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Introduction Strengthening Our Niches Increasing Our Absorptive Capacity Sustaining Our Contributions to Nation Building Strengthening TEAM

governance Improving Administrative Efficiency Establishing a Sustainable Resource Base Promoting an Enabling Environment Celebrate Our Centennial Years

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Introduction
The challenges of our times require fostering interdisciplinary and transdisciplinary scholarship to effectively address problems and respond to profound transformations in the socioeconomic, political, and biophysical landscapes. UPLB as a national university (RA 9500) has boldly adopted a framework of operation using the transdisciplinary approach as a platform to facilitate collaboration among the scientific and scholarly disciplines with the realm of practice. been demanded by the times with the need to accelerate commercialization of agriculture technologies, promote an entrepreneurial culture/mindset and generate jobs. To help foster interdisciplinarity in R&D, we have initiated the setting up of the UPLB Biomathematics Initiative, and possibly, the Low Carbon Research and Development Center. Commercialization of our technologies continues while our scientists churn out important information, discoveries, and inventions. We got a boost in commercialization with two patents given to UPLB, namely, Method for Extending the Marketable Life of Carabao Mangoes and Microbial Inoculant for Use as Biofertilizer, Crop Growth Promoter, and Biological Control Agent. We have partnered with industry, government, other SUCs, and international funding agencies to implement R&D projects and to set up a venue for our expertise to be tapped by sectors that need them. Moreover, we weighed in on policy formulation and tried to influence policy and governance through our policy advocacy initiatives. Meanwhile, our town-and-gown activities have continued to integrate us into our nearby communities with UPLB providing technical assistance and opportunities for continuing education and training. While we were at this, we also took care of maintaining a solid UPLB team, along with our alumni and supporters, through a strong TEAM governance approach. It has truly been an eventful and productive year. Together, we look forward to 2011 when we can fully consolidate and nurture the gains that we have made in distinctive excellence.

Moreover, while taking this integrative mindset, we have brought ourselves to the realization that we may have the best qualified mentors Such collaboration has provided and the latest to impart from the a higher and more comprehensive scientific disciplines. Learning, in level of integration of scientific knowledge and human action oriented order to be effective, must be learnercentered and should not be so much towards present-day challenges, the delivery of instruction as the the solutions of which transcend production of learning, and should scientific disciplines. With this therefore elicit student discovery and paradigm shift, we have been guided by the need for a common conceptual construction of knowledge. framework in addressing challenges We have also gone full throttle in the basic sciences, education and into the implementation of the large human development, culture and class size policy that has allowed us arts, food and nutrition safety and to respond to other concerns such as security, integrated natural resources the shortage of seasoned teachers, and environmental management, bottleneck courses, continuing energy systems, development and education for teachers, and the need governance, biotechnology, ICT and for them to produce scholarly outputs. engineering, and climate change and We gave full material support to the aggravated natural resources. large class size policy. As such, we have taken a hard look at our curricular and R&D programs and have upgraded some of them to address the need for human resource in various areas where we have a strong potential for producing. For instance, BS Agricultural Biotechnology addresses the food needs of our burgeoning population. It is also a field for which we have an excellent pool of experts. Technopreneurship has Our graduates have consistently proven themselves to be worthy contributors to development through their excellent performance. In courses that require licensure examinations to be professional practitioners, our students have consistently performed well, giving UPLB the distinction of being the number one school in these fields.

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Strengthening
Initiatives on the findings of the UPLB External Program Evaluation and Management Review Declining enrollment in forestry is a global phenomenon but something that we should arrest as we need foresters now more than ever. We intend to do this through a 5-year strategic plan in forestry education that will address the inability to attract more and good quality students, increasing degree-employment mismatch, declining government support to forestry education, research, and extension, among other developments that impinge on our ability to increase our output. The same situation behooves us to adjust our agriculture curriculum by institutionalizing sunshine and cutting edge disciplines. Although we have witnessed renewed interest in agriculture through our BS Agricultural Biotechnology program, we have been holding continuing

Our Niches
Mobilization of experts and funding the development of programs to showcase distinctive excellence We mobilized experts to develop programs and projects showcasing excellence in sustainable rural development and research/manpower support to CALABARZON through Collaborative Research, Development and Extension Services (CRDES). The CRDES has launched programs on extension delivery system in CALABARZON and Bicol; enhancing farm productivity and income through rice-based farming system, and market-oriented organic vegetables; site-specific nutrient management for maize; enhancing demand for agriculture forestry and natural resources graduates; and food security. The CRDES team was mobilized to investigate the armyworm outbreak in Quezon and to recommend actions to manage the outbreak/infection.

conversations to come up with a new agenda for agriculture education. Among these conversations were six centennial professorial chair lectures, namely, UPLBCA Agenda for 20112035, Livestock and Poultry Sector, Land Resource Utilization, Crop Postharvest Sector, Crop Production Sector, and Food Processing Sector. The crucial elements of scientific research in the next decade are creativity and innovation. In the arts and sciences, we have modified our approach to instruction to be more learner-centered: from delivery of instruction to the production of learning; from offering programs to creating powerful learning environments. This calls for improving not just the quality of instruction, but the quality of learning, by eliciting student discovery and construction of knowledge. The framework for this paradigm shift was presented at the UPLB and UPLBFI Management Planning Workshop on July 29, 2010.

Nurturing Our Gains in Distinctive Excellence 2

We have set up a native animal farm to conduct researches on climate change and breed development. In food science, we focused on food safety, climate change, and health-promoting phytochemicals from local food plants and the like. CHED review concerns and recommendations We are working for the second phase implementation of agricultural engineering in UPLB as a CHED COE and have developed the proposal, Research, Development, and Extension Excellence in Agricultural Engineering through Machine Vision and Infrared Spectroscopy for this. UPLB has obtained funding from the CHED Center of Excellence in Mathematics Grant to reinvigorate research initiatives in mathematics. Among the activities that have been held are a) giving awards of excellence to undergraduate and graduate research in mathematics; b) holding of a research summer school in algebra and combinatorics attended by 84 tertiary level teachers; c) the creation of the mathematics research library; d) hosting of the first national conference on semigroups, groups, graphs and codes; and e) the publication of the Philippine Journal for the Mathematical Sciences. We aim to become a center of excellence in environmental science and management, after having been awarded as a center of development for excellence by the Commission on Higher Education. The primary success factors that we will build on are relevance to current societal needs and interdisciplinarity - a strength that has attracted students to take our degree programs. We have repaired and upgraded laboratories as part of the important requirements that we have to meet in order to justify our bid to become a Center of Development on Nutrition and Dietetics. Our high passing rates in the licensure examination for nutritiondietetics is one of the strong justifications that we have already met. Dynamism in the GE program We continuously looked out for opportunities to inject dynamism into our general education program through the institution of new courses and improvement of existing ones as well as adjustments in its implementation. This year we institutionalized Humanities 3 (Reading film, TV, and the Internet) under the arts and humanities domain. All our GE courses

except those that have just been institutionalized are now offered in the large class mode. We took part in the UP System GE Council to assess the GE framework and program. It was decided that we will continue to require 15 GE units for each of the three domains (arts and humanities, social sciences and philosophy, mathematics, science and technology) of which 6-9 units/domain will cover courses that the students are free to decide. Strengthening our growth areas Curricular program development Offering of the BS Agricultural Biotechnology program starting in 2010-2011 Approval of pollution engineering as a new specialization under the MS Chemical Engineering program

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Streamlining the curriculum of our undergraduate and graduate degree programs in development communication Revision of the BS Nutrition curriculum in line with UPLBs niches and themes under the Instruction, Research, Developement, and Extension (IRDE) Framework New directions Enhancing technopreneurship has been one of our focal areas of development. PCASTRD and PCARRDDOST supported us in projects that promote an entrepreneurial mindset among UPLB students, faculty and REPS, and SUCs; accelerate commercialization of UPLB technologies, and promote the entrepreneurship option among Agricuture, Forestry, and Natural Resources (AFNR) and allied courses students. We held many conversation activities that aimed to enhance academic teaching in economics. Among the issues that we discussed were food insecurity, stated choice analysis, experimental economics in product valuation and marketing, nutrition, obesity and health policies, using websites as academic homepage, and projections on the need for AFNR human resources in the country.

In response to the fast emerging importance of systems biology as a research area, we set up the UPLB Biomathematics Initiative to foster the conduct of interdisciplinary researches to solve problems in biology and related fields through quantitative means. We launched an online news platform, the Los Baos Times Online, to establish ourselves in the field of community online journalism.

finance, mathematics for the life and social sciences, and biological and environmental physics). We have provided P1 million to acquire instruments for a modern physics laboratory for applied physics, electrical engineering, chemistry, and mathematics and science teaching students.

