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After five days of intensive capacity-building sessions, tutors and youth development workers from Northwest Samar State University (NwSSU) are now set to officially begin their roles in the Tara, Basa! Tutoring Program, a national initiative that empowers youth to promote literacy and community development.

Held from April 21 to 25, 2025, at the NwSSU RSU Socio-Cultural Center, the preparatory sessions equipped the volunteers with essential skills in pedagogy, child development, values formation, and community engagement, crucial in supporting early-grade learners who struggle with reading. The capability-building also emphasized the importance of empathy, cultural sensitivity, and educational equity in tutoring marginalized youth. In addition to assisting children, the program also includes parents as participants in the Nanay Tatay Sessions, a program facilitated by youth development workers that educates parents on the importance of a nurturing and loving home environment in a child’s development.

The Tara, Basa! Tutoring Program, launched by the Department of Social Welfare and Development (DSWD) in partnership with State University Colleges, Deped, and PLGU Samar through Gov. Sharee Ann Tan, is a community-based initiative designed to assist low-income families with young learners while providing college students the opportunity to earn through a cash-for-work scheme. The program empowers youth to serve as literacy and parent education champions, promoting inclusive community development.

Now equipped with training and guidance, NwSSU’s youth development workers will soon be deployed across their assigned communities, ready to advance foundational literacy and demonstrate NwSSU’s commitment to education-driven nation-building, community service, and youth leadership.