Quezon City Academy
Quezon City Academy Foundation Inc. | |
---|---|
Location | |
Quezon City, Manila, Philippines | |
Information | |
Type | Private Secondary School |
Established | 1953 |
Color(s) | Maroon and White |
Website | Official site |
Quezon City Academy is a private secondary school located at 1144 Epifanio Delos Santos Avenue (EDSA), in Quezon City, Philippines.
History
Established in 1953, it was first known as Bago Bantay Academy, a kamalig-type structure that was made as a cradle of young minds in the metro. In its first year of operation, there are only 62 students.
Ten years later in 1963, Justice Carmelino Gomez Alvendia, Sr. of the Court of Appeals, offered to buy Bago Bantay Academy in its chronic stage of decay. In its first year of operation with Justice Alvendia, Bago Bantay Academy changed its name to Quezon City Academy. There was only one section per year with a total school population of 89 students. Also in that year, Bago Bantay made a relocation area for squatters from Sampaloc to Intramuros, Manila. However, a big public school was established nearby, the San Francisco High School (formerly Don Mariano Marcos High School), and it became one of the rivals of Quezon City Academy. QCA was receiving minimal patronage from the people it aimed to serve.
Justice Alvendia, an educator and an economist, was a visionary. He made renovations in Quezon City Academy until it become one of the famous IT secondary schools in the Philippines. But before that, in 1965, enrolment rose to 132. In the 1980s, the population rises to 2,700 students with almost 450 graduates every year. It is clear that patronage of residents of Bago Bantay, Project 7, Project 8, Sto. NiƱo, Pag-asa, Project 6, Balintawak, Bagong Barrio, San Francisco del Monte, West Avenue and other nearby areas in Quezon City has been won over by QCA.
Tuition and other fees in QCA are far less than that charged by other private schools in Quezon City, whereas education in the Academy has always maintained its high standard, especially in terms of information technology. In the 1997-1998 National Secondary Assessment Test, QCA carded a general average of 98.9%.[citation needed]
Curriculum
In terms of new technologies, QCA students have been taught basic and advanced IT software programs. During their first year, students are taught with basic and advanced Microsoft Operating System. This includes MS Word, MS Powerpoint, MS Excel, MS Frontpage and other programs. In the second year, students are taught with HTML and webpage creating. Adobe Photoshop and GIMP are taught to students during their third year. The final year, students are taught with Macromedia Flash and GIF animations.
QCA students now talk of leadership and citizenship training as an integral part of their education in the academy. The fight for academic honors is very keen but healthy, so QCA graduates often top professional board and bar examinations. The academy also received reports that many of its students are either on the dean's list or president's list and many have been graduating with honors in colleges and universities.[citation needed] In the year 2000, the U.P. Diliman Student Council chairman was a graduate of Quezon City Academy, Raymond Palatino (batch 1996).
Mission & Vision
"A learning institution that provides quality education at the least cost and develops leaders in effective, creative and productive communication to meet the global competition of the next century."
"Direct its curriculum and programs to technology and other community oriented projects and activities that should enhance moral and spiritual values, critical thinking and better livelihood opportunities to meet the educational challenges of today and life in the future."
Hymn
There's no other school like QCA
Where the youths are trained so well
To glorify our family, our country dear
and God Almighty!
Oh, QC Academy!
In thy name, we live and strive
And golden laurels of victory
Shall offer thee.
Hail to thee Alma Mater dear
Hail QCA!.
Administration
- Carmelino P. Alvendia, Jr. Chairman
- Jose Alvendia Director
- Sylvia Alvendia Rodriguez Director
- Carmen Alvendia Director
- Amador Alvendia Director
- Tomas Ongoco President
(Note: Esperanza Pahati Alvendia was also one of the directors and wife of Justice Alvendia, but she died in 2001)
See also
External links
- Kyoka - The Quezon City Academy online community
- Raymond Palatino blog
- QCA BATCH 78- Quezon City Academy Batch 1978 blogsite
- QCA BATCH 77- Quezon City Academy Batch 1977 blogsite
- - QCA 1990 alumni
- - QCA Official Website
References
- QCA Student Manual
- QCA Webpage
- QCA Echo - The Official School Publication of Quezon City Academy
- QCA Gintong Ani Yearbook