A priority project for CY 2010 is the construction of the three-storey Mathematics Building (P60 million). We reformulated key RDE themes We will convert two large classrooms and areas under public affairs to the in the Mathematics Building into following: 1) institution, governance air-conditioned mini-lecture halls and delivery systems; 2) innovation equipped with state-of-the-art audiosystems for community development/ visual systems and internet-ready We brought learning out of the four strategies for CD social development computers. walls of the classroom by involving and innovations; 3) social development We are constructing the our human ecology and nutrition and innovations; and 4) science and Information and Technology Building students in the conduct of community technology policy. and other priority projects at our profile studies, barangay integrated laboratory high school, the UP Rural development and comprehensive land We will be establishing the Low High School, improve its agricultural use plans, and in capability building of Carbon Research and Development shed and demonstration area for local nutrition and day care workers. Center, which will include a project on agriculture classes, subsidize the lignocellulosic mapping and the Food schools MOOE, and provide its We successfully reintegrated the Engineering Center. instructional equipment needs. Agricultural Credit and Cooperatives Institute from the CPAf to CEM In mathematical sciences and S&T Park (STP) accreditation and renamed it as the Institute of physics, we are revising our core Cooperatives and Bio-Enterprise staffing pattern to include emerging We continued to work with the Development or ICOPED. specializations (mathematics of local government unit of Los Baos

Nurturing Our Gains in Distinctive Excellence 4

for its endorsement to the Philippine Economic Zone Authority (PEZA) and with the Community Environment and Natural Resources Office (CENRO) of the Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR) Region IV-A to complete the boundary survey of the UPLB STP. We developed and implemented three major proposals for institutional development: 1) Support for the UPLB Technology Business Incubator (TBI). This was approved for funding by the DOST on June 2010. The TBI aims to create sustainable enterprises among graduates in agriculture, forestry, ICT, and agribusiness, as well as UPLB researchers to encourage the spirit of innovation and entrepreneurship.

We reformulated key RDE themes and areas under public affairs to the following: 1) institution, governance and delivery systems; 2) innovation systems for community development/strategies for community development; 3) social development and innovations; and 4) science and technology policy. With the DE grant, our civil engineering faculty participated in various areas of research related to climate change, sanitary engineering, and construction materials engineering and management. The facilities of the Innovative Engineering Materials Laboratory (InEM) were upgraded, bringing immediate positive impact on the research activities in civil engineering with the implementation of research activities on strength and durability of construction materials. In the arts and sciences, we sought to nurture distinctive excellence in the fusion of arts and sciences to bridge the gap triggered by disciplinal boundaries through three components, namely, Sabangan, Dulang and Hugnay.

3) Establishment of the Information Technology Hub at the UPLB STP. This is aimed to facilitate the commercialization of information and communication technologies 2) Feasibility Study on Establishing (ICTs) through spin-offs and growth of the Knowledge Enterprise Incubation knowledge enterprises. Center (KEICEN) at the UPLB STP. Results showed that KEICEN can Distinctive excellence challenge support 12 incubatees during the first year of operations. The target marketWe completed infrastructure locators at the IT park are IT-oriented projects worth P7.42 million to be companies in the country, start-ups used in instruction and research in and spin-offs which may be interested veterinary medicine. in establishing operations in the area.

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Sabangan features various disciplinal perspectives and expertise and fosters collaboration through a series of lecture-discussions and collaborative workshops/exhibits. Dulang is a venue where students and faculty members can showcase their thesis or final projects that portray the artistry in a scientific project or the scientific reasons behind an artistic output. Hugnay is the staging of artsscience fusion. It seeks to integrate the different art forms: poetry reading, photography, multi-media performances, modern/street jazz or dances, and film production in staging scientific ideas or texts that are inspired by the principles of science and technology. Linkages We have forged linkages through 50 MOAs/MOUs with 48 foreign institutions. Eight of these MOAs were forged during the review period. We played host to 25 foreign exchange students, 8 from Korea in the second semester of SY 2009-2010 and 17 students from Korea (7), Japan (1),

USA (8) and Canada (1) during the first semester of 2010-2011. We sent 15 students on student exchange programs to Michigan State University (2), University of British Columbia in Canada (3), University of Tsukuba in Japan (4), Tokyo University of Agriculture (1), Kyungnam University in Korea (1), Catholic University of Korea (1), and Far East University of Korea (3). Similarly, linkages with various institutions and universities have been complementing mechanisms for our instruction, research and extension initiatives. We have linkages

with SEARCA (natural resource management trainings, agricultural development conversations and fora, policy advice, microfinance), SANREM (research and trainings), UNDP (research and development), FAO (research on environmental animal health and advocacy), IRRI (research, training, instruction), APN (research), IGBP, IHDP (trainings and conferences), Chiangmai University (workshop, training), Cantho University (instruction, training), Wageningen International (training), World Agroforestry Center (research), and Worldfish (research, publication).

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Increasing

Our Absorptive Capacity

To increase our absorptive capacity, we have implemented the large class size policy. Pursuing this has also shown us avenues for responding to other University problems such as the shortage of seasoned teachers who can effectively teach general education courses, the slow uptake of enrollees in bottleneck courses, and the need for teachers to pursue continuing education, conduct research, and publish their work in reputable publications. To ensure successful implementation of the large class size format, we poured resources into infrastructure, facilities, human resource development and education activities, and materials development. Among the education activities were the First University-wide Seminar Workshops on Teaching Large Classes on April 12-18 where the principles and techniques of teaching management, administration and assessment, and evaluation of large

classes were taught. We capped the seminar with the Large Class Plenary on May 31. Incentives for large classes in the amount of P20,000 for the development of lecture materials and course syllabus were made available under the program to faculty members with proven teaching competence and who are capable of developing interactive and self-instructional learning materials to supplement the lecture.

instructional facilities to ensure the success of the large class mode. In forestry, we are actively sourcing scholarships to provide full support until graduation to deserving scholars enrolled in BS Forestry.

Our civil engineering students will benefit from a P3 million grant to be used for classroom expansion. One of the classrooms can accommodate up to 60 students while the other one can accommodate up to 100 students. We will have increased our capability to hold large classes in industrial In development communication, we upgraded and optimized the use of engineering with funding of another key laboratories, classrooms and other P3 million for the construction of two classrooms.

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Sustaining our
Providing government and industry with high quality graduates Performance in Licensure Examinations

contributions to nation building

Public service

student volunteers who carried out these activities. Through our public service arm, we conducted and monitored 14 short, Commercialization of mature non-degree/extension trainings, all technologies of which aimed at capability building of underserved sectors. We also Two patents were granted to UPLB, implemented three externally funded namely, Method for Extending the long-term projects in educational Marketable Life of Carabao Mangoes enhancement and health/nutrition and Microbial Inoculant for Use as intervention, targeting public school Biofertilizer, Crop Growth Promoter elementary students. We were able and Biological Control Agent to enlist 268 faculty members and

Full commercialization of BIO-N. Around 64 BIO-N mixing plants have been established in different regions of the country. A number of licensing agreements with private companies and universities have been forged and there is an on-going negotiation with an Indonesian company to market BIO-N in Indonesia. As of June 2008, BIO-N has generated sales amounting to P30.6 M since it started commercialization in 2002.

