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Elementary and secondary schools for girls located in the Philippines. Related articles about the subject of girls' schools in the Philippines may also be included. See also: Category:Women's universities and colleges in the Philippines
The following is a list of international K–12 schools located in provincial cities of the Philippines, sorted by region, that both have international curricula and international pre-tertiary-education accreditation.
At the request of Pope Pius X, a group of anglophone Assumption Sisters returned to Manila in 1904; the Philippine Islands were by then already under American control.With the group of Sisters were Mother Helen Margaret as Superior, and Mother Rosa María Pachoud, Mother Esperanza Maria A. CuUnjieng, Madame Angela Ansaldo, Sr. Lory Mapa, Sr. Luisa Locsin and Sr. Bianca Rosa Perez Rubio who ...
In 1919 during the American colonial era, the Philippine Women's University was established as the Philippine Women's College (PWC) by a group of Filipino women consisting of Clara Aragon, Concepcion Aragon, Francisca Tirona Benitez, Paz Marquez Benitez, Carolina Ocampo Palma, Mercedes Rivera and Socorro Marquez Zaballero with the assistance of Filipino lawyer José Abad Santos, who drafted ...
Name Location (Main campus) President Established Population City Region Island Group University of the Philippines: Quezon City: NCR: Luzon: Danilo L. Concepcion: 1908: 57,387 Polytechnic University of the Philippines: Manila: NCR Luzon: Manuel M. Muhi: 1904: 56,928 Technological University of the Philippines: Manila: NCR Luzon: Jesus Rodrigo ...
DRANHS – Daniel R. Aguinaldo High School; DWU – Divine Word University; ESEP – Engineering and Science Education Program; EVSU – Eastern Visayas State University; FAST – Filipino-American School Town; FEU-FERN – Far Eastern University - Nicanor Reyes Educational Foundation; FS – Falcon School; HSCI – Hua Siong College of Iloilo
Zappeion (Constantinople, now Istanbul) - Established in 1875, it was a school for girls catering to the Greek population. Ayşe Sıdıka Hanım [ tr ] , an ethnic Turk, attended this school. Johann Strauss, author of "Language and power in the late Ottoman Empire," described it as "prestigious".
In 1907, Avelino joined her friend Carmen de Luna and lawyer/educator Fernando Salas to found the Centro Escolar de Señoritas, a school which organized courses from kindergarten through high school for girls. The school was the first non-parochial institution in the country and based its curriculum on a modern, liberal model, attempting to ...