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Cabadbaran, officially the City of Cabadbaran (Cebuano: Dakbayan sa Cabadbaran), is a component city and de jure capital of the province of Agusan del Norte, Philippines. According to the 2020 census, it has a population of 80,354 people.
Most recently, the Caraga STEM Alliance conducted the 1st Caraga STEM Fun Day at the CSU-Cabadbaran Campus Gymnasium in collaboration with the Department of Education (DepEd) Cabadbaran City Schools Division Office headed by SDS Dr. Imelda Sabornido and the City Government of Cabadbaran City headed by Mayor Judy Chin Amante.
Poverty Incidence of Caraga 10 20 30 40 50 60 2000 55.25 2003 54.00 2006 49.24 2009 54.35 2012 40.33 2015 39.65 2018 30.54 2021 25.90 Source: Philippine Statistics Authority From 2001 to 2003, Caraga Region consistently maintained its performance vis-à-vis other regions in Mindanao. Caraga posted a 0.9% growth rate compared to the 9.5% growth rate of Region 12 and the 2.6% growth rate of the ...
Agusan del Norte comprises 10 municipalities and 1 component city. There are 253 barangays (including the independent city of Butuan). The city of Cabadbaran is the officially designated capital of the province per Republic Act 8811. [6] The highly urbanized city of Butuan is geographically within but administratively independent from the province.
The Caraga State University – Cabadbaran Campus (CSU-CC), commonly called the Trades School in Cabadbaran and formerly known as the NORMISIST - Cabadbaran Campus and Northern Mindanao College of Arts, Science, and Technology (NMCAST), is a component college of the Caraga State University (formerly Northern Mindanao State Institute of Science and Technology or abbreviated as NORMISIST), with ...
The idea received full support from Rev. and Mrs. Frank Woodward who lent it impetus by moving their missionary residence to Cabadbaran. Mindanao Institute was established in June 1946 as a non-stock, non-profit Church-related High-School which was recognized by the government under Recognition No. 166.
Booming business in Tubay was still noticeable until the fabulous 20's when the navigable Jabonga River was the chief artery of its copra and hemp traffic. However, when the road connecting Tubay-Santiago and Cabadbaran was finished, business in Tubay began to decline and trade through the Jabonga River disappeared.
In August 2020, a DepEd TV episode used for a test broadcast contained grammatical errors in the sample questionnaire for a Grade 8 English course. Later in October, a math problem on DepEd TV had also gone viral for having an incorrect solution, wherein the solution asked students to divide by zero. [16]