Saturday, 10 January 2009

Snippets of UPLB History: The Humanities (Part 2)

Below is the second part of the article written by Professor Edelwina C. Legaspi published in the special issue of the Philippine Agriculturist (Volume XLIII, Number 1, June 1959) in honor of the University of the Philippines College of Agriculture’s golden jubilee.

DEPARTMENT OF LANGUAGES
(Second of three parts)

by Edelwina Cu-Legaspi

When the Americans returned, it was only natural to expect the reestablishment of English as a separate department. But the heavy toll that the Japanese occupation had taken on the members of the pre-war Department made reorganization a most difficult task. Thus, when the College re-opened on July 26, 1945, three English courses for 95 students were offered under the Department of Languages headed by Dean Uichanco in an acting capacity.  Miss Aurora L. Samonte of the Department of Agricultural Educational was assigned to teach English 1a and 1b; later she became the acting head of the Department and acting librarian of the College. English 1b, a completion course for those whose classes had been disrupted by the Pacific war and the battle for liberation, was handled by Mrs. Guadalupe Fores-Guazon, also of the Department of Agricultural Education. Dr. Gerardo O. Ocfemia, head of the Department of Plant Pathology, was detailed to teach English 10, a thesis-writing course for seniors. English 1 and 10 both aimed at training students in “such written and spoken discourse as will be of practical value to agriculturists in the Philippine Islands.”

 

In June, 1946, English A and B, preparatory courses divided into two-semester work for students who had had only six years of elementary schooling, were introduced. The Department also taught English 1a and 1b (English Composition), English 5 (World Literature), English 10 (Scientific Reporting), English 11 (Public Speaking), English 101 (The Short Story), German and Spanish.  Four faculty members handled these classes; of this number three were detailed from other departments, two from the Department of Agricultural Education and one from the Department of Soils.

 

There was a change of hands in the school year 1948-49. Miss Samonte, a most valuable worker, resigned.  Mrs. Marcela I. Sevilla, instructor at the UP Rural High School, was made in-charge of the Department on January 1, 1949. Professors Nicolas Galvez of Soils, Melanio Gapud of Agricultural Education, and Jose Blando of the College of Forestry were drafted to teach some courses. A couple of years later Miss Nelly Dunglao, just back from abroad, joined the Department staff.

 

In 1952 two additional instructors were appointed. In July of the same year Miss Nelly Dunglao was designated acting head, relieving Mrs. Sevilla as in charge of the Department. During this period the copy editor of the Philippine Agriculturist and the head of the Department of Soils were on detail in the Department.

 

Four instructors, two for English and two for Spanish, joined the staff in 1953. One of the Spanish instructors at once took the initiative of organizing the Circulo Hispanista, an association of the students enrolled in Spanish.

 

Five more came in 1954. When the College enrollment trebled far beyond expectations in 1955, the curriculum and the faculty likewise expanded. The Department acquired the services of nine new members. Miss Dunglao, who became head of the Department in November, 1955, resigned on July 31, 1957, leaving the Department of Languages with a teaching force of nineteen, this included the writer who was appointed head on August 1, 1957, an office clerk, and four student assistants. But even with these the Department still had to count on the services of “borrowed talents.” Dr. Galvez continued to handle the German courses which were attended mostly by graduate students. With the passage of the Magalona bill and later the Rizal law, more courses in Spanish had to be offered.

 

The Department of Languages has travelled a long way since its founding. Of its 19 staff members today, only four have no advanced credits; five have master’s degrees (four from abroad, one from the U.P.). Now housed in a building all its own, the old Agronomy, the Department is quite a contrast to the late Miss Yule’s English office at the Old College Building with its “one straight-backed chair and a deal table with a small drawer.” The interior which underwent a facelifting in the summer of 1958 was painted in varying shades of blue.

 

Before it inherited the old Agronomy building in June, 1954, the Department never stayed put in one place. After the liberation the Languages office was where a little space could be spared. Consequently, before it found its permanent home, the Department had “squatted” in the Departments of Agricultural Education, Agricultural Engineering, Entomology, and Agricultural Economics. For some time, therefore, the students were treated to the sight of Languages instructors scurrying from building to building, lugging along books, notebooks, papers, chalks, and even loose blackboards.

 

It is easy to see that the early post-liberation conditions left much to be desired. The Department especially felt keenly the lack of instructional materials. Just starting to get rehabilitated itself, the library was not much of help. The English teachers, thus handicapped, very often had only their own resources to draw from.  They made up for their youth and lack of experience with their knowledge of the subject matter, diligence, resourcefulness, interest, and personality.  In time they realized that there was no substitute for a well-trained teacher genuinely enthusiastic about his elected calling.


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