Tuesday, December 29, 2015

A Very Significant Date

29-XII-15 
A Very Significant Date


“It was my fault that Lex and Nita did not receive anything from the proceeds of the sale of our properties in Itbayat, Batanes because I told Nana that we would not accept any share from it; that all of it should go to her,” thus said Kuya Flor in his explanation of what he said he was about to do for us, his siblings.  To be clear, we did have properties in Itbayat.  These comprised of a couple of parcels of agricultural farms in Riaxogay and Kasupitan, as well as a house and lot in the town of Itbayat.  These were inherited by our mother from her Ninang, our Lola Cela, who had practically adopted Nana Nitang. These properties, by any means, didn’t make our family well-to-do.  In fact, we worked these farms like hell so we could survive the harsh realities of life in Itbayat.  If one is not hard worker in Itbayat, one would not survive one minute even with large tracts of land to one’s name.  Too, one must understand that in Itbayat, Batanes owning a property means nothing if one isn’t ready to work it.  We could have had these farm lots, but if we didn’t work them we wouldn’t have survived.  Still, we were lucky we had these farm lots.  With hard work, we were able to survive the harshness of island life, dependent only on mother nature and hard work.  We had little use for money, by the way, but through hard work (hard labor, really) we did have enough food on the table, even if only kamote tubers and tops.

After completing our studies, we started working and we had practically migrated to Los Banos (my brother finished his studies at UPCA, so did I), and our sister finished her studies in Laguna.  When my brother finished his studies, he sent me to school (High School and College), and when I finished college and started working, I sent our sister to school (college).  That’s exactly how things had to work for us; that’s the value system we grew up in: those younger than us were our responsibilities.  We had fully accepted those responsibilities, we never complained.  Instead, we had to be thankful that we were able to get to where we were at.

The time had come to bring our mother to Los Banos to stay with us.  We knew we had come to the point where we would begin taking full responsibility for the welfare of our mother, who, as a single parent, raised us all within a demanding value system framework.  She had been highly successful, and we have not been able to thank her enough for that.  So it was that when she got to Los Banos, we told her in no uncertain terms that we were not going to take any share from the proceeds of the sale of properties in Itbayat, that she owned all of it and may do whatever she wanted to do with her money.  She has always lived a frugal life and every now and then, without our knowledge, she would spend for some gifts to her grand children.  Unfortunately, Kuya didn’t have any child and I had one.  This was perhaps another reason Kuya must have felt it a responsibility to share with us, his siblings, what he has been able to generate through the years.  Under the value system we were brought up, we always accepted the decision of those older than were were.  So, while I expressed concern and disagreement with Kuya’s decision to share his resources with Nita and myself, I was aware that Kuya has made his decision and so I had to accept that but with some suggestions.

A footnote to this: earlier on Kuya apparently had talked to Nana about the proceeds of sale of our properties in Itbayat, then Kuya told me about it later.  I completely agreed with him.

Anyway, Kuya has decided to give us a share from his share of the proceeds in the sale of Panyesanan.  I know that this was not a difficult decision for him because I know his basis, but I’m not so sure about Ate Aida.  Of course, the significant point is that they shared the proceeds right down the middle, 50-50, and each one responsible for his/her share.  Here, I’m not touching on what Ate Aida intends to do with her share because that’s her business.  I’m saying something about Kuya’s share because I’m party to it.  I am pleased however, that Kuya listened to me and has retained a larger proportion because he has a lot of expected expenses.  I really wouldn’t have made a fuss if he didn’t give me a share at all.  And I know my sister Nita thinks the same way.  But we accept Kuya’s decision because that’s how we were brought up.  And that’s that.

I’ll not talk about amounts here because I consider talking about these unethical and uncalled for.  Besides, we’re not talking here of figures anywhere close to that of  Bill Gates’ coins.   All I wish to share here is what I have decided to do with what I have no matter the amount.  First, some I have already decided to allocate for Jegs’ Mom’s health concerns, and I hope Jegs would agree with me that I need some amount (less than what I have allocated for the health benefits of her Mom) to complete the transfer of my son’s inheritance from me.  This is part of my responsibility and commitment and I haven’t been able to do this (I still have to discuss this with Jegs.  I do hope she agrees with me.  I shall not ask any more for myself.   The rest would go towards a residential abode or an investment, all of which will end up in the hands of Jegs, anyway.

