Английская Википедия:History of De La Salle University
The history of De La Salle University dates back to 1911, when the Christian Brothers opened the De La Salle College (DLSC) in Nozaleda Street, Paco, Manila, Philippines. It is the first La Salle school established by the Christian Brothers in the Philippines, and the oldest constituent of De La Salle Philippines (DLSP), a network of 16 Lasallian educational institutions established in 2006 replacing the De La Salle University System.[1][2]
Early history
In 1901, three years after Spain ceded control of the Philippines to the United States, the Americans established a new public education system using English as the medium of instruction. The Catholic educational institutions in the country at that time, however, continued using Spanish as their medium, and this practice raised concerns that the Catholic children would lose out in the quest for leadership roles under the American administration. The Americans tried convincing the Spanish Jesuits of Ateneo to use English as the new language of instruction, but the Jesuits refused the American demand and remained loyal to Spain. Meanwhile, the Catholic teaching congregation Brothers of the Christian Schools (FSC, from the Latin: Fratres Scholarum Christianarum) had by then established their presence in 35 countries, including several Lasallian schools in Europe, North America, Latin America, Africa, and Asia. Thus, the Americans turned to the Christian Brothers to pave the way for the introduction of English-based quality Catholic education in the country.[3]
De La Salle College was established by nine Christian Brothers at the request of Manila Archbishop Jeremiah James Harty. Brothers Blimond Pierre Eilenbecker, a Luxembourgish-born French director, Aloysius McGiverin of Gonzaga, the sole American brother, and Augusto Correge of France arrived on March 10, 1911. On May 13, the remaining six Brothers arrived. They were Brothers Ptolomee Louis Duffaux, Goslin Camillus Henri, D. Joseph, Celba John Lynam, Imar William Reale, and Martin, from France and Ireland, respectively.[4] De La Salle College formally opened on June 16, 1911, initially with 125 students. By July 10, the total number of students reached 175. The campus was located on a Шаблон:Convert lot in Nozaleda Street, Paco, Manila and became the first La Salle school in the Philippines.[5][6][7][8][9]
On February 12, 1912, the college was incorporated under the sole ownership of the college director, who was then Br. Eilenbecker. In March 1912, four more Brothers arrived to answer Br. Eilenbecker's request for more teachers. They were Brothers Wilfrid, Basilian Coin, Dorotheus Joseph and Egbert Xavier Kelly. During the early years, the Brothers were allowed to offer the full primary and intermediate programs and a three-year commercial secondary school program. The Commercial High School Diploma was first conferred in 1915 to three graduates. In November 1917, the school was allowed to confer an Associate in Arts degree. Brothers Donatian Felix, V. Andrew, Albinus Peter, Flavius Leo, Alphonsus Henry, Felix and David King were sent to the school to teach various subjects from 1917 to 1929.[10]
In 1921, due to the lack of space on the original Nozaleda Campus in Paco, the Brothers made a decision to move in 2401 Taft Avenue in Malate, its present location. Brother Acisclus Michael, FSC was able to secure a Шаблон:Convert lot at the southernmost boundary of Manila.[11] The Paco property was then sold on March 19, 1920, to Don Vicente Madrigal, a wealthy shipping magnate. A groundbreaking ceremony was held on March 3, 1920, on a purchased lot along Taft Avenue. More than a year later on September 24, 1921, the teachers together with 425 students trooped on foot from Paco to a half-finished school designed by architect Tomás Mapúa. Classes on the new Taft campus formally started on October 3, 1921, while the building was completed on December 15, 1924.[3][10]
In 1924, only 13 years after the Christian Brothers opened the doors of its new school to young boys, De La Salle College was already recognized as the best private school in the country by the Board of Educational Survey created by the Philippine Legislature then to make a study of education and all the educational institutions, facilities and agencies in the country.[3][10] In 1920, the school opened a two-year commercial course. The school's catalog for 1925 listed courses for an Associate in Arts, a two-year Commerce curriculum, and a Bachelor of Arts and a Master of Arts although these last two degrees were never conferred before World War II. In 1930, the college was authorized to confer the degrees of Bachelor of Science in Education and Master of Science of Education. The last pre-war arts degree holders graduated in 1931. The Associate in Arts program was then discontinued because of the department's lack of staff. The Bachelor of Science in Commerce degree was first conferred in 1931 after a third year had been added to the initial two-year program.[3]
World War II
