San Pablo City National High School

San Pablo City National High School
Pambansang Paaralang Pangsekundarya ng Lungsod ng San Pablo
Address
F. Mariño St., Lakeside Park Subdivision, Barangay VI-D
San Pablo City, Laguna
Philippines
Information
Type Public
Established March 3, 1969
Principal Laila R. Maloles
Campus Urban

San Pablo City National High School (Filipino: Pambansang Mataas na Paaralan ng Lungsod ng San Pablo) is one of the 12 functioning public secondary schools of San Pablo City, Philippines. Located in F. Mariño St., Lakeside Park Subdivision, Brgy. VI-D, San Pablo City, it provides free secondary education for the people of the city and neighboring towns with a science curriculum. Abbreviated as SPCNHS, students nicknamed it "City High" or "City High Main".

History

In 1969, the late Councilor Jose C. Reyes filed a resolution for the establishment of a public high school. The school was founded on November, 1969 and was called San Pablo City High School. When it was founded, students had to pay fees. In 1988, its name was changed to San Pablo City National High School. It became a public high school as prescribed by Republic Act No. 6655 which was signed into law on May 26, 1988 by President Corazon Aquino. Beginning in the 1990s, SPCNHS had affiliated annexes in different barangays of the city due to unprecedented increase of enrollees that could no longer be accommodated by the school. Thus, it bears the name San Pablo City National High School-Main because it is the main campus. Beginning in the 2000s, each annex became an independent public high school.

SPCNHS is recognized by the DepEd.

School principals and heads

Mathematics department head

Science

Faculty and staff

SPCNHS had 80 teachers as of February 12, 2009. They are grouped into 13 departments, each with a department head. There are 11 teachers under English, 11 under Mathematics, 16 under Science and Technology, 11 under Filipino, 9 under Araling Panlipunan, 9 under MAPEH, and 13 under T.L.E. In addition, 11 serve as administrative staff. All of these are headed by a secondary school principal.[1]

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.