When I’m gone, which I feel is sooner than later, I’ll not be able to leave much for Jegs, but she would have either a respectable abode, or a small investment package that would provide her enough elbow-room for her financial transactions.  We don’t have much right now but she’ll have all what we now have, including a car, which I already have put under her name.  The investment package will, sooner or later, be in her name.  If we decide to invest in a small house and lot, such holding will be hers when I'm gone.  Meantime, I will also live in the place.  But this is not for long anymore.


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Sunday, November 15, 2015

Your Article Appeared in a Predatory Journal? That’s Become a Problem Now


At the UPOU, I’m a member of two committees at the university level: Committee on Professor Emeriti  and Committee on the UP Science Productivity System, both requiring stringent criteria that have something to do with scientific output.  The Committee on Professor Emeriti is responsible for the evaluation and  nomination of retiring faculty members with the rank of Professor 12 to the title of Professor Emeritus.  The Professor Emeritus title is for life.  The other committee that I’m a member of is responsible for the evaluation of faculty members to determine if they’re qualified to be nominated for the Award UP Scientist I, UP Scientist II, or UP Scientist III; or UP Artist I, UP Artist II, or UP Artist III. 

In evaluating the scientific or artistic outputs of the faculty members being considered for the Scientific Productivity Award, the UP Artist Award, and the Professor Emeritus Award, we look carefully at the scientific artistic publication outputs.  In other words, we take a look at books, book chapters, or journal articles published by the faculty member concerned in reputable publishers.  This has become a problematic matter beginning this year because the UP System has suddenly excluded articles published in what they have labeled predatory journals.  Why has this become a problem?

Predatory publication refers to various characteristics like weak review process, guarantees that an article would be published, the author paying a publication fee, and things like these.  We used to think of predatory journals as only those that charge publication fees, but there are more issues involved.  For example, the criteria that would identify a journal as predatory journal, or a publishing house as predatory publisher, include the following characteristics:

1.     Peer review procedure is weak or even non-existent.
2.     Board of Editors is comprised of unknown names in the field, or include names of known individuals without their permission, much less agree to become members of the editorial boards.
3.     The journal doesn’t have authentic address.
4.     The journal has an over-active promotion program, practically forcing individuals, researchers, or authors  to submit articles to the journal.
5.     The journal is usually not listed or even mentioned in the Journal Citation Report, which is usually through the Library.
6.     The journal has a high manuscript acceptance. rate
7.     The journal may be short-lived.
8.     The journal has an over-flattering characteristic such as high impact factor.
9.     The journal charges publication fee.
10. Little or no attention paid to digital preservation.

There are other characteristics, but these are the common ones.  Perhaps the most common among these is for authors to pay publication fee.  Very many journals do this, and this practice has even been bolstered by the proliferation of open access journals.  This phenomenon of open access started big time in 2002.  It is estimated that today, the number of open access journals has surpassed the 10,000 mark.  The number is probably much larger.  There are three models of open access publications (journals).

1.     Gold Model, which provides that the author pays for the publication of his article.
2.     Green Model, which means that the author shall self-archive all his previous articles published in open access repositories, and possibly make them available on request.  In other words, the journal has nothing to do with archiving the article it publishes.
3.     Platinum Model, which means that the publication is free for both author and reader, and is funded by an organization, institution, or other individual/s.

To the issue of whether or not the University of the Philippines should exclude any publication from predatory journals in its evaluation of scientific productivity of individual faculty members is really an internal matter.  My suggestion, however, is that the policy to exclude articles published in predatory journals from the evaluation of scientific outputs of the individual faculty member being considered for promotion or award  should not be applied now.  Maybe it could be applied next year,  in the next call for promotions. By then, the UP System would have completed its list of journals it considers predatory and any article published in such journals the UP shall not credit under its promotion or scientific productivity programs.  It is necessary that the UP has its own criteria for determining whether or not a journal is predatory.  Otherwise, it can use the list provided by legitimate societies or associations such as the Directory of Open Access Journals or the Open Access Scholarly Publications Association.  The list, regularly updated and published by Jeffrey Beall of Colorado State University, is controversial although used by many universities.  One of the criticisms against Beall is that it is apparent he has a bias against open access publications.  Beall’s list is commonly referred to as “black list” of journals, while those from DOAJ or OASPA is “white list,” which means they’re not predatory journals.

