those of Rousseau.

Contributions/ Influences to Education

Rousseau, though he paid his respects to Plato's philosophy, rejected it as impractical due to the decayed state of society. Rousseau also had a different theory of human development; where Plato held that people are born with skills appropriate to different castes (though he did not regard these skills as being inherited), Rousseau held that there was one developmental process common to all humans. This was an intrinsic, natural course of action, of which the chief behavioral manifestation was curiosity. This differed from Locke's 'tabula rasa' in that it was an active process deriving from the child's nature, which drove the child to learn and adapt to its surroundings.

Rousseau stipulated in his book Emile that all children are perfect and faultless organisms, ready to learn from their surroundings so as to grow into virtuous adults, but due to the malign influence of corrupt society, they often fail to do so. Rousseau urged an educational technique which contained of removing the child from the society – for example, to a country home – and alternately qualifying him through changes to environment and determining traps and puzzles for him to solve or overcome.
Rousseau was unusual in that he recognized and addressed the potential of a problem of legalization for teaching. He advocated that adults always be truthful with children, and in particular that they never hide the fact that the basis for their authority in teaching was purely one of physical coercion: the fact that the tutor is bigger than his pupil. Once children reached the age of reason, at about 12, they would be engaged as free individuals in the ongoing process of their own.

He once said that a child ought to grow up without adult intervention and that the child must be taught to suffer from the experience of the natural outcomes of his own acts or behavior. When he experiences the consequences of his own deeds, he is supposed to advise himself. And instead of an educated man being maneuvered by societal norms, Rousseau hopes for the child to have no other guide than his own reason by the time he is educated.

He mentions that children should not acquire habits due to the constraints these practices could cause. Instead, natural education cherishes inclination, which Rousseau describes as being “conscious of our sensations we are inclined to seek or to avoid the objects which produce them.” They are simply to be our nature to which everything else must adapt. Education for Rousseau must conform to nature, and not as a means of preparing for citizenship in any particular government, much less for an occupation, but for the development of manhood per se and fitting for the duties of human life.

Rousseau's philosophy of education can be seen today in some aspects of the homeschooling movement which takes the child out of mainstream education and what the states says they need to learn and gives them more independence, freedom and space to learn at their own speed and to focus on the topics that they want to study. Rousseau presents a challenge that is still relevant to today's system of education and argues that schools are a bit like sausage making machines. They aim to take different unique children and put them through the factory of education, producing identical sausages. The Montessori method, likewise, is one of the most significant and popular approach to education whose roots may well be traced back to Rousseau.

Montessori Method: Modern Rousseau Curriculum?

The method aims to bring about, sustain and support the children’s true natural way of being by creating an environment and instituting materials designed for their self-directed learning activity. Enforcing this method involves the teacher regarding the child as having an inner natural guide for his/her own optimal self-directed development. The teacher's function of observation sometimes includes experimental interactions with children, commonly referred to as "lessons," to resolve misbehavior or to show how to use the various self-teaching materials that are provided in the environment for the children's free use.

The Montessori Method includes a curriculum of learning that derives from the child's own natural inner guidance and conveys itself in outward behavior as the child's various distinct interests are at work. Affirming this internal plan of nature, the method allows for a range of materials to induce the child's interest through self-directed activity. In the initial plane of development (0–6), these materials are generally devised into five basic categories: practical life, sensorial, math, language, and culture. Other categories may also include geography, history, and science.

The "prepared environment" is Maria Montessori's notion that the surrounding conditions can be designed to facilitate maximum independent learning and exploration by the child. In the quiet, coherent space of the Montessori prepared environment, children form activities of their own choice at their own pace. They experience a harmony of freedom and self-discipline in a place especially contrived to meet their developmental needs. 

In the Montessori classroom, learning materials are placed invitingly on low, open shelves. Children may choose whatever materials they would like to use and may work for as long as the material holds their interest. When they are finished with each material, they return it to the shelf from which it came. As the child's search continues, the materials interrelate and shape upon each other. Later, in the elementary years, new aspects of some of the materials unfold. 

In the Montessori curriculum, the term "normalization" has a specified and important meaning. "Normal" does not denote to what is believed to be "typical" or "average" or even "usual." "Normalization" does not pertain to a process of being constrained to conform. Instead, Maria Montessori applied the terms "normal" and "normalization" to depict a unique process she discovered in child development. Montessori learned from observation that when children are permitted freedom in an environment meant to their needs, they blossom. After a period of extremely sharp concentration, developing materials that fully engage their interest, children seem to be refreshed and satisfied. Through an extended and centralized work of their own choice, children grow in inner discipline and peace. She ascribed this process "normalization" and referred it as "the most important single result of our whole work."

Wednesday, February 23, 2011

A Night of Ladies and Gentlemen

(Speech delivered on Junior-Senior Prom for Roosevelt College Science High School, 2011)

Photo Credit: www.signupgenius.com
Most (if not all) of us would agree that the days we spent in high school were certainly the best days of our lives, and probably, one of the most memorable. It was in school that we made BFFs, competed to excel, hoped for places in the sports teams, and learned some significant lessons about life. The memories we were able to make as we go through our everyday routine will always be etched in our hearts and our subconscious. Sometimes, what we did in high school has likewise significant impacts in what we will be 10 to 15 years from now; other times however, what we did while we were in high school led us to another thing that turned us into the other way around. We won’t be really sure what the future holds for each of us in here, but what we know is that, we are actually making that future already in every decision we made, in every good or bad deed we acted impulsively, and even in how we deal with the pressures and the surprises that come our way.

We are here today not just to dance or to have fun. This is not only the Junior-Senior Prom. Look at it this way. Every step you take NOW is a realization that you are all growing up already as the ladies and gentlemen you will become. And it is my prayer that you stay true to that – ladies and gentlemen. By definition, a lady and a gentleman are a woman and a man of refinement. And I actually like that word, refinement. It means the result of improving something; it means the process of removing impurities. It means to us a constant desire to improve what there is to improve and remove what undesirable we can find in ourselves. It is a lifelong process, yes, as nobody is perfect except which has been perfected by the grace of the Lord, and even then, may not be perfect still while we are living in this world. There is no instant solution to perfection anyway. So, we all have a long way to go. And I would like us all to start that long process now. Today when we are in our finest dresses and coats and tuxes, let us live up to our outside garment. Let us in the inside be as fine, as beautiful, and as presentable as our outward appearance.

I know you all have come a long way already. We all have come a long way. And we still have a lot of things ahead of us. College for the seniors is very much nearer already than we hoped it would be. And we are not to stay in high school forever. Because that would mean we are not growing anymore by way of the mind and heart. Sooner than we realized it, the juniors now will also be busy already with their college requirements. Time is swift indeed and there is no denying the need to cope up with time, and not let time cope with us.

Of course we also have to have fun. What is a prom without the fun, some may say. Why not have fun while also having the best of what life can be. And it can be the best if we live up to it with the refinement a true lady and gentleman has. I say, let us all dance our hearts out, sing our feelings in, and live our life in accordance with the will of our True Master and Creator who is looking at us right now with pride for a masterpiece He has made in each of us. Ladies and gentlemen, let us not spoil that masterpiece, YOU. We at least owe that to Him, who has made each of us according to His image.

Let us enjoy this night with respect to each other and in hopeful prayer that tomorrow, we are better than we are tonight.