YDT, CAT To Mold Youth’s Physical, Mental Resilience: DepEd Exec
CITIZENS ARMY TRAINING. A high school student of the Cebu Institute of Technology-University stands in attention in this undated photo. Department of Education (DepEd)-Central Visayas regional director Salustiano Jimenez on Thursday (May 19, 2022) said the Youth Development Training and Citizens Army Training molds the youth to become physically and morally resilient and equip them with necessary skills. (PNA photo by John Rey Saavedra)
CEBU CITY – The top education official in Region 7 on Thursday said he is in favor of reviving the Youth Development Training (YDT) and Citizens Army Training (CAT) in high school, saying it will mold the youth’s resiliency towards physical and mental challenges.
Salustiano Jimenez, Department of Education (DepEd)-Central Visayas regional director, said in a radio interview these types of training will also equip the future generation with the necessary skills to face any forms of challenges and adversities in life.
He sees YDT and CAT as morale boosters for the younger citizens, as these service training on high school campuses will mold a nationalistic and patriotic citizenry.
In 1973, YDT was offered for 1st year to 3rd year high school students while CAT was for the 4th year.
Jimenez said students who underwent YDT and CAT were found to be more physically and morally resilient.
“It is not necessary that we will all be serving the military. But in our personal capacity, in our family, the training that we went through can be useful, like me as a father, as a family man, and as an official of the government. I hope that my kids will experience the same training that I got,” Jimenez said, adding that he noticed his children who have not experienced YDT or CAT would easily get tired.
The said training will equip the younger sector with the mechanisms to cope with the challenges in life and avoid being “demoralized or being toppled down by the crisis,” he added.
Jimenez's remarks came amid talks on the revival of CAT in junior high school and Reserve Officer Training Corps for senior high school, following the election of Davao Mayor Sara Duterte as presumptive vice president.
Meanwhile, Jimenez said DepEd-7 welcomes Duterte as their chief should the presumptive president, Ferdinand “Bongbong” Marcos Jr. Finally decides to appoint her as the next Secretary of Education. (PNA)
Pet Cats Know Their Fellow Cats’ Names, Study Shows
There’s been a lot of interest lately in the words that dogs know. We’ve seen that some dogs like Rico and Chaser and other “genius” dogs learn many words and that dogs like Stella can learn to press buttons in order to ‘talk.’ But it turns out that pet cats have interesting linguistic abilities too, according to a new study published in Scientific Reports.
We already know that pet cats can recognize their own names. That research gave rise to an intriguing possibility: that they might know other cats' names. Now scientists in Japan have shown that pet cats recognize the names that people have given to other cats who live in the same home—and it seems that some may even know the names of their guardians.
This shows that cats are paying attention to what we say.
Saho Takagi of the Department of Psychology at Kyoto University, the first author of the research, told me,
Learning the names of other individuals does not provide much benefit to them. Nevertheless, the fact that they remember the names of other individuals means that they are listening to humans that carefully. By talking to them a lot, you and your cat will get to know each other better.
Source: Kari Shea/Unsplash
The research involved two experiments in the homes of pet cats and cat cafés. Both experiments looked at something called an expectancy violation, whereby cats look for longer at pictures on a laptop when they know they don’t match the name that they hear at the same time. Of course, if the cat did not know the name, no such expectancy violation would occur.
Testing if Cats Know the Names of Other CatsThe pet cats who took part in the study lived in a home with at least three cats in total. In the first experiment, cats were held in front of a laptop. They first heard a recording of their guardian saying the name of one of their fellow cats. Then they were shown a photo of either that cat (the name matched) or one of their other fellow cats (the name didn’t match).
When the name and photo matched up, the cat only looked at the photo for a short time. When they had heard the name of a different cat, however—the incongruent condition—cats looked at the photo for longer.
Cats from cat cafés also took part, and they did not look for longer in the incongruent condition. This is not a surprise; previous research found that cats who live in cat cafés do not seem to know their own name, so you would not expect them to know other cats’ names. Since a lot of cats can live in the cafés (often over 30), they must hear different people calling different names a lot of the time. These conditions don’t seem so conducive to learning names.
Testing if Cats Know People’s NamesThe second experiment used a similar method, except that this time they used the names and photos of people in the cats’ household. To match normal usage, they used the names people use in everyday life in the home, and they were spoken by someone else from the home.
The households were of different sizes ranging from two to five people. Not all cats showed an expectancy violation, meaning that only some cats knew whether the photo matched the name. But cats were more likely to show an expectancy violation if there were more people in the home (presumably meaning people used the names more often) and if the cat had lived in the home for longer (perhaps giving them more opportunities to learn).
How do cats learn names?Being able to learn the names of other cats could be a type of social learning in which the cats have picked up the names from observing them in use. However, the current study did not investigate how cats learn their names, so this is a question for future research.
The cats in this study did not receive any training on cats’ or peoples’ names. The pet cats had lived in their home, along with the other resident cats and people, for at least six months.
The researchers say,
In summary, house cats matched at least their companion cats’ names and faces, and possibly their human family members’ names. This is the first evidence that domestic cats link human utterances and their social referents through everyday experiences.
This fascinating research adds to what we know about pet cats’ socio-cognitive abilities, which include being able to follow a person’s point or look to find food, knowing whether someone is paying attention to them or not, and recognizing their guardian’s voice.
Perhaps this research will lead to people talking to their cats more and even trying to teach them names and other words.
In any case, it shows that cats are far cleverer than many people think.
References
Takagi, S., Saito, A., Arahori, M., Chijiiwa, H., Koyasu, H., Nagasawa, M., Kikusui, T., Fujita, K. & Kuroshima, H. (2022). Cats learn the names of their friend cats in their daily lives. Scientific
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