The effects of the mid1980s neoliberal policy of privatizing social services such as higher or postsecondary education have been widely felt in North America,
I came across an article on your website by Linda Torio.
When I asked my children what they wanted for dinner one evening, they said, “We want Filipino food.” That gave me pause, because at their age, it never occurred to me to qualify what I eat. Everything I ate was Filipino food.
Among Filipinos in Canada today, there are two distinct groups that will eventually become the face of Canadian Filipinos of the future:
Last year, I had an opportunity to facilitate classes to supplement students’ Socials Studies curriculum at a Vancouver school.
Schools across Surrey and the Lower Mainland of British Columbia have been struggling to find ways to solve overcrowding in classrooms.
Nelson Didulo has been involved all his life in civic organizations from YMCA International to Vancouver Folk Festival, to United Confederation of Filipino Associations in Canada.
Unlike many people I know, I retired without much thought about how I was going to survive.
The first wave of Filipino immigrants, young professionals who arrived in the 1960s and 1970s, are now reaching retirement age.
Beautiful British Columbia – to anyone who has ever visited B.C. – is a place synonymous with breathtaking scenery.
When my wife Eleanor and I were writing our book Seeking a Better Life Abroad (Manila: Anvil Publishing, Inc., 2008) based on her study of Filipinos in Canada
Words of wisdom from Canadian Filipinos in elected public office (Second of a series)