Just how serious is this problem in the academe?  Here are data from Jeffrey Beall. 

                    Year             No. of Predatory Publishers
                    2011                       18
                    2012                       23
                    2013                       225
                    2014                       477
                    2015                       693

The number of questionable stand alone journals:

                    Year             No.
                    2013             126
                    2014             303
                    2015             507

If anything, the number of predatory publishers as well as predatory open access journals have been increasing on a yearly basis, but the increase is largest in 2013.  In the case of stand alone journals (those that are not part of any organization or institution) Beall also reported that while in 2013 only 126 journals were questionable, this number increased to 507 in 2015.

There’s one point that needs to be discussed by all concerned individuals and institutions.  This is particularly important in the case of the University of the Philippines System.  Simply because an article was published in a “predatory” journal doesn’t necessarily mean the article per se is not of high quality.  Of course, the circumstances under which the article may have been published could be questionable.

Unfortunately, predatory publishing will not stop unless academics stop submitting their articles to these journals.  How about, “just leave them?”  Well, I wish it were as easy as that.
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Tuesday, September 29, 2015

Flashback

In June 2004, I was invited to talk about the concept of open university at the 3rd National Research Conference in Education at the University of Santo Tomas.  I refined that paper and included it in my book, Distance Education in the Philippines, Issues and Concerns which was published by the UP Open University in 2008.  I wish to reproduce here my concluding statement in that paper because the ideas are as valid then as they are today. 

Here’s my concluding statement then:

Clearly, open learning, distance education, and the concept of the open university are rather old concepts in other parts of the world.  In the Philippines these are relatively new concepts, just beginning to take root in this country.  Still, those who feel they are innovative keep on pushing to establish open universities within their organizational set up.  They must be recognized for their forward-looking and innovative thinking.  However, I hope that they also realize there are wrong premises from which to proceed.  Let me clarify what I consider to be wrong premises:

1.     It is wrong to claim that you have an open university simply because you have announced so; and that you are offering one or a couple of courses, or even degree programs.  It is only in the Philippines where a unit of a university offers a course or a program and calls it open university.  It is also only in the Philippines where a university is subsumed under a college, as in the case of an open university under a state college.  Sometimes you have an open college under a school in a college.  I have been wondering where we are getting these ideas.

Let us abide by accepted international norms so we can be competitive worldwide.

2.     It is wrong to claim that we have well-prepared instructional modules for our distance students when all we have is a pamphlet, not designed for independent learning, and probably mimeographed years ago.  We are short-changing our students who pay good money for their education.  We may think that education is a business enterprise, and probably that may even be acceptable, but knowledge can hardly be bought.

If you want to offer open learning and distance education courses and even programs, train first your human resources and build up your expertise and non-human resources before you begin admitting students.  It should not be the other way around.

3.     It is wrong to enroll students in distance courses and do not provide them appropriate support services so that they can gain from the courses they enrolled in.  That, to me, is cheating, pure and simple.

If you want to offer courses in the distance mode, always provide for an efficient and effective student support services.  That is the heart of distance education.
4.     It is wrong for institutions of higher learning to offer academic degree programs in the distance education mode when their own conventional programs are not even good enough.  What makes them think that they can deliver quality education in the distance mode when they cannot even do so in the conventional mode?  Distance education is not easy.  It is also very expensive to prepare good instructional materials designed for distance education delivery.

If you want to offer courses in the distance mode, do an excellent job on your conventional programs first.  You can not hope to be good in distance education if you are not good in your conventional programs.  Pour enough resources into conceptualization, planning, course development, support services, and evaluation procedures.  Follow accepted standards of excellence and quality.

5.     It is wrong to offer programs in the distance mode when you do not have sufficient manpower, expertise, and resources to deliver them.  The moment you begin offering your courses you have a psychological contract with your students that will require you to continue offering the courses until the students complete their programs and earn their academic degrees.  If you are not ready to abide by that psychological contract, then don’t start it.