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Commercialization of BIOCON. BIOCON is now commercially produced by TRIBIO Inc. through a licensing agreement with UPLB. As of OctoberDecember 2005, royalties amount to P 0.23 M. Commercialization of MYKOVAM. Adam Farms and Agricultural Resource Management Services Inc. is currently marketing the product. As of 2007, this technology has generated royalties amounting to P .74 M. Sinta Papaya commercialization. From the renewed franchise agreement with East-West Seed Company, UPLB will benefit from the increase in the price of parent material and a royalty rate of 7%. As of 2007, Sinta Papaya has generated royalties amounting to P1.43 M. New and improved crop varieties. IPB Var 8, IPB Var 9, IPB Var 11, IPB Var 13. Other technological breakthroughs We evaluated the toxicity and mutagenecity of trichosetin, an antibiotic produced from the dual culture of Catharathus roseus Callus

and Trichoderma harzianum. This antibiotic is a potential alternative to vancomycin-intermediate resistant makes it an important component S. aureus (VISA), as well as methicillin- of village-level corn processing enterprises. A manufacturer from Pila, resistant S. aureus (MRSA). Laguna is manufacturing the mini corn mill to bid for the requirement of the The field evaluation of a lahar DA as a component of the Village-type barrier technology vs. termites is Corn Processing Program. already on its fourth year and so far has been proven to be effective The AMDP-IAE Windmill for leaving little doubt of its commercial Irrigation of High Value Crops is used application. Moreover, the University to generate power from the wind to has successfully proven that chicken pump water for irrigating vegetable feathers can be used to fabricate crops. An existing tube well is the main composite panels using cement. The potential for this technology to put to source of water. The windmill can use the millions of kilograms dumped pump 135 L/hr with wind gustiness of year after year by commercial poultry 2,700fpm, and 6 inches stroke length of the pump. The windmill is currently processing plants is enormous. installed in a high value commercial crops farm in SIlang, Cavite. The multi-crop pneumatic seeder with fertilizer applicator is a machine Hybrid Rice. We started to that can furrow a prepared field, commercialize the National Seed apply basal fertilizer and seed in one Industry Council (NSIC)-approved operation. It is mounted to a fourTGMS-based on two-line varieties, wheel tractor and can be used for PRUP 7 and PRUP 9, which were planting corn and legumes. developed in cooperation with the Philippine Rice Research Institute. The AMDP mini corn mill consists of the main milling assembly, grit Corn. Seed production of Obatanpa polisher, oscillating screen, and or IPB Var 6 (NSIC Cn2008-224) centrifugal cleaning fan. The valuenow covers 165 hectares, with a adding potential of the mini corn mill

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total of 6,572 bags distributed to different regions as of October 2010. Obatanpa has high yield potential, resistance to lodging, excellent ear-fill characteristics, deep kernels, and high lysine content. Cassava. NSIC also accredited for commercial release an improved cassava variety developed at UPLB. The new NSIC-registered variety, NSIC Cv-47 (Pedigree Code: CG0201-01; Popular Name: Sultan 12), was recommended for release as an industrial variety following 12 valid tests in seven regional stations for two testing seasons. Mango. We developed a protocol for the tissue culture of Carabao mango to rapidly propagate it and to improve the traits thicker skin for stronger resistance against pests, longer shelf life for longer storage, and bigger size for superior eating satisfaction. Abaca. Abaca with resistance to abaca bunchy top virus (AbBTV) is the first abaca variety developed in the country through conventional breeding, with resistance to the major disease of abaca. This will help in rehabilitating abaca areas previously wiped out by the disease and

therefore will help boost our abaca industry especially the pulp and paper sector.

leafhoppers and diamond backmoth, Spodoptera nuclear polyhedrosis virus (SNPV) against cutworm, Rapid Test Kit for detection of pesticide residue, Papaya. Papaya resistant to papaya butterfly farming and ranching, and ringspot virus (PRSV) is the first mushroom cultivation and growing. papaya variety developed through conventional breeding and will boost Partnering for technological papaya production especially in Luzon. development Transgenic Papaya. Papaya with delayed ripening trait and thus, with extended shelf life. Transgenic papaya will help boost our papaya industry because of good quality fruit even on extended transport period. The DA Rural Development Administration of Korea funded a BIOTECH project that aims to improve corn and legume productivity through the use of biofertilizers.

The University is now tapping the Dairy. We produced cream cheese vast potentials of algal fuel (Chlorella from goats milk, a technology that vulgaris) as a third generation biofuel has been adopted by commercial dairy feedstock. We have developed two farms. variants of a photobioreactor that enables the microalgae to produce Food Processing. We have large amounts of biomass and usable perfected the processing of instant ubi, oil. fruit wine and calamansi. With San Miguel Yamamura Crop Protection. Our mature Packaging Corporation, we are technologies include mass-produced conducting a project aimed at parasitoid Trichogramma evanesceus manufacturing wood plastics Boucek, released earwigs against corn composites that will be used for the borer, the Black earwig Chelisoches production of pallets. We have already morio Fabr. against pests of banana optimized the parameters for wood and coconut, mass-produced plastics composites using recycled Metarhizium anisopliae/ Beanveria plastics reinforced with rice hull, bassina against rice black bug, sludge, and other fibrous materials.

Nurturing Our Gains in Distinctive Excellence 10

Sugarcane Planters-Researchers Partnership in Developing Sugarcane Varieties for Luzon Areas. We implemented seven projects funded by PCIERD-DOST and DA-BAR including the commercialization and packaging of instant ubi powder, wine processing, spray-drying of fruits and vegetables, and thermal processing of food. Providing technical assistance for government and private sector programs

on Restoration/Rehabilitation/ Management of Forestlands Affected by Mining on Oct. 20-21 at the House of Representatives in Quezon City. We brought to the fore the topic on cooperative insurance and the cooperative insurance system of the country that is considered a revolutionary step for servicing the marginalized small insurance market which mainstream companies has not served since 1974.

In support to the governments program on alternative sources of green energy, we have embarked on R & D to package technologies and systems for harvesting and postharvest mechanization of Jatropha curcas L. Thus, we have established the thermo-physical and mechanical properties of the jatropha fruit and seeds as bases for developing mechanization technologies. We have fabricated a jatropha dehusker, a seed sheller prototype, and a manual jatropha fruit dehusker for small-scale jatropha production. We have also developed a handheld corn sheller and a plow-mounted corn seeder for the small-scale corn farmers under the Farmer-Scientist Training Program that has recently been developed into a nationwide program. Disease indexing, post-entry quarantine, and germplasm conservation and maintenance of sugarcane collections are being undertaken with the Philippine Sugar Research Institute. With the Luzon Federation of Sugarcane Growers Association, we implemented a five-year project entitled Sugarcane Breeding:

We provided technical expertise in our niche areas in the following UPLB hosted the last leg of programs: 1) formulation of the the sub-regional consultation Sustainable Watershed Development workshops for the provinces of Plan of Bauko, Mt. Province: A Cavite, Batangas, Laguna, Rizal Participatory Approach and 2) and Quezon (CALABARZON) and Social Analysis and Settlements Plan, Occidental Mindoro, Oriental Mindoro, Agriculture Development Master Plan, Marinduque, Romblon and Palawan Casiguran, Aurora. (MIMAROPA) on the formulation of the Implementing Rules and Regulations of We have partnered with Sipag, the Organic Agriculture Act of 2010 on Ipon at Kaalaman Aming Puhunan sa July 26. Kaunlaran (Industriousness, Savings, Skills, our Investment to Progress) In cooperation with the Australian Barangay Integrated Development Commonwealth Scientific and Approach for Nutrition Improvement Industrial Research Organization (SIKAP-BIDANI) Development (CSIRO), and the Natural Resources Foundation, a nongovernment Committee of the House of institution engaged in providing Representatives, we held the microfinance assistance, in pilot Policy Conference and Workshop testing the Participative Nutrition

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Enhancement Project (PNEP) in the Municipality of Rizal, Laguna. We have also partnered with prominent foundations like the Zuellig Family Foundation, and the Enrique Zobel Foundation. With the PNP-Batangas, we conducted a community-based peace and safety program seminar entitled Engaging Local Communities in Strategic Peace and Safety Program Planning. The seminar aimed at developing a community action plan for peace and safety as a requisite to local economic growth and development. We implemented the Students Transformation and Enrichment for Truth-Values Integration and Promotion (STET-VIP) for 36 officers and members of the Philippine National Police from 27 municipalities and 3 cities of Laguna.

health, and many other development concerns. Being the premier veterinary medicine educational institution in the country, the government has looked to us for expertise in the field. Thus, we have fielded our experts to serve in committees and subcommittees of government line agencies such as DA, DOST, and CHED. Our faculty members/researchers in forestry have continuously provided technical assistance to government bodies such as the Department of Trade and Industry (DTI), Fertilizer and Pesticide Authority (FPA), DOST, and DENR.

working group for Chapter 12 of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change Fifth Assessment Report. We trained 48 agricultural stakeholders representing local government units, Provincial Agriculture Office, Municipal Planning and Development Office, Municipal Agriculture Office, and State Universities and Colleges (SUCs) in Ifugao and Benguet to transform them into trainors on climate change vulnerability and in using impact assessment tools that help determine and assess exposure to climate change hazards. As part of a project to develop spatially explicit tools for monitoring and communicating climate risks around the Mt. Makiling Forest Reserve, we have completed its GPS mapping and created its 3D diorama. The map will indicate the hazardous areas in Mt. Makiling and will also show possible landslide- and floodprone areas Our engineering faculty members have provided technical assistance to DA-BAR on biofuels, as resource

Notable inputs to government and international bodies that our faculty members/researchers have and will be making are the following: In development communication, 1) as bureau head, responsible for we have provided technical assistance sourcing development projects worth to public elementary and high schools, P5 Billion for the DENR; 2) as resource DENR, DA, POPCOM, Philippine Rice person in committee meetings of Research Institute, CHED-2 Zonal the House of Representatives for the Center, and several UPLB units, passage of the Sustainable Forest in various activities pertaining to Ecosystem Management Bill; and 3) environment and food security, as coordinating lead author for the

Nurturing Our Gains in Distinctive Excellence 12

persons of the DA and of the PNOC. Under the UPLB-based National Farmer-Scientist Training Program, 270 corn farmers are now farmerscientists. New program areas cover Region 8 (with four towns in Leyte and Samar) and Region 9 (three towns in Zamboanga del Norte).

