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By the year 1921, the school adopted a new name, "St. Rita Academy", and then renamed as "Saint Rita College" in 1945. In 1948, College programs as well as vocational courses were offered. The school opened its doors to young boys by the year 2003. Saint Rita College celebrated its centennial year in 2007 with the theme "Love to Come Home."
St. Rita's College of Balingasag is a Filipino, Catholic, co-educational RVM institution founded in 1901 by a Jesuit Missionary, Rev. Fr. Gregorio Parache, S.J., the parish priest as a parochial school aimed at giving basic education to the children of the parish.
St. James College of Parañaque (moved to Quezon City) St. Rita College Parañaque City; The Learning Child School (moved to Ayala Alabang) The Japanese School of Manila moved to Parañaque in 1978, and then to Taguig in 2001. [1] When it was in Parañaque, it was in Barangay Don Bosco, Levitown Subdivision. [2]
St. Theresa's College of Quezon City, also called by its acronym STC, is a private Catholic basic education institution for girls (formerly also a higher education institution) run by the Missionary Sisters of the Immaculate Heart of Mary in Quezon City, Metro Manila, Philippines. It was officially established on January 7, 1947, by the ICM ...
The sisters, led by Juana Zabalza, Superior of the College at that time, and the principal, Candida Ocampo, who later became the first Filipina Superior of the College, were able to acquire the former St. Rita's College at 210 Taft Avenue, Manila. Some time after the war, the name was changed to Santa Isabel College.
Southville International School and Colleges was founded in 1990 as Southville International School. The school started by offering preschool at its Elizalde Campus, and eventually expanded to offer primary school, secondary school, International Baccalaureate Diploma Programme, and college degree courses.
The Saint Francis of Assisi College (SFAC) is a learning institution offering education from pre-school up to the graduate level. Founded in 1981 with about 80 pre-school pupils, SFAC now consists of more than 10,000 students spread across nine campuses in the Southern Luzon area.
The school was intended as a school for boys only offering secondary education with its counterpart, Colegio de Sta. Rita, a school for girls, run by the Augustinian Recollect Sisters. After a year of construction, on June 20, 1941, the Solemn Blessing was officiated by the Most Rev. Casimiro Lladoc, D.D., Bishop of Bacolod, and was attended by ...