Develop a human resource pool who have acceptable levels of expertise in the theory, philosophy, and practice of open learning and distance education.  It is not enough to have one trained individual on your faculty, or to have simply visited the UK Open University.  Open learning and distance education are commitments that go way beyond mere compilation of lecture notes for distribution to students.  It is a calling, a philosophy, a way of life, a professional commitment and sometimes a sacrifice.


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Sunday, July 12, 2015

UPOU Helps Conserve Culture Through Wood Carving


Ongoing at the new UPOU Community Hub Bldg. (8-15 July 2015) is a Wood-Carving Workshop, Wood Carving Competition and Artists’ Forum where 15 wood carvers (7 from Ifugao, 5 from Besi in Guagua, Pampanga, and 3 from Paete in Laguna) are actively participating. This is part of the series of activities in celebration of the 20th Anniversary of UPOU and UPOU’s celebration of World Wood Day. 






Theme of this workshop is “Wood and Humanity” and it highlights the crucial role of wood in ensuring a sustainable future. 

The most important aspect of this Project is the Wood Carving Competition, which shall be held on July 15th at the CCDL (Centennial Center for Distance Learning) at the UPOU Campus in Los BaƱos.




The Project, aptly titled Artists’ Workshop and Forum, has brought together the dwindling number of Filipino Wood Carvers to work with a couple of Chinese Master Wood Carvers from the IWCS.  According to Prof. Habito, Project Leader, the winner for this year’s competition shall be sponsored by the IWCS for a European tour to observe and study woodcarving techniques in other countries in Europe.



The Exhibit of the products or outputs of the workshop shall be at the Centennial Center for Distance Learning (CCDL), UPOU Campus in Los BaƱos.   It should be pointed out as well that the wood used by the wood carvers come from the huge trunks and branches of acacia trees uprooted by Typhoon Glenda on the campus of UPLB.




Incidentally, UPOU’s 19th Graduation Ceremonies shall be held on 25 July 2015, 5:00 pm, at the UPOU Grounds.  UPOU shall officially announce the graduation of 378 individuals who have completed all the requirements for graduation from 24 degree programs (FMDS, 10; FEd, 9; FICS, 5).

Thursday, July 2, 2015

UPLB Graduation Crossing Over to a New Dimension



Finally, after more than 40 years, UPLB is finally crossing over to a new dimension in its perennially perspiration-soaked or rain-soaked graduation ceremonies.  At UPLB, graduation ceremonies begin at 2:00 pm and usually finish at 7-8 pm.  And the graduates have to literally sweat it out under the heat of the afternoon sun, which, by the way, they have to face frontally as well.

Historically, UPLB graduates always either are soaked with their own perspiration or in a downpour.  For sometime now, there has always been talk about shifting to morning ceremonies, but this has not been agreed upon.  Except perhaps in the case of UP Mindanao, where the graduation ceremonies are held at dawn, graduation ceremonies at UP campuses are normally held in the afternoon or evening.

This year, the UPLB Graduation Ceremonies enters a new dimension – that of what I will call “sheltered graduation.”  The entire graduation ceremonies ground, in front of the DL Umali Auditorium – which is also called the DLU Freedom Park, is covered with huge roof.  This time, both the UPLB Administrators and faculty and the graduates will be sitting under the same roof.




I believe we have Chancellor Fernando C. Sanchez, Jr. to thank for.  Previous UPLB Graduations never had the DLU Freedom Park covered with plasticized roofing material during graduation ceremonies.  Previous graduates either had to literally sweat it out under the sweltering heat of an afternoon sun or be soaked in a huge downpour.



 To repeat, the UPLB Administration has installed a steel-framed roof protection in this year’s graduation ceremonies.  This is the beginning of a new dimension in the graduation ceremonies of the University.

Up until 1968, UPCA graduates had to join the graduation ceremonies at UP Diliman.  I was a member of Class 1968, the last class to participate in the graduation ceremonies in Diliman.  Then, the first graduation ceremonies at UPLB, I believe, were held in 1972 at the steps of the old Library (which, today, is the Department of Humanities).  For four years there were no graduation ceremonies (those were the height of activism at UP).

