TESDA gets UN grant to carry out gender-sensitive education

12 July 2011

The Technical Education and Skills Development Authority (TESDA) and the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) are beefing up efforts to break the division along gender lines in technical vocational education.

In the weeks ahead, TESDA will finalize a gender-sensitivity training curriculum and roll it out among its trainees and trainers under an agreement that is signed with the UNFPA, which gave a total of $89,083 grant.

The Letter of Understanding inked recently formalized the partnership of the two agencies in implementing the project component of the Joint Programme on Youth Employment and Migration (YEM) that aims to bring to technical vocational education and training (TVET) gender-sensitivity and life skills.

Starting late last year, TESDA has been a partner of the International Labour Organization (ILO) in the implementation of the Millennium Development Goals Achievement  Fund (MDG-F) Joint Programme on Youth, Employment  and Migration (YEM) entitled “Alternatives to Migration:  Decent Jobs for Filipino Youth”,  particularly for the conduct of labor market-responsive TVET for disadvantaged youths in four identified provinces namely, Antique, Masbate, Agusan Del Sur and Maguindanao.

"Embedding the gender dimension into TVET is a initiative to empower women across societies," TESDA Director General Joel Villanueva said.

"TESDA has opened a wider venue for women, making available variety of courses that they can enroll in, including those previously thought to be only for men. But much more needs to be done and we are continuously working on it," Villanueva said.

Under the agreement, TESDA has agreed to finalize and reproduce gender-sensitive modules and training materials, which will include training tools on sexually-transmitted infections and HIV/AIDS and roll-out the developed curriculum and materials in the Training of Trainers that will be conducted initially for the Trainers  of TVET institutions in the four target provinces of the YEM project.

The modules will be submitted to the TESDA National GAD Council headed by former Senator Leticia Ramos Shahani for institutionalization into the TESDA curriculum.

Villanueva said at least 20,000 technical vocational education and training (TVET) trainers across the country are expected to benefit from the project once the materials are completely rolled-out.

The first batch of trainers' training will be held in Iloilo City from July 18 to 22 for the provinces of Masbate and Antique, according to Marta Hernandez, Executive Director of TESDA TVET Systems Development Office.

TESDA's Annual Work Plan (AWP) for the YEM project will have a total budget of $126,875. Of this, $34,581 will come from the UNFPA regular funds, $54,502 will be sourced from the Millennium Development Goals Achievement Fund, and $37,791 will come from TESDA as a counterpart fund for salary of personnel.

TESDA has taken strides in mainstreaming gender and development in the agency.

Villanueva said that the UNFPA-TESDA partnership took off from the accomplishments of the Gender-Responsive Economic Actions for the Transformation of Women (GREAT) Project, where TESDA partnered with the Philippine Commission on Women (PCW) and the Canadian International Cooperation Agency (CIDA).

The GREAT Women Project is a governance and capacity development project that aims to create and support a gender-responsive enabling environment for women’s economic empowerment, particularly those in micro-enterprises as well as in the program and service delivery systems for women entrepreneurs and their workers.

The outputs of TESDA sub-project activity under the GREAT Women Project directly contribute to the country program outcomes/outputs of the Joint Programme on Youth, Employment and Migration (JP-YEM) through the integration of the gender and the life skills components to the TVET curriculum. 

"Empowering our women through gender-sensitive education makes them informed, productive workers, yielding better economic and social benefits," Villanueva said.

"This is what TESDA's goal is at the end of the day -- improved lives through skills education," he added.

Villanueva represented the agency during the signing of the agreement held at the UNFPA Office recently. Signing for the UNFPA was Ugochi Daniels, Country Office head.

Also present from UNFPA were Ms. Florence Tayzon, Asst. Representative; Dr. Jacqueline Kitong, Programme Officer for Reproductive Health;  Jovanni Templonuevo, National Programme Professional Personnel on HIV/AIDS; Mr. Eduardson Flores, Programme Associate for YEM; and,  Ms. Pearl Joy dela Cruz, Programme Assistant. Executive Director Marta M. Hernandez, Division Chief Josephine Arriola, Ms. Ida Miape and Ms. Glenda Galabin of TESDA also witnessed the signing of the LOU.