A Memorandum of Understanding between the Provincial Government of Negros Occidental and UPLB has Influence policy and governance been signed with the aim of helping through active policy advocacy developing agriculture in the province. We proposed the National As part of our extension program, Strategy for Financial Literacy on we provided technical assistance Microinsurance together with the on herbal medicine and mushroom Department of Finance, German culture in collaboration with the Technical Cooperation, Asian UP Manila College of Medicines Development Bank, and the Technical Community Health Program in San Working Group (TWG) members from Juan, Batangas. the private and public sectors. We conducted two trainings on seed production of open-pollinated corn for DA corn coordinators, researchers, and technicians from the DAs regional offices and micropropagation and disease elimination of Musa for the provincial agriculturist and agricultural technicians of Sinait, Ilocos Sur. In Agusan del Norte, trainers including Our climate change experts conducted vulnerability and adaptation (V&A) assessment to the impacts of climate change in the province of Albay. The results will be useful in coming up with the revised Comprehensive Land Use Plan (CLUP) of Albay. Research outputs will be presented to the Climate Change Commission by way of advocating for

representatives of local state colleges and universities, government units, and the DA, as well as shippers and staff of the Philippine Ports Authority underwent training courses on postharvest handling of bananas. Meanwhile, LGU staff members and DA extension workers had a short course on postharvest handling of fresh fruits, vegetables and cutflowers.

the inclusion of V&A assessment as a requirement for the preparation of CLUPs. We were the primary moving force in a symposium entitled Facing the Challenges: Agenda for Action for the Philippine Agriculture Sector that presented the highlights of policy papers on current issues besetting the Philippine sector. The policy recommendations from the papers presented in the symposium, dubbed as Greenbook II could serve as bases for the government to craft an agenda for action that will increase agricultural productivity and enhance competitiveness of Philippine agricultural and fishery products amidst rural poverty, climate change, and income inequality. Greenbook II will be disseminated to policymakers in the Senate, House of Representatives, and relevant government agencies and offices. The House of Representatives and Senate invited our agriculture experts as resource persons on proposed bills like the creation of the Philippine Cereal Institution and the Revitalization of Agricultural Extension, and discussions on proposals like

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the development of the fruit and vegetable industry in Casiguran, Quezon. We also actively contributed to CHED programs on agricultural education through our membership in the TPAE and other technical working groups. Some of our researchers/experts served as members of the National Seed Industry Councils Technical Working Groups on rice; corn and sorghum; field legumes; vegetables; root crops; fruit crops; sugarcane; seed production; seed extension, promotion and marketing; plantation crops; ornamental crops; and fiber crops. Nine staff members served as Plant Variety Protection Examiners of the Department of Agriculture, while some experts have been tapped as evaluators of research projects funded by the DAs Bureau of Agricultural Research (BAR) and DOSTs Philippine Council for Agriculture, Forestry and Natural Resources Research Development (PCARRD). Food science experts served as members of the DA-BAR Technical Committee on Applied Biotechnology Research Program, DOST-PCIERDs National TWG and Bureau of Postharvest Research and Extensions TWG. We contributed to ensuring peaceful and clean elections in 2009 through DZLB Bantay Halalan, a twopart program - a talk-magazine show and a two-day live coverage of the first automated national elections. The program was also streamed live and it reported 1,754 viewers from 10 countries all over the world. Establish a mentoring program for other SUCs and private schools in the country We are now working on reviving the BIDANI network with UPLB as the main hub and SUCs as satellites. So

far, we have had encouraging results and already, some of them have identified pilot areas on which they will collaborate with UPLB. Development Communication professors have initiated the creation of the Consortium of Development Communication Educators and Practitioners in answer to the need for a professional organization that will promote the field. We have shared to other SUCs our knowledge in writing articles for publication in refereed journals in workshops conducted for faculty members of the Isabela State University, Cagayan State University, Quirino State University, and Nueva Vizcaya State University. Through the CHED-sponsored Adopt-a-School, we are mentoring the following schools to help improve their teaching and research capabilities: Batangas State University, Southern Luzon State University, and University Rizal System.

We have always been tapped as reviewer of some SUCs in connection with the Licensure Examination for Agriculturists. We accommodated students from the Quezon National Agricultural School (Malicboy, Pagbilao, Quezon), Nueva Vizcaya State University (Bayombong, Nueva Vizcaya), Batangas College of Arts and Sciences (Lipa City), Trace College and the Laguna State Polytechnic University (Los Baos, Laguna), Pampanga Agricultural College, and Virgen Milagrosa University Foundation for on-the-job training (OJT). The Food Science Cluster (FSC) provided supervisory and technical assistance in eight research studies/ projects of students from UP Rural High School, San Pablo National High School, Southern Luzon State University (Quezon) and UP Diliman; and to RIC and agricultural extension workers.

Nurturing Our Gains in Distinctive Excellence 14

Generating and disseminating novel ideas and research results We continued to disseminate information about technologies developed at UPLB. On Jan. 27-31, 2010, we participated in the 2nd Laguna Business and Investment Exposition at the Enchanted Kingdom in Sta. Rosa City, Laguna. We held the UPLB Technology and Products Exhibit on Oct 9-10 at the EB Copeland Gymnasium as part of the 92nd Loyalty Day and Alumni Homecoming Celebration. From November 2009 to October 29, 2010, the number of users of UPLB Journals Online ballooned to about 1,000. The abstracts were viewed online more than 18,000 times while nearly 15,000 PDFs downloads have been recorded. The UPLB Research, Development and Extension portal has been gaining internet exposure. As of review date, there were 280 articles posted in the website, written by the Research Utilization and Dissemination Section staff, UPLB contributors, and journalists covering science, technology, agriculture, and university beats. The website has received nearly 221,000 content hits since its launch. The website has a daily average of 100 readers and a total of 30,000 site visitors (November 2009 - October 2010). About 25% of the websites traffic is due to direct visits or referral by other internet sites. Content pickup of other sites from the news service is encouraging. Articles posted in the site were re-posted automatically to blogsites, newsites and other websites. slides. The best feature of this website was the availability of the Digital Object Identifier (DOI) system which enabled the digital content to become citable for use in scientific publications. As of October 2010, the total video views almost reached 10,000. We trained selected website managers of units conducting research and extension on content management using Joomla!, an open source content management system that enables creation of websites and applications. It is currently the framework behind the websites being developed and deployed by UPLB. Students and researchers as well as Internet users from across the globe can now watch presentations and discussions on the latest scientific investigations conducted in UPLB through the web. Currently, 17 videos are available with more being prepared for uploading. on research programs, technologies, and others. UPLB RDE Digest Vol 2, No 1 (April) and UPLB RDE Digest Vol 2, No 2 (October) have already been released and distributed. The newsletter is also available online in PDF file through a third-party hosting account. As of October 2010, the uploaded newsletters have been viewed/read online more than 2,000 times. The multimedia DVD entitled UPLB: The Philippines Premier Research University has been converted and formatted as a digital object for online viewing through the Internet. The digital objects (Chapter 1 to 5) have been viewed nearly 2,000

To promote UPLB technologies, services, and events related to research and extension, we published Our newest web facility, the a newsletter, The UPLB RDE Digest, UPLB Research Videos, is an online which is released every April and repository of scientific presentations October. The digest contains news, and discussions of faculty and articles, and photos which have been researchers. The site currently features featured in the UPLB RDE News Service 25 video presentations, fully edited website, as well as full length features and synchronized with the presentors

15 UPLB Annual Report 2010

times. Fifty copies of the DVD were given to partner member agencies of the Southern Tagalog Agriculture and Resources Research and Development Consortium.