In the interim, after the completion of the Centennial Field House, I have wondered why graduations have not been held in that Field House (there was one held there sometime back, if I’m not mistaken). 


Back to this year’s graduation ceremonies.  This is a feat to beat in next year’s graduation ceremonies.  At the very least, many would expect the same, if not better, preparation for the UPLB Graduation Ceremonies next year.
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Wednesday, June 24, 2015

UPOU Soon to Launch Green Building



I mentioned in one of my FB posts in 2014 that UPOU was going to construct its first green building.  In fact, I posted a picture of the start of construction.  Today, I wish to inform the followers of this blog and my FB Posts, that said building shall be launched during the Graduation Ceremonies of UPOU in July 2015.  Well, that’s my belief, but I haven’t heard of an official launch yet.  Let me tell you a few little things about this building.

The UPOU Community Hub Building.

 
The main entrance to the Hub.
The building is called the UP Open Unive3rsity Community Hub.  My own perception is that this has reference to one of the important functions of the UPOU, as an open educational institution, to provide a facility and space where community residents could exchange with UOU academics ideas worth pursuing through individual educational efforts.  The UPOU provides a meaningful description of this concept  called ODeL or Open Distance Electronic Learning, which is at the heart of UPOU operations, and for which the UPOU has provided this facility.

At the background is UPOU's Billboard.

 
View from the rear.  Thisw portion will be a lagoon, I understand.

View from inside through main doors.

The roof enables light to shine through and would help reduce use of electricity for lighting/

This is one sample of the discussion  spaces at the UPOU Community Hub.

This facility shall house UPOU’s Learning Center in Laguna, UPOU Information Office (where souvenir items shall be available for sale at very low cost), the UPOU Library, perhaps a seminar hall, and discussion hallways.  Too, there are four spaces for food concessionaires who may be interested to provide food items like snacks and pasalubongs.  Take note that this building is almost right across from the SouthSupermaket in Los Banos, and entry through it doesn’t permit entry into the UPOU Compound  and IRRI field.  You enter through the main entrance, and exit through the same way.


This facility may be open to the public in July during UPOU's Graduation Ceremonies.  See you there.

Tuesday, April 28, 2015

Remains Applicable Today

This was a discussion paper of a Professorial Lecture of an esteemed colleague, the late Professor Dr. Corazon Lamug of UPLB.  I believe the issues raised then remain important today.  I accidentally found it in my old files and I wish to share it.


Comments by
Dr. Lex Librero
Discussant

  
A CRITIQUE OF THE SOCIAL RESEARCH DESIGNS OF STUDIES ON COMMUNITY-BASED NATURAL RESOURCE MANAGEMENT
BY DR. CORAZON B. LAMUG
(SEARCA Professorial Lecture, UP Los BaƱos, 14 March 2008)

 Having a discussant in a professorial lecture is not unheard of in the academe, but at UPLB it is not normative behavior either.  Therefore, it came to me as a surprise when Dr. Cora Lamug requested that I serve as discussant for her professorial lecture.  I know that in most universities abroad academics welcome, in fact they seek, criticisms of their works from their peers.  I have been exposed to the belief that this is one of the best ways of improving one’s work.  Unfortunately, this academic culture has not as yet blossomed well enough at UPLB, much less in other universities in the country, even at this rather late age. 

It is, therefore, a very pleasant and welcome opportunity for me to respond to what an esteemed colleague has made of the sometimes confused and confusing research in community-based natural resource management in this country.

Dr. Lamug’s critique of the research designs employed in CBNRM studies, I would like to believe, has dug much deeper than most in terms of comparative analysis of research designs, particularly from the points of view of positivism, interpretivism, critical theory, and action research. 

The first observation that Dr. Lamug made that caught my eye immediately was stated rather lamely when she said “Most review of CBNRM focus on research findings.”  I have always been vocal against this simplistic approach to the review of scientific literature, particularly by our colleagues and graduate students.  Look at any chapter on the review of literature in all graduate theses and dissertations at the UPLB Library and you will find that not less than 95% would just report a litany of findings reported by theses and dissertations done earlier, not much more.  Why do I need to pounce on this right away?  Well, this is not the way to review the scientific literature.

