HomeGood DeedPalawan non-profit Ink2Link donates printing materials for learning modules

Palawan non-profit Ink2Link donates printing materials for learning modules

 

Ink2Link
Ink2Link reaches out to communities and public schools in the far-flung areas of Palawan to support the education of Filipino distance learners.

Palawan’s Ink2Link is donating printing materials for the learning modules of disadvantaged students in the province to help them cope with the new normal of schooling in this time of the COVID-19 pandemic.

The non-profit group was started by longtime friends Janjan Olit, Pepzee Tiococo, and Helga Lisboa who originally thought to sell affordable printer ink to schools in Palawan.

The business idea gave way to an ink donation drive which helps underfunded and remote public schools produce materials for modular learning amid the new modes adopted by Philippine education.

“More volunteers, communities, private individuals, and organizations have joined our cause and before we realized it, this simple #inkmovement has evolved into a #ink2linkmovement!” the group wrote on August 14, 2020.

Ink2Link connects teachers, parents, and education advocates to help produce modules for use of students under the blended or distance learning approach adopted by the Philippine Department of Education to keep children safe amid the pandemic.

The group together with their volunteers have provided the printing needs of 20 Ink2Link partner schools located in Coron, Culion, and Busuanga in the Calamian Islands on the northern part of Palawan, the Philippines.

The non-profit was able to raise over 125,000 pesos in donations as of September 13. Funds will go to the acquisition of printers, bond paper, and ink for select schools in Palawan.

Ink2Link is accepting cash and in-kind donations. Contact them here.

Similar initiatives have been started by kind-hearted Filipinos who are advocating for the education of needy students in trying times.

OFW nurse Aldrin Licayan raised funds for tablet computers to be donated to Pinoy kids back home. Computer programmer Mark Anthony Perez is offering his laptop repair services for free to students in Tarlac.

Famous celebrities Carmina Villaroel-Legaspi, Heart Evangelista’s Big Heart PH, and Alden Richards gave away distance learning tools to students.

Student-led initiatives are also making sure that no learner is left behind amid the new normal schooling.

SEND CHEERS in the comments below to Palawan non-profit Ink2Link for donating printing materials for learning modules of students.

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Margo Hannah De Guzman Quadra
Margo Hannah De Guzman Quadra
Margo is a voracious reader - some might even say she reads too much for her own good. She majored in BS Psychology and hopes to become a forensic psychologist one day. She’s also an aspiring writer, mental health advocate, and a staunch believer of equality.

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