Ramon Magsaysay (Cubao) High School

Ramon Magsaysay (Cubao) High School (RMCHS) is a high school in Quezon City, Philippines.[1] It was founded as an annex of Quezon City High School in 1953 then became an independent school in 1958. It is one of the two schools in Metro Manila named after President Ramon Magsaysay (the other being Ramon Magsaysay High School, Manila).

Ramon Magsaysay (Cubao) High School
Mataas na Paaralan ng Ramon Magsaysay (Cubao)
Address
RMCHS
Location in Metro Manila
Ermin Garcia St., cor. Epifanio de los Santos Avenue, Cubao

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Coordinates
Information
TypePublic, Special science
Established1953
School number305358
PrincipalDr. Levita Ramos
Grades7 to 12
Number of studentsApprox. 7000
Medium of languageEnglish, Filipino
Color(s)Green and White
NicknameRMCHS, Monsay
AffiliationsDivision of City Schools - Quezon City, Department of Education

History

Facade of the RMCHS main building viewed from the Ermin Garcia St. side.
Bust of Ramon Magsaysay displayed at the school's quadrangle

The school was established as an annex of Quezon City High School in 1953. It was located at EDSA, near Cubao Elementary School. In 1958, this annex became the independent Cubao High School, which relocated in 1960 to New Orleans St., behind the old Quezon City Hall. Due to accelerating socio-economic development in Quezon City, Cubao High School annexes began sprouting. The first of these was the Murphy Annex, which started operations in 1961. This annex was named Juan Sumulong High School upon being designated an independent school in 1964. The second annex became Carlos P. Garcia High School, while the third became Ponciano Bernardo High School.

On March 17, 1965, Cubao High School was renamed in memory of President Ramon Magsaysay who perished in a plane crash on March 17, 1957. Consequently, March 17 of every year was observed as the school's Foundation Day. The school year 1968-1969 saw a record boom in enrollment, resulting in the lack of accommodations for the more than 81,000 students. To remedy the situation, the old Quezon City Hall, standing on prime land at the corner of EDSA and Ermin Garcia St., was appropriated as the permanent school site. The rooms of the building itself was converted into classrooms. Unfortunately, on March 15, 1981, a devastating fire gutted the entire school building. School year 1981-1982 was spent at the nearby Raval Building, which was rented by the city government to enable students to continue their schooling.

Through the initiative of former First Lady and then Metro Manila Governor Imelda Marcos and then city Mayor Adelina S. Rodriguez, construction of a P13.6 million school building began in 1982. The three-story building was inaugurated on September 8 of the same year. Through the initiative of the Department of Education, Culture and Sports, a two-story SEDP building was constructed.

To cope with the demand for more classrooms, the city government vacated the adjacent Post Office to give way to the construction of a new school building sponsored by then Congressman Sonny Belmonte in 1997. The P12 million structure, named Bahay ni Florian Building, then houses most of the school's computer-based education.

In 1998, a fourth building was constructed beside the SEDP building to house the laboratory classes of the students. It was called the DOST Building, named after the Department of Science and Technology, who sponsored building the facility.

Three more buildings were added to the school's compound to house the technical and home economics subjects, as well as the science curriculum students of the school, namely the Home Economics Building in 1999, the Mathay Hall in 2002, and the Technology Building in 2003.

In 2007, the SEDP building was demolished to make way with the construction of a four-storey building named Belmonte Hall.

In 2013, the school's Foundation Day was moved to August 31, Magsaysay's birthdate, then moved back again in 2015 to March 17, Magsaysay's death.

Curriculums

Ramon Magsaysay (Cubao) High School, as with other Public Schools in the Philippines, follows the Basic Education Curriculum as prescribed by the Department of Education. In 1994, President Fidel V. Ramos introduced the Engineering and Science Education Program (ESEP) in some selected public schools in Philippines; and the Ramon Magsaysay (Cubao) High School was one of those who were selected. The ESEP Curriculum revised its predecessor, the Science and Technology Education Program (STEP), which was then formulated by the Department of Education, Culture, and Sports. In 2013, the ESEP Curriculum was then changed to Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics Curriculum, in lieu for the Government's Revision of the old Education Curriculum; changing from the Basic Education Curriculum (BEC) to the K-12 Education Curriculum.[2]

There are other Curriculums offered by the school such as the following:

  • Special Education Curriculum (SPED)
  • Foreign Language Service Curriculum (Chinese-Mandarin)
  • Balik Paaralan Para sa Out of School Youth (BP-OSY)

Noted alumni

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References

  1. "Problems mar opening of classes". Sun.Star. June 6, 2006. Retrieved May 10, 2010.
  2. Torres-Tupas, Tetch. "K-12 to displace thousands of teachers, students, say critics". newsinfo.inquirer.net. Retrieved 2015-05-29.
  • "RMCHS: The Inside Story". The Apprentice, 2002 annual. 2002.
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