Friday, December 24, 2010

Gender experts build capacity in AWCF-SCC workshop




Identifying techniques in forwarding advocacies and mainstreaming gender in co-ops. Knowing the importance of storytelling as an essential tool in advocacy. Developing training modules and identifying methodologies useful in the conduct of training.

These were among the learning for 35 gender focal persons (GFPs), and gender trainers and advocates who took part in the “1st Capacity Building Workshop” held under the “Promoting Gender Equality Among Co-operatives in the Philippines” Project, October 19-21, 2010, in Hidden Valley Resort, Lamac, Pinamungajan, Cebu province. The Project is being implemented by AWCF and the Swedish Cooperative Centre (SCC) as part of SCC’s Philippine country programme for 2010-2012, which is the “Advancing Civic Capacities for Effective and Sustainable Services to the Poor (ACCESS to the Poor)" Programme. The Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency (SIDA) provides funding support. The Lamac Multi-Purpose Cooperative (LMPC) owns and manages the Hidden Valley Resort.

The Project contributes to the Programme clusters on organizational development/capacity building and on advocacy and networking. The Project objective is to strengthen local capacities and create favourable policies for the promotion of gender equality (GE) among co-ops in the Philippines, to benefit 15 co-ops in the Philippines’s three island groups of Luzon, Visayas, and Mindanao.

The October Workshop was the first of the Project’s series of capacity-building activities to enable participating co-ops’ GFPs, and gender trainers and advocates to deepen knowledge and skills on GE, and also to enhance their communication and facilitation skills in conducting gender training in their respective co-ops; and to develop gender training modules suitable to co-ops’ needs.

Ms Bonnie Bërnstrom, Gender Consultant of SCC from Sweden and one of the Workshop facilitators, introduced various techniques in forwarding advocacies and mainstreaming gender in co-ops.

She informed the participants about some legally binding international declarations that promote and sponsor GE as a cause, such as the Beijing Platform for Action (BPFA), the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW), and the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs). The learning from this session will strengthen the participants’ platform or basis in forwarding the GE advocacy.

Ms Bërnstrom also made the participants compare the Gender Gap Index between Sweden and the Philippines, and to assess the areas of strength and weakness of the two countries in terms of politics, economics, education, education and training, and maternity and childbearing.

To focus on what is and how GE advocacy should be promoted, Ms Bërnstrom discussed the value of the core message, the use of “handbreaks” or learning when and when not to say something, and process questions that create better understanding of people with different worldviews and to explicate the underlying reasons of a person’s belief or disbelief of a concept or an issue.

Ms Bërnstrom also stressed the importance of storytelling as an essential tool in advocacy. How stories, as a combination of facts and emotions, send the message across and how they appeal to people of different culture and orientation.

Meanwhile, the Workshop’s session on developing training modules and identifying methodologies useful in the conduct of training was facilitated by Ms Salome Ganibe, Executive Director of AWCF. The session’s outputs were a) development of different training modules on GE; b) enhanced use of different training methodologies, such as role plays, buzz sessions, group discussions, and storytelling; and c) listing of various unfreezing activities and their description.

As the Workshop exemplified participation and teamwork, daily host team-members co-managed the day and evening social activities to perk up the learning sessions.

Important guests accentuated the Workshop’s significance. Pinamungajan Mayor Geraldine Yapha graced the opening program, and LMPC Chairperson Delfin Tuquib and Lamac Parish Priest Fr. Dennis Acedo were present in the closing program.

The next capacity-building workshop of the AWCF-SCC GE Project is slated for the first quarter of 2011.

1 comment:

  1. Hi folks, I dunno if i have met anyone of u b4, I've been to Philippines. I know Gigi. Anyway, I do gender training for women workers and would be keen to learn more.
    with peace n luv
    Suguna Papachan
    Kuala Lumpur
    http://gudhealthylife.com/offer/

    ReplyDelete