As part of a mentoring program, we held the Developing and Packaging Successful Research Proposals on June 7 and 8 for young researchers who will form the core of our research manpower in the future. This will We have also assisted in the video strengthen our capacity in developing documentation of the broadcasts of research proposals that can generate the Tinig ng Agrikultura sa Barangay funding. We have also started a (TAB), a 60-minute agriculture comprehensive training program on magazine show airing at Radyo DLZB patenting with the seminar-workshop 1116. The program disseminates WYSK about Patents. It focused agricultural and developmental on the process of patent search and information relevant to the present provided participants the knowledge needs of the rural and urban and tools needed to determine communities, provides communication patentability of inventions. support to UPLBs extension programs, and promotes modern agriculture We have also been holding a as a viable community development series of workshops on Mentoring enterprise. The 12-man TAB team on Scientific Paper Writing for won the 2010 PCARRD Professional Publications since 2006 up to the Broadcast Media Award (3RD place) present. This is for the benefit in the National Symposium on especially of those among the Agriculture and Resources Research constituents who want to publish their and Development (NSARRD) and papers in refereed journals. Awarding Ceremony on November 10, 2010 at the Dusit Thani in Makati We conducted blended training City. The TAB broadcasters were workshops entitled Content recognized for their relentless efforts Management System on Oct. for wider and faster dissemination of 14 and Instructional Design and new and appropriate technologies Content Development on Oct. 15of the Southern Tagalog Agriculture 22 to impart to the participants and Resources Research and knowledge on instructional design Development Consortium in the areas and content development, and teach of food, agriculture, biotechnology, the use of Modular Object-Oriented engineering, and other developmental Dynamic Learning Environment concerns. (MOODLE). MOODLE is a content management system designed to From November 2009 2010 Intellectual Productivity Database November 2010, we endorsed 141 ISI-Indexed journal articles: 92 were locally published while 47 were internationally published. A book and a book section were endorsed for International Publication Award. Our database on intellectual productivity documented a total of 472 publications: of the total 119 articles published in refereed journals, 71 were published in local refereed journals, and 48 in international refereed journals. There were also 40 books published.

help educators create effective online learning communities. These training workshops will enable the participants to implement blended learning and manage their courses in the web. A total of 259 papers were presented in international (47) and

local conferences (212). Fifty papers were published in proceedings of conferences: 34 of which were national in scope while 16 were international conferences. About four (4) other publication forms were published. The Philippine Journal of Agricultural and Biosystems Engineering ), Vol. VIII, No. 1, was declared by a team of technical experts as a CHED accredited research journal. We also published the Philippine Agricultural Mechanization Journal which is a semi-technical bi-annual publication and a non-refereed journal.

Nurturing Our Gains in Distinctive Excellence 16

Combined Total R&E Funds 2007-2010 (in 100)*

Some of the books published include: 1) Farm Management: Approaches and Tools in a Changing Environment by CEM-DAE provides a standardized source of farm management knowledge to those interested in farm management. 2) An Assessment of the Comprehensive Agrarian Reform Program and its Impacts on Rural Communities: Micro Perspective by CEM-DAE; and 3) Economics: An Introduction to be used in introductory and intermediate economics courses.

Resource generation for R&D We generated a total of P233,471 million in research and development funds in 2010 . This was 17.6 M (7%) lower than in 2009. This was due to the decrease in funds from the government funding agencies of P64.9 M (-32.3%). However, there was an increase in funds from international funding agencies (101%) and the local /private organizations (71%). The total funds reflected in 2010 included the combined R&D funds monitored by OVCRE and the UPLB-FI.

Strengthening our Town-and-Gown partnership

We held a seminar on climate change and disaster risk management with Dr. Carlos Primo David, professor at the National Institute of Geological Services; Dr. Giovanni Tapang, national chairperson of Samahang Nagtataguyod ng Agham at Teknolohiya and associate professor at the National Institute of Physics; and Forester Jess Javier, head of the Forestry Division of the Forestry Management Bureau. This was attended by representatives of LGUs UPLB got the highest research grant around UPLB. of P 106,925 M from government agencies for 172 projects. International We have supported the LB Four quarterly issues of the organizations allocated research municipality through program Philippine Agricultural Scientist (PAS), grants for two projects; and local/ collaboration and provision of an ISI-accredited journal publication, private organizations provided for technical assistance to the Laguna have been published in 2010. Included three projects. Among the government de Bay-Mt. Makiling Watershed here were 41 full-length articles and 13 agencies, PCASTRD provided the Development and Management and research notes. highest project support (P 21,857 the Mt. Makiling Forest Reserve M) followed by PCARRD-DOST Protection and Ecosystem and Solid Some of our experts served as (P18,990 M). Among the international Waste Management. We have also editor and authors in the book on organizations, International Atomic demonstrated strong solidarity with Poultry Production in the Tropics, Energy Agency gave the highest R&D LB by participating in the 395th Los while a faculty member served as fund grant of P 290,000; from local/ Baos Foundation Day celebration and writer for the manual, Duck Egg private organization, the Federation of in distribution of relief goods under Production, which was published Free Farmers gave a grant of P 35,000. the Sagip Kapamilya Program of a TV by B-Meg. Research and extension network. personnel contributed to the PCARRD Research Funds publications including a booklet on Profitability of 25-dairy cow module with a Fact Sheet and a leaflet on Investment Brief. The FSC produced a chapter entitled Fruit Processing in the book, The Mango Botany, Production and Uses.

17 UPLB Annual Report 2010

Through our Adopt-a-School Program, we provided support to the Los Baos Central Elementary School by setting up exhibits, donating classproduced learning materials, and participating in a clean-up project. We launched an online news platform, the Los Baos Times Online (www.lbtimes.ph) in April. Aside from establishing the University in the field of community online journalism, the Los Baos Times Online will enable different local government offices of Los Baos to disseminate updates in their respective jurisdiction. We also continued to maintain Radyo DZLB as one of our extension arms. DZLB regularly airs 13 community-based radio programs developed by partners from different government and nongovernment organizations in the province.

We are now validating a protocol for rapid assessment and monitoring of LGUs compliance to the provisions of the Ecological Solid Waste Management Act. We supported the initiatives of the local government units by providing technical assistance in carrying out the Magna Carta of women and its institutional mechanisms in planning and advocacy work. We conducted a seminar and an outreach activity on rabies and responsible pet ownership, the latter in partnership with the NRCP. We provided knowledge enhancement training to public school teachers in evolutionary biology on April 22.

jabber, rolling injection planter, forage cutter, and the UPLB corn-cob-fed furnace corn dryer. A significant positive impact of these interventions was that the farmers have realized the benefits of mechanizing farm operations. Another off-shoot of the AMDP intervention in Calamba was the installation of a drip irrigation system in a small-scale cornbased farm in Kay-anlog, Calamba City. The project gave us an opportunity to showcase how drip irrigation system works in the area and hopefully make other farmers adopt the technology. We have also formulated a soil and water conservation plan for one of the farms in the area. To strengthen our town-andgown partnership, we provided technical expertise to science students from different high schools in Los Baos and San Pablo City, and allow the use of the IBS facilities and resources for the conduct of the students science projects. Meanwhile, we continued to implement the Community Aerobics every Saturday at 6:00 AM. The target beneficiaries are residents of Los Baos and neighboring towns.

We provided technical assistance on corn production-processing Leader Ka K!, a youth magazine mechanization to the Calamba Upland program, on the other hand, was Farmers Multi-Purpose Cooperative awarded a special citation for (CUFAMCO). An upland barangay encouraging the youth to take direct in Calamba also benefited from a action in effecting change and progress package of technologies developed in the country in the 32nd Catholic by our agricultural engineers. These Mass Media Awards (CMMA) held on technologies are the AMDP upland October 13 at the University of Sto. power tiller with steering clutch Tomas. mechanism, AMDP manual and motorized corn sheller, UPLB hand

Nurturing Our Gains in Distinctive Excellence 18

The CA has an Out-of-School Youth Program in collaboration with the Department of Agriculture and Municipal Agriculture and Fisheries Council (MAFC) of Los Baos. This includes a seminar series on Basic Agriculture Concepts and Practices for Next Generation Farmers of Los Baos aimed at generating awareness and appreciation on the arts, science and business of agriculture; encouraging the next generation of agriculturists to sustain the agricultural industry in the community; providing practical and technical know-how on the various facets of agriculture; and organizing the participants into a cohesive and committed group of agriculture advocates and practitioners. Fruit planting materials were donated to the Municipality of Los Baos and to Bgy. Paciano Rizal, Bay, Laguna for tree planting activities. Moreover, assorted vegetable seeds were provided to Barangay San Antonio, Los Baos Laguna for distribution to participants of the backyard and community gardening activity of the barangay.

