University of the Philippines Visayas
Unibersidad ng Pilipinas Visayas
MottoHonor and Excellence
TypePublic Regional state Research higher education institution
Established1947 (1947)
Academic affiliations
APRU, ASEA UNINET, AUN
ChancellorClement C. Camposano[1]
PresidentAngelo Jimenez
Academic staff
391 (2018)[2]
Students3,299 (2019–20)[3]
Undergraduates2,615 (2019–20)[3]
Postgraduates684 (2019–20)[3]
Other students
518 (high school) (2018)[2]
Location
Hymn"U.P. Naming Mahal" ("U.P. Beloved")
ColorsMaroon Forest green
NicknameIsko and Iska
Sporting affiliations
SCUAA
Varsity team nameFighting Maroons
Websiteupv.edu.ph

The University of the Philippines Visayas (UPV or UP Visayas) is a public research university in the Philippines with campuses and facilities throughout the Visayas. A constituent university of the University of the Philippines system, it teaches management, accountancy, marketing, economics, chemistry, applied mathematics and physics, marine science education and research, fisheries, and aquaculture. It offers regional studies programs on the preservation and enrichment of the Visayan cultural heritage.

UP Visayas has two campuses—Miagao and Iloilo City — with Miagao being the main campus where the central administration offices are located.

Most of the students of the university are drawn from the Visayas and the Visayan linguistic groups. Many of the leaders of the Visayas graduated from UPV or its predecessor institutions. As of 2007, the Commission on Higher Education of the Philippines awarded four National Centers of Excellence and Development to UPV including Fisheries (UPV-Miagao), Marine Science (UPV-Miagao), and Biology (UPV-Miagao).

The University of the Philippines College of Law (U.P. Diliman) has opened a law academic extension program in U.P. Visayas - Iloilo City Campus.

History

UPV was created by merging four UP colleges: UP College of Fisheries founded in 1944; UP Cebu founded in 1918, UP Iloilo founded in 1947, and UP Tacloban founded in 1973. When the Miagao campus was established, many of the academic programs offered in the Iloilo City campus were moved there. To this day, the faculty, staff and students travel between the Iloilo City and Miagao campuses.

During the term of UP President Onofre D. Corpuz in 1975 an interdisciplinary team within the university conceived of an autonomous unit which would become an institution for fisheries and marine science education and research. The idea was fleshed out in a proposal entitled "Education Development Plan for the University of the Philippines in the Visayas", a six-volume report by the interdisciplinary team. The new university would evolve from the UP College of Iloilo and the College of Fisheries in Diliman, which would transfer to its new site in the Visayas. Funding was to come partly from a government loan, to be negotiated with the World Bank for the development of fisheries education.

On September 21, 1977, President Ferdinand E. Marcos issued Presidential Decree 1200, known as the Philippine Five-Year Development Plan (1978–1982), which provides, among others, that Region VI would be the site of the University of the Philippines in the Visayas (UPV) with emphasis on fisheries and marine sciences. A second UPV Project Development Team was then organized in December 1977 to review and update the plans. The development plan was approved by the UP Board of Regents on May 28, 1978. The fisheries educational loan was then re-negotiated with the World Bank inasmuch as its appraisal team had earlier favorably endorsed the development plan.

On May 31, 1979, the Board of Regents approved the establishment of the University of the Philippines in the Visayas as an autonomous unit of the University of the Philippines System with its main campus in Miagao, Iloilo. It would start with two colleges, the UP College Iloilo as its College of Arts and Sciences and the College of Fisheries as its flagship college.

Through the Sixth Educational Loan of the Philippine Government approved by the World Bank in January 1980, the development of the UPV flagship college was made possible.

On February 29, 1980, the groundbreaking of the UPV site in Miagao was held. On June 26, 1980, Executive Order No. 628 of President Ferdinand E. Marcos operationalized UPV, and Dr. Dionisia A. Rola was appointed the first Chancellor, becoming the first ever woman Chancellor in the history of UP.

The development of the site and construction of facilities began in September 1981 and was made possible through the Sixth Educational Loan. The loan of about $18 million was used for site acquisition, construction of buildings, procurement of equipment, and the transfer of the College of Fisheries personnel and other property from Diliman to Miagao.

Originally, UPV consisted of two colleges - the College of Fisheries and the College of Arts and Sciences, formerly UP College Iloilo.

On April 30, 1987, the Board of Regents approved the reorganization of the College of Fisheries (now the College of Fisheries and Ocean Sciences or CFOS) and the establishment of four institutes, namely, the Institute of Aquaculture, the Institute of Marine Fisheries and Oceanology, Institute of Fish Processing Technology, and the Institute of Fisheries Policy and Development Studies. The Brackishwater Aquaculture Center facilities in Leganes, Iloilo became the Brackishwater Aquaculture Research Station of IA.

In May 1988, the College of Fisheries transferred to the new site in Miagao under the leadership of Chancellor Rogelio O. Juliano and Dean Efren Ed. C. Flores. The Diliman-based programs of the College of Fisheries were then relocated to its present site together with most of its faculty and staff.

In January 1990, the School of Technology transferred to the Miagao Campus. In June of the same year, Chancellor Francisco Nemenzo effected the transfer of the Division of Humanities and the Division of Social Sciences of the College of Arts and Sciences.

In May 1993, the transfer of the Division of Physical Sciences and Mathematics and the Division of Biological Sciences, along with the Office of the Dean, completed the transfer of the CAS.