During the Second World War, the Japanese forces in Manila forcibly took over the De La Salle College grounds and turned the campus into their South Manila defense quarters. Classes continued during the War starting in school year 1943–44 but the curriculum was severely reduced. Repeated bombings of the vicinity resulted in the total destruction of the college gymnasium, its library holdings, as well as laboratory equipment. On February 12, 1945, as American forces were making their way back to Manila and its environs, a small group of Japanese soldiers massacred 16 out of the 17 Brothers (all Europeans) residing in the Taft Campus, as well as several families who had taken refuge with them in the school chapel of the St. La Salle Hall. Only one survived the massacre – Brother Antonius Von Jesus, FSC despite being severely wounded by the Japanese soldiers. Brother Antonius was found by the American and Filipino forces who entered the La Salle campus a few days after February 12. Then-De La Salle College Brother President, Brother Egbert Xavier, FSC went missing one day before the massacre on February 12, 1945, presumably taken by Japanese soldiers.[12][13][14]
The end of the war brought the imprisoned American De La Salle Brothers back home from the Japanese Los Baños concentration camp. They resumed classes in July 1945 in spite of lacking manpower and facilities; 1945 saw 60 boys graduating from high school at the end of the school year.[15] Recognizing the role of education in reconstructing the Philippines, the Brothers expanded the Commerce curriculum into a four-year program.[16]
Post-war recovery and development
The post-war years saw the establishment of numerous undergraduate schools and units. In 1947, the undergraduate school of Engineering was established, followed by Arts and Sciences in 1953, Education in 1959, Industrial Technology in 1973, and Career Development in 1980. De La Salle's Graduate School of Business Administration was established in 1960, followed by Education in 1963. In 1979, the College of Industrial Technology was merged with the College of Engineering as an Engineering Technology Program. In 1981, the Center for Planning, Information, and Computer Science was organized prompting the initial offering of the Bachelor of Science in Computer Science program. Beginning school year 1984–85, the Computer Science Program was spun off as a program under the College of Computer Studies. In 1982, the La Salle Teacher Training Center was put up to revive an earlier education program and in 1987, this center was elevated to the La Salle School of Education. The events of the 1970s were crucial to the development of De La Salle as a social institution. The school was exclusively for boys until 1973 when it admitted female students. That same year, a blueprint called De La Salle Ten Years was published, projecting the planned improvements of the school from 1973 to 1983, and was updated yearly.[16]
Attaining university status
On February 19, 1975, De La Salle College was granted university status under the presidency of Brother H. Gabriel Connon, FSC and became known as De La Salle University. Another milestone school year was 1981–82, when the university adopted the year-round trimestral calendar for all units instead of the traditional semestral academic schedule. The trimestral system allows its students to graduate earlier than their counterparts in other schools that employ the semestral system.[16] In 1987, the then 5-campus De La Salle University System was organized under the term of Br. Andrew Gonzalez, FSC composed of De La Salle University (Taft Avenue, Manila), De La Salle–College of Saint Benilde (Taft Avenue, Manila), the Шаблон:Convert De La Salle Santiago Zobel School (Ayala Alabang Village, Muntinlupa, Metro Manila), the Шаблон:Convert De La Salle University-Dasmarinas (Dasmarinas, Cavite) and the Шаблон:Convert De La Salle Medical and Health Sciences Institute (formerly known as De La Salle University – Health Sciences Campus in Dasmarinas, Cavite). Since then more Lasallian schools were added, most notably the traditionally all-boys La Salle Green Hills school (opened in 1959 in Ortigas Ave., Mandaluyong), De La Salle Lipa (Lipa City, Batangas), De La Salle Araneta University (Malabon) and La Salle College Antipolo (Antipolo, Rizal). From 1987 up to 2008, the university officially became known as De La Salle University – Manila.
On March 28, 1994, the university had full Internet connection,[17] and was one of the first Philippine schools to be connected to the Internet.[18] The university then created its official website, dlsu.edu.ph in December of the same year.[17] In 1996, graduate and undergraduate students were given Internet accounts,[17] and the university became the first Philippine educational institution online.[19] During school year 1995–96, DLSU Professional Schools was established, comprising the College of Computer Studies and the Graduate School of Business. Both were granted semi-autonomous status, which allowed them certain freedom to come up with their own academic and hiring policies, pay scale, among other things. In 2002, the College of Computer Studies was reintegrated into the university.
