Southeast Asian body promoting quality education turns 55

The Southeast Asian Ministers of Education Organization (SEAMEO), of which the Philippines is a chartered member, celebrated its 55th  year in November.

SEAMEO has 26 regional centers across Southeast Asia, three of which are hosted by the Philippine government. The country is represented in the SEAMEO Council by the Secretary of the Department of Education (DepEd), a news release said.

“Indeed, SEAMEO has come a long way since its inception in 1965 and has taken pride of its achievements over the years as Southeast Asia’s longest running regional organization for promoting quality education, science and culture,” said Dr. Ethel Agnes P. Valenzuela, a Filipino and the director of the Bangkok-based SEAMEO Secretariat (SEAMES).

The event has the theme, “Stronger Together for Quality, Accessible, and Responsive Education.”

Founded on November 30, 1965, SEAMEO has grown from six founding member countries—the Philippines, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Singapore and Thailand—to 11 current members, which include the 10 Asean members plus Timor-Leste, the news release said.

SEAMEO also has eight associate member countries: Australia, Canada, France, Germany, New Zealand, the Netherlands, Spain, and the United Kingdom, as well as affiliate member institutions.

As such, SEAMEO can be considered as one of the most resilient and viable inter-government treaty bodies of nations.

The Southeast Asian Regional Center for Graduate Study and Research in Agriculture (SEARCA), founded on November 27, 1966, and based on the University of the Philippines Los Baños (UPLB) campus, is the oldest SEAMEO center.

Also hosted by the Philippine government are the Regional Centre for Educational Innovation and Technology (INNOTECH) in the University of the Philippines Diliman, and the Regional Centre for Public Health, Hospital Administration, Environmental and Occupational Health (Tropmed Philippines) in UP Manila, the SEARCA news release said.

According to SEAMEO, its “centers and network have been both think tanks and implementing arms of SEAMEO in its own specialty through policy advocacy, technical and consultancy services, as well as capacity building programs and activities, fora, research, and other intellectual and practical platforms and networks.”

“For almost six decades,  SEAMEO has been at the forefront of  education in the region and beyond,” said SEARCA Director Dr. Glenn B. Gregorio.

He added that SEAMEO “has perfectly exemplified the importance of interconnectivity among different sectors and stakeholders of the society while taking multi- and interdisciplinary approaches in dealing with various issues and challenges.”

Gregorio pointed out that “it has evolved with the changing times without losing its relevance, making education as an enabling vehicle for growth and sustainability.”

Education Secretary Leonor Briones congratulated Seames and the SEAMEO centers for “the long years of collaboration.”

“The Covid-19 pandemic has pushed and encouraged and perhaps even inspired the education sector to develop and innovate ways to resume teaching and learning safely and inclusively,” Briones said.

“We appreciate the initiatives of the SEAMEO Secretariat and the regional centers in promoting distance learning and providing our teachers with capacity-building webinars this year. And we look forward to more years of partnership with SEAMEO,” Briones added.

“SEAMEO’s strength lies in the 26 regional centers and network in Southeast Asia through programs, projects, and activities that follow the lead of education ministers to support countries in achieving educational objectives as well as regional vision through bilateral and multilateral programs and activities in and beyond Southeast Asia,” Valenzuela said.

“I am proud to say that SEARCA, INNOTECH and Tropmed have contributed a lot to the region through your programs, research, scholarships and partnerships,” she added.

Tropmed Philippines Director Dr. Vicente Y. Belizario Jr. said, “We realize that our theme for this anniversary—stronger collaboration and cooperation among SEAMEO networks—already offers us an approach in implementing our mandate and addressing the many concerns in these very uncertain times. More than ever, we need to come together as One SEAMEO.”

The need to rely on and share among SEAMEO centers in the face of current challenges, particularly those brought about by the Covid-19 pandemic, was also emphasized by INNOTECH Director Dr. Ramon C. Bacani.

“I do hope we will continue with this spirit of regional cooperation, learning and sharing from one another in the many activities we will undertake together under SEAMEO… in education, science, and culture,” Bacani said.

To memorialize SEAMEO’s 55th  anniversary, the respective director of INNOTECH and Tropmed Philippines planted a tree in their compound, while the SEARCA directorate along with some heads, staff, and scholars planted 10 Taiwan bamboo within the Center’s complex in Los Baños, Laguna.

The spirit of the tree-planting was best articulated by Dr. Belizario when he said: “We planted a tree that symbolizes our collective aspiration as one SEAMEO community to help address the challenge of our time, that we can bear fruit together and be of better service to the country and of our people in the Southeast Asian region better if we grow together.”