Ubay National Science High School

Ubay National Science High School (Filipino: Mataas na Pambansang Paaralang Pang-Agham ng Ubay), commonly called USci or SciHigh is a special public high school in the Philippines. The campus is located in the southern tip of Barangay Fatima in the municipality of Ubay in the province of Bohol. The school is duly administered by the Department of Education.[1] It is the second science high school in Bohol, next to Tagbilaran City.

mapulot national high school

Ubay National Science High School
Address
E. Aumentado Avenue, Fatima

,
6315

Information
School typeGovernment Funded, Public, Special Science
MottoSecundus ut Nullus
(Second to None)
EstablishedJuly 1, 1996
FounderErico B. Aumentado
Sister schoolTCSHS
School district2nd District of Bohol
PrincipalLoreta Q. Garcia
Faculty14
Key peopleDr. Clarita V. Alesna, Reynita Haduc
Grades7 to 12
Enrollment150 - 200
Education systemESEP - DepEd
Medium of languageEnglish, Filipino
CampusUrban
Color(s)Green, Yellow, Red, Blue
                   
SloganScience High, Aiming High
MascotSun-Sun
NicknameUNSHS, SciHigh
PublicationThe Explorer
YearbookThe Pioneer
AffiliationsDepartment of Education - Division of Bohol
WebsiteUNSHS

History

The school was established through the collaborative efforts of education heads and political officials who dreamed to provide quality education for the students of Ubay and beyond. A year later after the success of creating a science high school in Tagbilaran City, the former Department of Education, Culture and Sports (DECS) - Region VII approved the establishment of the school in 1996, through the joined hands of then schools district supervisor Clarita V. Alesna, 2nd District Congressman Erico B. Aumentado and former municipal mayor Manuel B. Alesna.

On July 1, 1996, the school was formally opened wherein top elementary graduates of the municipality were enrolled to form the pioneer batch. The institution was first named Ubay Science and Laboratory High School.

At first, students and faculty members utilized the multi-purpose building in Ubay Central Elementary in Poblacion as their temporary shelter. Although the building was considerably small, the organization found a way to maximize the facility. It was later subdivided into five small rooms, which houses the a single classroom, faculty room, small library, computer room and a mini-theater.

The first set of faculty members were Clarita V. Alesna, Reynita Haduc, Ricarlena Catacutan and Arlene Ocdenaria. Mrs. Reynita Haduc was the first school principal and led the campus on its first 7 years. The campus produced its first batch of graduates in 2000.

The Campus

The present-day two-storey school building was built in 1998 to accommodate the growing population of the institution. It was formally inaugurated on June 1998. The site of school building was donated by the philanthropist Eutiquio del Valle, a grandson of former Bohol governor, Eutiquio Boyles.[2]

The institution changed its name to Ubay Science High School, when the class opened on June 1998. It was later changed to Ubay National Science High School through the Republic Act No. 10034 in 2001[3] during the third regular session of the 14th Congress.

Classes

Admission

A prospective student must pass the competitive and screening examination in order to be admitted to the school. Students are ranked according to their results, in which top passers are guaranteed slots in the campus. In case a student doesn't want to enter the school, or wants to enrol to another campus, students from the waiting list are called up to be enrolled in the institution in order to complete the slots allotted for the batch.[4]

Students from other science high school campuses may apply for transfer to the institution. However, they must meet a grade requirement.

Curriculum

The school offers a science and mathematics-oriented curriculum called Engineering and Science Education Program (ESEP). Department of Education devised this type of curriculum for specialized high schools in the Philippines.

SUBJECT Grade 7 Grade 8 Grade 9 Grade 10
SCIENCE Natural Science Biology Chemistry 9 (Inorganic Chemistry) Physics II (Advanced Physics)
Earth Science Physics I (Introduction to Physics) Chemistry II (Organic Chemistry)
MATHEMATICS Elementary Algebra Geometry Trigonometry Calculus
Basic Statistics Intermediate Algebra Analytic Geometry Finite Mathematics
ENGLISH Grammar, Communication Skills, and Literature Grammar, Communication Skills, and Afro-Asian Literature Grammar, Communication Skills, and Asian Literature Grammar, Communication Skills, and World Literature
Developmental Reading Speech and Composition Journalism
FILIPINO Filipino 7 (Ibong Adarna) Filipino 8 (Florante at Laura) Filipino 9 (Noli Me Tangere) Filipino 10 (El Filibusterismo)
SOCIAL SCIENCE Araling Panlipunan 7 (Philippine History) Araling Panlipunan 8 (Asian History) Araling Panlipunan 9 (World History) Araling Panlipunan 10 (Economics)
COMPUTER SCIENCE Computer Education Basic Programming
MAPEH Music, Arts, Physical Education, and Health 7 Music, Arts, Physical Education, and Health 8 Music, Arts, Physical Education, and Health 9 Music, Arts, Physical Education, and Health 10
RESEARCH Research I (Technical Writing) Research II (Engineering for Science and Technology) Research III (Research in Science)
VALUES Values Education 7 Values Education 8 Values Education 9 Values Education 10
OTHERS Citizen's Army Training (CAT) Citizen's Army Training (CAT)

Sections

Student life

Student Organizations

  • Supreme Student Government (SSG)
  • Science Club
  • Physics Club
  • Mathematics Club
  • English Club
gollark: Is the plural of giannis giannes?
gollark: I don't believe any religion at all actually exists.
gollark: Like I said, I don't believe in religion.
gollark: There are the diode people, giannis people and ceramic wobble people.
gollark: Possibly more.

References

  1. "Educational Service Area, District II Bohol". Department of Education, Division of Bohol. 2013-06-01. Retrieved 2014-02-14.
  2. "List of Governors (since 1901)". Bohol Tourism Office. 2011-12-12. Retrieved 2013-06-01.
  3. "Republic Act 10034". Law Library. 2009-07-27. Retrieved 2012-10-21.
  4. "Examination Results Memorandum" (PDF). DepEd Division of Bohol. 2011-03-18. Retrieved 2013-03-21.
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