Professor Ivor Davies of Indiana University, in a course that I took under him, once said, “no body will be interested in your findings, but everybody will be interested in how you treated the scientific literature you had access to.”  In other words, the results of your study can only be meaningful if the means by which you arrived at them were subject to scientific rigor.  Outside of that, the results become spurious.  From this point of view, therefore, Dr. Lamug’s decision to look at the research designs employed in the research efforts in CBNRM concerns become very significant if only because we are interested in meaningful new information and knowledge that would hopefully provide insights into how the existing problems in the environment could be dealt with effectively and efficiently.

I am elated by the fact that Dr. Lamug chose to look at the research designs that have been employed in the study of natural resource management in this country.  The classification of research designs into the four paradigms of positivism, interpretivism, critical theory, and action research makes the discourse much more philosophical and academic, thereby elevating a few notches the discourse as it ought to be in an academic community.  However, I shall try to simplify some of my thoughts on these as we go along, at least for the benefit of those at my level who may not always feel comfortable with the isms of academe.

Dr. Lamug has already explained to us what the four paradigms mean, but let us have a quick review.  According to the philosophy espoused by Auguste Comte and the philosophers that followed him, human thought proceeds through three stages: theological, metaphysical, and positivistic.  The first refers to explaining all phenomena as happening because of the direct manipulation of supernatural beings or divine forces as if they physically existed (for example, recall the gods of Greek mythology).  The second is just like the first but that the supernatural beings have become more abstract rather than appearing human like.  The third, positivism,  abandoned the supernatural beings and metaphysical abstractions in favor of naturalistic and empirical explanations.  Put simply, we give meaning to what we can observe or sense.

Interpretivism means that the social sciences should be concerned with providing interpretation of events and phenomena in terms of how people involved perceive and understand their own experiences, not simply quantifying what actually happens in a social phenomenon.   In fact, interpretive sociology  deals with how to find reality through the experiences of individuals involved in the actual social phenomenon.

Critical theory, as explained by Dr. Lamug, may be viewed from two perspectives, namely: literary criticism and social theory.  We are interested in social theory, I believe, in this instance.  From the point of view of the social sciences, therefore, critical theory is concerned with critiquing and changing society as a whole in contrast to traditional theory which is oriented to understanding and explaining social phenomena. 

Participatory action research, or simply action research, has been defined as “collective self-reflective enquiry undertaken by participants in social situations in order to improve the rationality and justice of their own social practices” (Kemmis and McTraggart, 1988).   Hence, research becomes action research when it is collective activity.  Put simply, action research is actually the Dewey concept of learning, which is “learning by doing,” and it is known by many names like participatory research, collaborative inquiry, emancipatory research, action learning, and contextual action research which are variations of a theme.  In other words, a group of individuals would identify a problem, together do something to resolve the issue, observe how successful their efforts may be and if not satisfied, try again.

Now, let me proceed further into the lecture.  Dr. Lamug reported that 74% of the total number of reviewed research reports employed positivism as research paradigm.  About 7% of the studies employed interpretivism, another 7% critical theory, and 12% participatory action research.  This tells me that our researchers have been focusing too much on simply describing the situation in the environment.  Only 12 of a hundred have focused on explaining and understanding the actual experiences of individuals living in coastal areas.  This is rather small amount of research.   Could this explain why we do not, until now, fully understand the problems of people living in the coastal areas of the country?

Dr. Lamug’s critique, I would like to believe, has dug much deeper than most studies in terms of comparative analysis of research work in CBNRM.  She also had the foresight of telling us that the paradigms of positivism, interpretivism, critical theory, and participatory action research, indeed, are interrelated one way or the other.  Participatory research could be viewed as trying to achieve a clearer focus on a specific group of individuals being observed from the point of view of critical theory, and whose actions may be interpreted either from the point of view of the researcher or the researched and examined within the broad framework of positivism.

Dr. Lamug, through her lecture, has attempted to enlighten us on very serious discrepancies both in terms of our knowledge of and the methods by which we arrive at such knowledge of CBNRM and its effects on people and society.  For so long a time now, we have been doing research that simply scraped the surface of a social problem.  There are few in-depth analyses of the problems of CBNRM.  Most of the studies lack in-depth analysis that should logically lead to a better understanding of why people live the way they do in relation to their environment.