19 UPLB Annual Report 2010

Strengthening
Promoting the TEAM spirit We held the Palarong UPLB 2010 on Jan. 28-31 with the theme Palarong UPLB Attaining T.E.A.M. Work Through Sports. We also showed team spirit when we banded together to overwhelm the IRRI sports contingent in a dual meet on July 24. On December 8, we held the Faculty Follies, an annual program where faculty members, staff and students unite and stage performances. Over the past months, UPLB has also seen many sports competitions, especially marathons that have been held in the campus. Our faculty members and staff and students have consistently participated in these events, some of which were sponsored or cosponsored by the University. Through all these events, the UPLB spirit of oneness and unity has never before been made more important than it was in the past.

TEAM Governance
We have also been practicing information sharing among the faculty and REPS to update everyone on developments in the field of human nutrition. Moreover, brown bag sessions have occasionally been held in some units and junior faculty members have been mentored by ensuring their participation in departmental instruction, research, and extension activities.

Nurturing Our Gains in Distinctive Excellence 20

Improving
Harness our IT infrastructure to continue streamlining administrative processes Memoranda and announcements are now being sent electronically after the Office of the Chancellor issued Memorandum No. 041 directing the same. UPLB has gone mobile with the use of a service providers communications technology, specifically its infoboard web-based platform, to make use of various SMS facilites with different functions and capabilities to cater to the needs of our constituents. These include providing general information, advisories, and announcements to preregistered subscribers, and a feedback system. We video conferenced the UPLB centennial lectures that were delivered by our centennial fellows, as well as, the 2010 UPLB Commencement Program and the UP President Nominees Forum. We are maintaining Wi-Fi Internet access in the following locations: ICS, CDC, Carillon, New EE Building, UPLB Main Library, ACCI Auditorium, ADCS (Villegas Hall), Hall, and CEC.

Administrative Efficiency

We continue to peer with the UP Diliman VOIP server for both incoming and outgoing calls and for direct outgoing call to other Metro Manila areas. Peering with DOST-Advanced Science and Technology Institute (ASTI) has also provided us with faster Internet access through an additional 2-6 mbps to our existing Internet bandwidth. Continued peering with DOST-Asti has also enhanced our research and academic networks with UP Diliman, Asia-Pacific Advance Network, Internet 2, GEANT, RedClara, and TEIN. To facilitate our bid for streamlined systems, we

have conducted free training courses in the use of our Document Tracking System for 176 users, Ubuntu for 31 users, and Joomla! For 28 content managers.

21 UPLB Annual Report 2010

Establishing a
We have implemented the project Transforming Marginal Uplands into Productive Areas through Planting of Non-Traditional Indigenous Biofuel and Timber Species that aims to establish and demonstrate the economic, financial, environmental, and social feasibility of a mixed biofuel and timber plantation using indigenous non-traditional species in marginal upland areas. forests, and promote sustainable land uses/practices in deforested and areas. Around 144 hectares have already been planted with indigenous and ecologically important tree species, particularly high-valued dipterocarps for rehabilitation. Nurseries have been established near the field station to ensure good quality planting materials.

Sustainable Resource Base


In line with our stewardship of the Makiling Forest Reserve, we continue to conduct programs to demonstrate appropriate restoration technologies to maintain the ecological integrity of watersheds, specifically, indigenous tree seedling production, reforestation/plantation establishment and development, and maintenance of experimental and demonstration areas. One other program is aimed at enhancing the peoples understanding, appreciation and conservation of mountain biodiversity through the management of the Makiling Botanic Garden.

We have ventured into the cultivation of citronella (Cymbopogon To preserve the remaining spp) to generate income from resources of the UP Sierra Madre citronella essential oil and to increase Land Grant, we conducted the DBP the vegetative cover in some areas of Forest Project entitled Watershed the LQLG. We started with 5 ha and Rehabilitation and Protection of the UP will expand by 20 ha. The annual net Sierra Madre Land Grant. This project revenues for each hectare is P0.38 We have also been conducting aims to protect the remaining natural million assuming a quarterly harvest of a special program, specifically a forest, encourage non-destructive/pro- 42,000 kg raw grass/year. youth summer program for MFR environment land uses in secondary conservation and development, and an

Nurturing Our Gains in Distinctive Excellence 22

environmental education project that income-generating projects on instant includes an awareness campaign, tree ubi powder, fruit wines and calamansi planting, film showing, and community juice. broadcasting. For the period July 2009 to Another program is aimed at September 2010, our income from executing plans and activities to staff housing occupancy fees and protect, regulate use, and uphold private housing and allied agencies control of the MFR. This involves land use rental amounted to monitoring and forest patrolling to P5,838,343.07. As approved by the ensure law enforcement and filing BOR in 2008, 60% of the amount of court cases against violators. We is allotted for maintenance of the are also conducting a mountain housing units and other operating information and institutional expenses and 40% will be turned over development program to establish to the UPLB Housing Trust Fund. We and maintain databases, and review have therefore invested P1,884,965 for and implement policies pertaining to capital build-up in the UPLB Housing conservation. To augment our budget, Trust Fund. To date, the University has we establish linkages and collaboration a total of 258 staff housing units, 76 to implement RDE projects on of which underwent repairs in 2009Philippine mountain ecosystems. 2010 using some of the construction Lastly, we control the entry of illegal materials bought with money from this settlers, but at the same time, fund. implement a program to promote the socio-economic development of With BOR approval at its 1261st mountain communities. meeting, we created the UPLB Student Housing Trust Fund to which income In coordination with the various of the SHD will be remitted and part college clusters and other UPLB units, of which will be used to fund major the CA rehabilitated the AgriPark as repairs and construction of new a potential income-generating and dormitories. Three dormitories were self-sustaining project. The opening repaired and opened for occupancy of the ADSC Meat Shop where various in the 1st semester of SY 2010. These locallyprocessed meat products include the ATI and ACCI dormitories. are sold and toll processing in the dairy plant and analytical service To provide better health services, laboratories served as sources of we had some hospital equipment income for the Animal and Dairy and the University Health Service Sciences Cluster. The FSC has three building repaired. We also had a

generator house built. Funding came from collections of the UHS including accounts receivable and payment of services rendered to agencies outside UPLB. Meanwhile, we have entered into a lease agreement with the 7-Eleven 24-hour convenience store for a portion of the ground floor of the SU building. We have also improved and refurbished our bowling lanes to encourage more constituents to patronize the sports facilities at the basement of the SU building. To stem wastage of resources and promote conservation, we have strictly adhered to the limited use of office air conditioners from 9AM to 4PM and have closely monitored the maintenance of street lights. We have also upgraded our pump houses to new units that are more efficient and use less electricity. In designing new buildings, we have been proactive and have pushed for the use of green architecture. As a cheaper alternative to outsourcing, in-house architects have been designing our new buildings, reducing the architectural fee which represents 7% of the project cost. Annually, we spend around P2.5 million for the salaries of architects, engineers, and autocad operators who are hired on contractual basis to do the in-house architectural designs

23 UPLB Annual Report 2010

Comparison of Project Expense when Conducted by Contract and by Administration

and construction supervision. These conservation measures, we have contractual employees, however, have installed electric meters in buildings in done the following jobs that would the campus. have cost much more than the amount paid to them. As part of our efforts in stewardship of our resources, we have continued UPLB saved P48,267,439.37 from to implement the UPLB Termite architectural fees and P397,490.77 Management Program to monitor from contractors profit and taxes UPLB buildings and properties and in one year since the design and implement preventive measures administration of various projects were such as using soil barrier treatment done in-house. Compared to the P2.5 and conducting above ground spot million salaries paid to the contractual treatments. We treated 44 academic employees, the University saved and administrative buildings for a total around P40 million. We have also perimeter of 6,495 lineal meters. We been aggressively adopting the by also conducted preventive treatment administration option in conducting for newly constructed structures repairs and minor construction work to and regular demolition operations of save on contractors fees. termite mounds. We have purchased tools and equipment worth P1,448,994.93 to improve the delivery of our maintenance function. The use of proper tools and equipment shorten working time and enable us to save on human resource cost. To improve our electrical system, we have converted 14 units of indoor transformers with low secondary voltage, replaced creosoted wooden primary electrical poles with concrete poles. To come up with baseline information towards adopting energy

In compliance with the new UP Charter, we have actively been consolidating our land resources and ensured that these are properly documented. We have assigned a full time staff to facilitate the titling of the following UPLB properties: RS-1019 364.472 ha. at the lower campus; PSU 2053 32.84 ha. at the UPCO area up to the CFNR gate, Limnological Station- 4.08 ha., and three farm lots with a total area of 9.02 ha in Maahas. The request for titling of the above properties are now with the DENR Region IV-A for evaluation and awaiting the certification/clearance from DOH and DPWH.

