Teaching & Learning — How to Study, Get In, and Get Through
The other side of the desk. After a decade teaching at the University of the Philippines — and authoring online courses taken by thousands — this is where I write about the craft of learning itself: choosing a program, passing the exam, studying online without drifting, and actually finishing.
Everything filed under Teaching & Learning.
Guides on studying, online learning, exams, and getting into and through your program — newest first.

Six Sigma Green Belt Certification Course
Do you know that there is a Six Sigma Green Belt Certification Course here in the Philippines? There are in…
The craft of learning, from someone who teaches for a living.
Getting into a program, passing the exam, and finishing it are three different skills — and almost nobody is taught any of them. This pillar covers all three: choosing the right course, sitting graduate-school exams like the UP MBA GPAT, studying online without drifting, and the case for online learning itself.
It’s written from a decade teaching at the University of the Philippines and authoring Open Educational Resources for UP Open University. The briefs above are the advice I give my own students; the wider library is on the Publications page.
The other pillars.
Four streams, one editorial calendar — or see everything in one place.
Mutual Wealth
Cooperatives, NSSLAs, and community enterprises — strategy for wealth that belongs to members and missions.
Governance
Public administration research, translated into plain-language briefs for LGUs and practitioners.
MBA for MSMEs
The UP business curriculum — strategy, finance, operations, marketing — rewritten for owner-operators.
Beyond the writing.
When you want the teaching and frameworks delivered to your team or organisation.
Consulting
Strategy, feasibility, and planning engagements for businesses, cooperatives, and government teams.
Training
Hands-on capability-building — the same frameworks, delivered live to your team or organisation.
About RM Nisperos
The credentials, institutions, and track record behind the briefs — the case for trusting the work.