Has it not occurred to our colleagues, for example, that we still need to have a much better appreciation of why our indigenous cousins have a more meaningful understanding of nature and their environment?  At one time in the recent past, I challenged the researchers of Bicol University in one seminar, when I asked the participants “why is it that the wild life of Mayon Volcano understands the volcano much better than the people in its vicinity?”   The wildlife there, including the small lizards and insects, know when Mayon volcano is acting up.  But then again, the people probably know when Mayon volcano acts up but simply disregard it.  Such human behavior is something that also needs to be understood.  There must be a root cause of this problem situation, and that root cause is something we are not sure of.

Going back to issues raised in the lecture,  I ask: do we really understand our environment?  Some would say, yes we do but the difference is that we simply do not give a hoot because our greed is much stronger than our sense of responsibility and even safety.  Now, what then is the connection between irresponsibility and environmental conditions.  It is easy to make motherhood statements, or cop-out statements, but do we really honestly understand what the real relationship is between our own thinking and behavior and the natural order of our environment?  Our indigenous cousins would say, don’t do that because this would happen as a result, and that thing would result in this thing, and so forth and so on.  They have a strong sense of connection with their environment, and they have a deep understanding of how their lives and behavior are intertwined with natural conditions in their environment.  In a way, we can partly understand this phenomenon by understanding the indigenous knowledge system of the place.

If it has not come clear to you, let me try to simplify the message of Dr. Lamug’s lecture this morning.  In terms of research efforts, we simply describe because interpreting is much more difficult to do.  We think that when we have done our description we are done with our task.  Far from it.  The real work of a researcher is the correct interpretation of meaning and potential meanings and implications to our lives of what we may have discovered.  The problem is, when we do interpret to the limits of our understanding, we would certainly have to get out of our comfort zones – this is exactly what prevents us from further pushing our research and intellectual creativity towards innovative ways of looking at things and events.

Scientific revolutions happen, according to science philosopher and historian Thomas Kuhn, because of what he terms as anomalies resulting from discoveries of new ways of doing things.  The new ways of doing things resulting from new interpretations of similar observations unsettle what appears to be a relative calm within the scientific community.  When these new ways of doing things gain greater adherents among members of the scientific community questions are raised and an anomaly arises, and this anomaly would be settled either by accepting or rejecting the newer ways of doing things.  Then another relative calm sets in until another anomaly arises, and so forth and so on.  Of course, this does not happen overnight.  Remember, Copernicus was forgiven by the Roman Catholic religion only a thousand years later after he refuted the then dogma of the church that the earth was the center of the universe and that the heavenly bodies were the ones revolving around it.

As far back as two decades ago, I had already suggested that at least the UPLB-based social science researchers had better start doing synthesis work on the voluminous amount of research done if only to formulate research hypotheses or some other generalization that would lead to some kind of theorizing. 

I am glad that Dr. Lamug has done this critique because it has shown us clearly that many of the many research reviewed may not be as useful as the researchers might have thought initially. 

Echoing Dr. Lamug’s conclusion, I fully agree that our researchers in CBNRM must now try to be much more purposive in their efforts to unravel the complicated nature of social conditions.  A combination of the four paradigms sound to me to be highly useful.  This combination of paradigms could, in fact, provide us a better approach to a clearer understanding of the problem and solution structures of CBNRM issues.  My own take on this, however, is that I would prefer to reduce effort in mere description of conditions and put more effort into translation and interpretation of experiences into lessons and realities that could help us resolve real-world problems.

I now take this opportunity to congratulate Dr. Cora Lamug for painstakingly synthesizing the 74 studies in CBNRM in order to ferret out the lessons that most of us have failed to see.  To many social researchers, the work done by Dr. Lamug would have been daunting.  But I have known Dr. Lamug to be different, one who engages a social issue with intellectual fervor, trying to understand the social phenomenon through the eyes of a seasoned scientist.  As to the quality of the lecture this morning, it is a lecture worth the name professorial lecture.


Congratulations again, Dr. Lamug.  Thank you.