Our public service arm, the Pahinungod, was able to generate For check and balance, we had approximately P1,313,844 from been assiduously conducting internal proposals to private funding audit despite the limitations of human institutions and through resource resource at the Internal Control Office. sharing arrangements with local During the year under review, we governments and community partners. audited and examined the operations of the following income generating UPLB has continued its partnership units and activities: Dairy Training and with the locators of the Science and Research Institute, Business Recreation Technology Park. From January to and Services Unit, Stickers and Ticket November 2010, the CTTEs earnings issuance, Soil Test Kit and Soil Testing, from the lease of locators amounted to BIOTECH Water Analysis, University PhP 1,299,514.49. Health Service, dormitories, and the National Seed Foundation.

Nurturing Our Gains in Distinctive Excellence 24

Promoting

an Enabling Environment
assistance for those researchers who want their papers to be evaluated for patentability prior to presentation. Scholarships and financial assistance We administered a total of P2,189,566 for the two semesters during the period. This includes scholarship coursed through UP Diliman. State subsidies in tuition fees

Upgrade and strengthen our academic consultation among researchers and support system for our students and other constituents of the university. faculty Likewise, the MANCOM agreed that The CTTE proposed revisions the invention patent agreement will be and new policies related to required for new employees only. In intellectual property and technology addition, evaluation of research papers commercialization which were by the Intellectual Property Office for presented to the UPLB Management presentation in scientific conferences Committee last September 23, 2010. was agreed to be voluntary only. However, the IPO will still render These proposals were the following: Policy on Royalty Rate and Royalty Sharing Policy on Invention Disclosure through the Invention/ Patent Agreement Policy on Paper Presentation and Evaluation for Patentable Inventions The CTTE is currently finalizing the policies based on the comments and suggestions of the MANCOM. The proposal on royalty rates and royalty sharing is being finalized for public

25 UPLB Annual Report 2010

were enjoyed by 2,750 in the Second Semester of SY 2009-2010 and 3,150 in the First Semester of SY 2010-2011. Data show that most of our STFAP grantees belong to the lower brackets, specifically 5-8 and C-E1. During the period, 1,726 of our students availed themselves of the student assistantship program of the University to receive total salaries of P4,079,390.20. A total of 3,932 availed themselves of tuition loan, emergency loan, and CHED SAFE loan that aggregated at P78,123,501.45. Counseling and testing Over the three terms, 10,096 availed themselves of counseling and testing services, specifically counseling and consultation (3,611), group guidance (3,562), psychological assessment (1,255), readmission (740), tutorial (86), graduate placement (529), and extension service (313). We held the Summer Bridge Program to prepare our incoming freshmen students for their college studies in UPLB, especially the ones who scored low in mathematics and English in the UPCAT. We also helped prepare our graduates for the world of work through a pre-employment seminar and brought together prospective employers for a job fair in which many of our graduates participated. By way of welcoming the new freshmen and preparing them for life in UPLB, we held pre-college orientation, a parents orientation, and the opening convocation. We also celebrated the crystal anniversary of the STET-VIP, a program that originated at OSA. Student organizations and activities To balance academic life, we allow our students to engage in extracurricular activities within the bounds

of University rules and regulations. Majority of our student organizations are academic in nature while the rest are varsitarian, religious, cultural, sorority/fraternity, civic, and sports. Students implemented various activities depending on their groups advocacies or the reason for their alliance. Improved facilities and services We opened a new Veterinary Pathology Resource Facility, the first of its kind in the country, to allow more accurate veterinary diagnosis. This was made possible through a partnership with the Veterinary Comparative Pathology Society of the Philippines, Philippine Veterinary Medical Association-USA, the Charles Louis Davis Foundation, the UPCVM Alumni Association, and the UPLB administration. Our veterinary students will enjoy longer library hours and more

resources with the increase in the number of journal subscriptions, computer units used for internet/ OPAC, journal online access, and online library database. Students in human ecology now benefit from a bigger reading room as well as new acquisitions that were donated by alumni. To date, the reading room has a total acquisition of 7,987 reading/reference materials and is equipped with 7 computers for library automation and digitization and users access to e-journals, LANTEEAL, and e-books. We refurbished dormitories and classrooms with a budget of P30 million. Also in the works are the construction of two new dormitories with an allotment of P60 million. One will be a three-storey unit while the other one will be a clustered type facility to accommodate 190 and 380 students, respectively.

Nurturing Our Gains in Distinctive Excellence 26

Among the dormitories that we repaired are the newly turned over dormitories from the Agriculture Training Institute (ATI) of the Department of Agriculture and the ACCI. Both facilities increase our student dormitory capacity by 213 slots, 150 for ATI and 63 for ACCI. The University provided comprehensive health care services primarily to the UPLB constituents and to nearby communities. This year, the UHS received confirmation of its accreditation as a Level II hospital. It has 48 accredited consultantsspecialists, eight medical officers, and has extended consultation hours for patients from 8 AM to 5 PM daily.

would-be quitters under the Smoking Cessation Program. In 2010, three Quit Smoking Seminars and Counseling Sessions were conducted to 55 participants. Fifty percent of those who enrolled for counselling had successfully quit smoking in 8 weeks after seven counselling sessions. We have also improved our water system and refurbished lecture halls for the large classes. We opened the Edwin Bingham Copeland Gym, a three-storey gymnasium that also houses classrooms for human kinetics classes and other sports facilities.

with dorm residents and dorm heads to ultimately propose changes in dorm policies. Further, we have closed down Unit 1 of Mens Dorm as the Campus Planning and Development Office (CPDO) has rendered an evaluation that it is already a fire and safety hazard. UP President Emerlinda R. Roman approved the request of the DAM for funding of P6 million pesos for the renovation of the DAM building. Moreover, the amount (P18 million) committed through Senator Juan Miguel Zubiri for the building of the CEM Rural Economic Development and Renewal Energy Center has finally been turned over to UPLB, thus construction will commence soon.

Administrative control and supervision of the Student Housing Division has been transferred from We have also provided 13 health OSA to UHO through Administrative education lectures and counselling to a Order No. 065 dated May 5, 2010, for Meanwhile, the University has total of 77 people on self-care and self- a more focused coordination, planning, already bid and awarded the contract monitoring of capillary blood glucose, and implementation of housing plans for the construction of a new student lifestyle modification, detecting and programs. dormitory (P23.87 million), a gen-set diabetes, and proper care of wounds. house for the new administration To strengthen governance of offices (P1.0 million), and the supply, UPLB implemented the UPLB Quit the Universitys student housing delivery and installation of a new Smoking Support (QuitsS) Program provisions, we created an ad hoc elevator system (P3.5 million) and a to lay the groundwork for achieving committee through Administrative 500KVA gen-set (P2.39 million). a safe, healthy, and smoke free Order No. 126 to review the UPLB UPLB. We have conducted focused student dormitory policies, rules, We have tried to make the group discussions for the QuitsS regulations and fees. We have Christmas celebration of our and professional counselling to the conducted three consultation meetings constituents and townspeople of the

27 UPLB Annual Report 2010

neighboring areas an eventful one by putting up a giant Christmas tree, a life-size nativity scene, and of Santa Claus and his reindeers. We also held the Paskuhan sa Park to provide Christmas entertainment through performances by various groups. We also held the traditional Parolan on Dec. 17.

Creek. Pahinungod volunteers and members of the Scientia Consortia Animales have led in information campaigns for environmental We have initiated measures to sanitation and conservation as rehabilitate Molawin Creek, a tributary well as using artwork to promote of the Laguna Lake which traverses the environmental protection. UPLB campus through the Macrophyte Biosorption Technology. A 1996 Our alumni have been helping us in study had found the Molawin Creek our bid to transform the UPLB campus Improving campus peace and security containing toxic heavy metals and into a more beautiful campus. They dissolved substance. Rehabilitation have specifically helped us refurbish We have beefed up campus efforts use a root mat to filter landmarks that dot the campus. These security by recruiting 11 new members out floating solids and dissolved landmarks, mostly portals of the first of the University Police Force. We substances, reducing the creeks few buildings that we had but where also continue to employ CSBs who pollutant load. Beautification projects damaged by the war or gave way to complement the work of the UPF in have also been implemented at the modern structures, dot the UPLB maintaining peace and order in the Molawin Creek with the planting of campus and make our landscape campus. We installed street lights from Mussaenda varieties in cooperation uniquely beautiful compared to other Pili Drive going to IPB road and the with senior citizens of Mayondon in universities in the Philippines. Among APEC building to enhance security in Los Baos and Generika Drugstore the portals that have been refurbished the area. personnel. Members of Bantay Bayan, are the Poultry Portal and the UP-REPSS and the PPMSO Personnel Languages and Humanities Portal. and Riverside Community have also pitched in to clean up the Molawin

Campus beautification and environment sanitation and conservation

Nurturing Our Gains in Distinctive Excellence 28

Celebrate
We launched the UPLB Centennial Lecture Series (CLS), tapping renowned individuals who have made a difference in their respective fields to speak on various topics on the theme Visions and Pathways of Change: The UPLB of the Future. The CLS is one of the activities undertaken by UPLB to map out the future of the University. We have involved UPLB professors in mapping out our future as a University. UPLB has approved 80 professorial chairs and 30 faculty grants to harness the varied expertise of the faculty to focus on the University itself and how the faculty can contribute to address the concerns of external reviews.

