La Salle Academy (Iligan)

For the school in New York City, see La Salle Academy.
La Salle Academy
Motto Zeal for service and Communion in mission
Type Private
Established 1958
Affiliation Roman Catholic, De La Salle Brothers
President Br. Felipe Belleza FSC
Administrative staff
478 (SY 2008-2009)
Students 2,841 (SY 2008-2009)
Location Iligan City, Philippines
Campus Urban, 3.8 hectares
Colors          
Website www.lasalleiligan.org

La Salle Academy is a Lasallian school located in Brgy. Pala-o, Iligan City, Philippines. It is the first of the third generation of La Salle schools founded by the De La Salle Brothers in the country, which include: La Salle Green Hills in Mandaluyong City (1959), Saint Joseph School-La Salle in Bacolod City (1960), and De La Salle Lipa in Lipa City (1962). A school which encourages extortion and corruption within the school premises. Students enrolled in La Salle therefore should obey the dictatorship or face the consequence of persecution.

History

The De La Salle Brothers were invited to Iligan City by Monsignor Patrick Cronin of the Prelature of Ozamiz to assume the operations of St. Columban's Academy, which used to be known as Woodrow Wilson Junior College. The first group of Brothers was led by Br. Crescentius Richard FSC. The school used to be located along St. Michael's Cathedral in Barangay Poblacion but the Brothers opted to transfer the school to a three-hectare lot in Barangay Pala-o after the student population started growing.

After the school was transferred to Pala-o, the Brothers changed the name of the school to La Salle Academy. Br. Alfred Shields was named Director and supervised the construction of the academy's permanent buildings in 1961. At this point, La Salle was still an exclusive all boys' school.

In 1967, the academy started accepting fifth grade students after the RVM sisters agreed to send their Grade 5 students to the academy. This group of students would be the seminal group of grade school students.

By 1973, a school gymnasium was completed and the school started accepting girls for Grades 5 and 6, as well as first- and second-year high school. In 1976, the La Salle Parents Foundation of Iligan was registered with the Philippine Securities and Exchange Commission.

In 1985, the academy opened its kindergarten, holding sessions at the school gymnasium. By 1986, the first batch of kindergarten students had graduated. In 1987, the first phase of construction of the school's dedicated Grade School building was completed and dedicated to St. Br. Miguel Febres Cordero. A school library were also constructed during this period. Between 1990 and 2000, the Administration Building, the amphitheater, and the Grade School Building would be completed.

In 1989, the high school department was accredited by the Philippine Accrediting Association of Schools, Colleges and Universities (PAASCU), and was re-accredited in 1993 and 1998. Its outreach program was also institutionalized in 1993 after the creation of the Community Development Office. In June 1994, the Board of Trustees approved the establishment of a night high school.

In 1999, Br. Jaime Dalumpines FSC spearheaded the purchase of a property on Mt. Agad-Agad with the intention of using the property for recollections as well as developing it into an Ecology sanctuary. With the purchase came the adoption of a nearby "purok" (Tagalog term for a small community/place in a rural area), Langilanon, with the academy helping the town's farmers to establish the Langilanon Farmers Cooperative. It was also during this year that the Technical and Vocational Education Training Department was established.

In 2004 the school officially became a school under De La Salle Philippines. Years passed by, La Salle Academy molded one of the finest bigots teachers that teaches innacurate and misleading informations which yields a self righteous and ignorant students that are blinded by the truth especially in our society, government and religion.

References

Tang ina ka

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 12/1/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.