Recent history
In July 2006, De La Salle-Professional Schools, Inc. separated from DLSU-Manila making it fully autonomous. In March 2007, the College of Computer Studies was recognized as a Center of Excellence for Information Technology by the Commission on Higher Education. The College of Science's four departments, Biology, Chemistry, Physics, and Mathematics, were all reawarded with Centers of Excellence titles in their respective fields. In May 2007, as part of the reorganization included in the implementation of De La Salle Philippines, several administrative positions were renamed such as Chancellor from Executive Vice President.
Before 2007 ended, the Brothers of Christian Schools named Dr. Carmerlita Quebengco as a Lasallian Affiliate, the highest recognition bestowed by the De La Salle Brothers.[20] The Board of Trustees of the university also conferred to Dr. Carmelita Quebengco AFSC the Chancellor Emeritus status after serving the university for 12 years as Executive Vice President and one year as Chancellor. In December 2007, Br. Bernard S. Oca, FSC who served as President of the De La Salle Professional Schools, announced the plan to reintegrate the Graduate School of Business.[21]
School facilities and buildings were renovated such as the St. La Salle Hall in 2011 as part of the university's Centennial Renewal Plan, a project that aims to construct and renovate facilities inside the campus.[22] Construction of the Henry Sy Sr. Hall began on December 2, 2010. A 14-storey building, it replaced DLSU's football field and was completed by December 2012.[23][24] It is estimated to cost ₱1.4 billion (US$32.5 million).[25][26] The Henry Sy Sr. Hall also serves as the home of the university library, now called the Learning Commons, and has almost four hectares of floor space.[27][28] In line with this, DLSU entered an eight-year agreement with the Philippine Sports Commission. Under the contract, DLSU will fund the ₱7.4 million (US$171,000)[25] renovation of the Rizal Memorial Track and Football Stadium. DLSU will get to use the facilities in return.[29][30][31]
In 2012, the Шаблон:Convert De La Salle Canlubang was formally merged with De La Salle University and became an extension of DLSU.[32] It was inaugurated as the De La Salle University Science and Technology Complex, and later renamed as the De La Salle University – Laguna Campus.[33] In September 2013, the Bases Conversion and Development Authority (BCDA) has awarded to De La Salle University the lease and development of a seven-storey, Шаблон:Convert institutional lot in Bonifacio Global City in Taguig.[34][35] DLSU signed a contract with the BCDA in October 2013.[36] It is now the DLSU Rufino Campus College of Law provided by the Rufino family.[37][38] The campus houses 17 classrooms, an auditorium, an arbitration room, and a moot court.[39][40]
In 2015, DLSU announced that it would open its Manila campus for senior high school students in response to the K–12 implementation.[41] The Senior High School (SHS) classes officially opened on June 1, 2016.[42] In December 2018, DLSU announced its plan to launch a new Learning Management System (LMS) called AnimoSpace, built based on the Canvas LMS software.[43][44] AnimoSpace was officially launched on January 15, 2019.[45]
Based on Scopus-indexed papers, De La Salle University was named the country's most productive research university in March 2020. In 2019, DLSU published over 600 Scopus-indexed publications, the most by any Philippine institution in a single calendar year. DLSU's publications account for almost 15% of the nation's research output.[46][47] DLSU had 4,113 indexed publications in the database by June 2020, which was the second-highest number among Philippine higher education institutions (HEIs). According to Scopus' most recent citation database, DLSU's 2019 statistics were 729, keeping it as the country's top research institution.[48]
References
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- ↑ De La Salle University-Manila Student's Handbook: 2003-06. Manila: DLSU Press. 2003
- ↑ Carlos Quirino. La Salle: 1911–1986. Filipinas Foundation, Inc. 1986.
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- ↑ 17,0 17,1 17,2 DLSU-Manila: ITC's Historical Background, dlsu.edu.ph Шаблон:Webarchive Accessed September 5, 2006
- ↑ DigitalFilipino.com RP Internet Facts, Accessed September 10, 2006
- ↑ Philippine Internet Review:: BOOK OUTLINE, Philippine Internet Review Project Accessed September 5, 2006
- ↑ Philippine Lasallian Family RP Internet Facts, Accessed January 28, 2008
- ↑ Ang Pahayagang Plaridel. "Professional Schools, muling sasanib sa DLSU-M". December 18, 2007
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