Our Centennial Years


resources, arts and culture; food security and food safety; alternative energy, environment and natural resources; and other areas like nanotechnology and extension. The faculty grant, on the other hand, aimed to provide incentives for faculty members who developed instructional materials such as lecture syllabi, laboratory manuals, and others. Faculty grants had been awarded for courses in agriculture, economics, biology, chemistry, chemical engineering, electrical engineering, engineering science, food science, forestry, human ecology, human kinetics, humanities, microbiology, natural science, and veterinary medicine. it, the Ani sculpture by visual artist Sandra Torrijos. Ani is a modern interpretation of the Universitys last 100 years, from its humble origins to a dynamic institution. The Alumni Plaza also encompasses the area where the Centenary Carillon and the gazebo stand. UPLB honored the following with Hibiscus hybrid named after them: PEZA Director-General Lilia de Lima; and journalist Domini Torrevillas.

The theme for the centennial professorial chairs is Revitalizing, Strengthening, and Re-conceptualizing UPLB for the Next Century with The Alumni Plaza, an 8,000-sqm subthemes on administration and park near the College of Veterinary governance; curricular reforms; Medicine, was inaugurated and with

29 UPLB Annual Report 2010

UPLB had three BPI Science Award recipients in 2010: Ma. Ivy dela Cruz, BS Chemical Engineering; John Carlo Malabad, BS Biology, and Nathaniel Carolina, BS Chemistry. The UPLBAA in cooperation with UPLB held the Grand Alumni Centennial Ball in honor of Class 2010 on April 22. The CVM launched its centennial commemorative book UP College of Veterinary Medicine: 100 Years of Distinctive Excellence (1908-2008). The book chronicles the development of CVM through 100 years and accounts for its accomplishments in instruction, research and extension, the brief history of its now ISI-indexed Philippine Journal of Veterinary Medicine, its collection of art works, and charts its future direction. Step up our fund campaign With the celebration of the centenary of the establishment of the Mount Makiling Forest Reserve and the 50th year since it was transferred under UP administration, we launched the MakiLingap Project or the Mount Makiling Centennial Stewardship Campaign to attract stewardship commitments from private individuals,

corporations, and foundations. Isuzu Philippines Corporation is one of the first to respond. It adopted a 13-ha. portion of the Dipterocarp Arboretum at the MBG. It will plant 300 trees of 13 native dipterocarp tree species, refurbish a 1.3 km walkway inside MBG, and donate site markers, tree labels, and nature interpretation boards. We were the recipients of the largesse of the Global-Asia Resource Initiative Foundation, Inc. which donated a brand new van that will become an ambulatory clinic for our extension activities in veterinary medicine especially in the anti-rabies campaign in Los Banos.

The Tourism Infrastructure and Enterprise Zone Authority (TIEZA) turned over new structures donated to UPLB for the MBG. The new structures are the Nature Conservation Education and Ecotourism Center that now houses the MBG office, ticket booth, rainforest diorama, seminar room, and a 100-seat theatre for visitor information and audio-visual presentation. The second building is the Pavilion, a 330-sqm multi-purpose hall for social functions and special events. We continued to receive donations under the Make it UPLB! Fund campaign. Donations totaled $24,530 and P819,232.24.

Nurturing Our Gains in Distinctive Excellence 30

UNIVERSITY OFFICIALS 2010


BOARD OF REGENTS
Hon. Emmanuel Y. Angeles, Chairman, Commission on Higher Education I Hon. Emerlinda R. Romn, Vice Chairman I Hon. Manuel A. Roxas II, Chairman, Senate Committee on Education I Hon. Cynthia Villar, Chair, House Committee on Higher Education I MEMBERS: Hon. Abraham F. Sarmiento, Hon. Nelia T. Gonzalez, Hon. Francis C. Chua I Hon. Clodualdo E. Cabrera, Staff Regent I Hon. Alfredo E. Pascual, Alumni Regent I Hon. Judy M. Taguiwalo, Faculty Regent I Hon. Cory Alyssa Co, Student Regent

UP SYSTEM OFFICIALS
Dr. Emerlinda R. Romn, President I Dr. Amelia P. Guevara, VP for Academic Affairs I Prof. Edgardo G. Atanacio, VP for Planning and Finance I Dr. Arlene A. Samaniego, VP for Administration I Prof. Armin B. Sarthou, Jr., VP for Development I Dr. Isabelita O. Reyes, VP for Public Affairs I Prof. Theodore O. Te, LLB, VP for Legal Affairs I Dr. Lourdes E. Abadingo, Secretary of the University and of the Board of Regents

UPLB ADMINISTRATORS
Dr. Luis Rey I. Velasco, Chancellor I Dr. Rita P. Laude, Vice Chancellor for Instruction I Dr. Enrico P. Supangco, Vice Chancellor for Research and Extension I Dr. Ruben D. Tanqueco, Vice Chancellor for Planning and Development I Dr. Roberto F. Raola, Vice Chancellor for Administration I Dr. Virginia R. Cardenas, Vice Chancellor for Community Affairs I Dr. Cecilio R. Arboleda, Executive Director, UPLB Foundation Inc. I Prof. Moises A. Dorado, Asst. to the Vice Chancellor, OVCRE I Dr. Grace D. de Ocampo, Asst. to the Vice Chancellor,OVCI I Dr. Fernando C. Sanchez, Jr., Asst. to the Vice Chancellor, OVCPD I Dr. Elpidio M. Agbisit, Asst. to the Vice Chancellor, OVCCA I Dr. Florinia E. Merca, Director, Office of Institutional Linkages I Prof. Ma. Stella C. Tirol, Director, Office of Public Relations I Dr. Vivian A. Gonzales, Director, Office of Student Affairs I Dr. Myrna G. Carandang, University Registrar I Dr. Emmanuel Rodantes G. Abraham, Assistant to the Chancellor and Director, Office of Alumni Relations (Until May 2010) I Dr. Mimosa C. Ocampo, Director, Office of Alumni Relations I Atty. Damcelle Torres-Cortes, Assistant to the Chancellor

COLLEGE DEANS
Dr. Domingo E. Angeles, College of Agriculture I Dr. Asuncion K. Raymundo, College of Arts and Sciences I Dr. Cleofe S. Torres, College of Development Communication I Dr. Flordeliza A. Lantican, College of Economics and Management I Dr. Arsenio N. Resurreccion, College of Engineering and Agro-Industrial Technology I Dr. Rex Victor O. Cruz, College of Forestry and Natural Resources I Dr. Sue Liza C. Saguiguit, College of Human Ecology I Dr. Agnes C. Rola, College of Public Affairs I Dr. Conrado A. Valdez, College of Veterinary Medicine I Dr. Oscar B. Zamora, Graduate School I Dr. Maria Victoria O. Espaldon, School of Environmental Science and Management

THE 2010 ANNUAL REPORT TEAM


Dr. Luis Rey I. Velasco I Atty. Damcelle Torres-Cortes I Ms. Olga C. Lomboy I Prof. Ma. Stella C. Tirol, Editor I Ms. Josephine M. Bo, Writer I Mr. Eisen Bernard V. Bernardo, Layout Artist I Photographs by: Simplicio Veluz, Florante Cruz, Nicetas Araguas, Mario Maningas, Eisen Bernard V. Bernardo, Rey Angelo P. Nasino, Edmund Centeno, and Romeo Estimado

ACKNOWLEDGMENT The UPLB Annual Report Team would like to thank the members of the UPLB Management Committee, the Deans and their teams for the reports that provided/contributed to the contents of the 2010 UPLB Annual Report.

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