On September 24, 2010, the UP Board of Regents elevated the status of UP Cebu as an autonomous unit, in preparation for its constituent university status after five to seven years.[4] It eventually became a constituent university on October 27, 2016.[5] UP Tacloban followed suit, becoming an autonomous college, no longer under UP Visayas' purview, on April 27, 2023.[6] With its former regional units now independent, UP Visayas now only has campuses in Panay Island.

Two degree-granting units remain on the Iloilo City Campus. They are the College of Management, and the CAS Division of Professional Education. Also on campus is the U.P. High School in Iloilo (formerly U.P.V. High School). The High School is an experimental laboratory for innovative teaching strategies designed to provide academic training for underprivileged students in order to better prepare them for access to tertiary education in the University of the Philippines.

Some units have remained on the Iloilo City Campus:

  • the Center for West Visayan Studies (CWVS),
  • Office of Extension Services and Continuing Education (OESCE),
  • Sentro ng Wikang Filipino (SWF),
  • Graduate Program Office (GPO),
  • Language Program,
  • School for Distance Education, Visayas,
  • Ugnayan sa Pahinungod/Oblation Corps,
  • UPV Women's Desk.

Part of the Miagao Campus has been reserved to accommodate government regional offices and the Miagao town government offices and centers with which UPV interfaces. At present, a Land Bank of the Philippines (LBP) Branch is accommodated in the UPV Miagao Campus Library-Museum Building.

Degree-granting units

UP Visayas - Miagao Campus (Main)

College of Fisheries and Ocean Sciences (formerly the College of Fisheries)

The College of Fisheries and Ocean Sciences (CFOS) of the University of the Philippines Visayas gives fisheries education. The college has instituted degree programs that address the need for sustainable development of the country's fisheries resources and respond to the call for highly trained manpower in the field, at graduate and undergraduate level.

The College of Fisheries and Ocean Sciences has four institutes: the Institute of Aquaculture, the Institute of Fish Processing Technology, the Institute of Marine Fisheries and Oceanology, and the Institute of Fisheries Policy and Development Studies. It offers programs in Undergraduate B.S. Fisheries; Graduate Master of Aquaculture, M.S. Fisheries with majors in Aquaculture, Fisheries Biology, and Fish Processing Technology; and Ph.D. in Aquaculture.

College of Arts and Sciences

The College of Arts and Sciences (CAS) provides the general education program that is the foundation of all academic programs in the university. The college equips the students with basic knowledge in the natural sciences, social sciences and humanities. It offers interdisciplinary programs with double major supportive of, or complementary to, those offered by other colleges.

The college has a Division of Professional Education and a laboratory high school designed to train underprivileged youth especially from rural areas.

The College of Arts and Sciences has five divisions: the Biological Sciences, Humanities, Social Sciences, Physical Sciences and Mathematics, and Professional Education. The Professional Education Division offers the following programs: Master of Education in Biology, Chemistry, English as a Second Language, Guidance, Mathematics, Filipino as a Second Language, Reading, Social Studies, and Physics. An M.S. Biology is also offered by the Division of Biological Sciences. The academic programs of CAS are the following: Undergraduate (Baccalaureate) Bachelor of Arts in Communication and Media Studies, Community Development, Literature, History, Political Science, Psychology, Public Health, Sociology; Bachelor of Science in applied mathematics, statistics, computer science, economics, biology, and chemistry; undergraduate (post-baccalaureate) – diploma in physical education, certificate and diploma in science education, biology, chemistry, physics, and mathematics education.

School of Technology

The School of Technology (SoTech), formerly the School of Technology and Environmental Resources (STER), was established on March 29, 1984, as the fifth degree-granting unit of UP in the Visayas during the 966th Meeting of the Board of Regents. It was formally operationalized on February 17, 1986, with the transfer of the Food Technology program, along with its faculty, from the College of Arts and Sciences.

On April 22, 1993, the name of the school was changed from STER to SoTech.

The school provide trained manpower, generates environment-friendly technologies, disseminate information and transfer knowledge and technology; and assist in the proper management of the environment.

The School of Technology offers B.S. Food Technology, B.S. Chemical Engineering and the Certificate in Environmental Resource Management (CERM) with specialization in Coastal Resource Management, Watershed Management, and Environmental Technology.

UP Visayas–Iloilo City campus

The main building of the UP Visayas Iloilo City campus is the former city hall of Iloilo City.

The College of Management was formerly the School of Development Management, established in December 1981 out of the former Division of Development Management of the College of Arts and Sciences. SDM was elevated to college status in 1991.

The objectives of the college are to support the UPV programs in fisheries, marine sciences, the arts, social and natural sciences; to provide management education in order to train leaders for the region's public and private sectors; to serve as center for research, information dissemination, consultancy, and training services in administration/management; and to serve as a link between UPV and local, national, and international organizations engaged in management education, training and research.

The College of Management has two departments, namely, the Department of Accounting and the Department of Management. It offers the following academic programs: Undergraduate B.S. Accountancy, B.S. Business Administration (Marketing), and B.S. Management; Graduate Master of Management in Business Management, Public Management, Rural Development Management, and Tax Management.

Starting June 1997, the college offered the Diploma Program in Urban and Regional Planning in coordination with the School of Urban and Regional Planning at UP Diliman.

In July 1997, CM started the pilot testing of a course on Island Food Systems in RDM 298 (Field Studies), a course in the Master of Management, Rural Development Program. The initiative was made under the auspices of the Island Sustainability, Livelihood, and Equity (ISLE) Program. ISLE partners from Canada, Indonesia, and Jamaica team-taught the course with UPV faculty members.

In 2014, CM offered extension classes for Master of Management in Roxas City, Capiz at the Pueblo de Panay which is located in the city.

Also found in UPV Iloilo campus is the University of the Philippines High School in Iloilo.

In 2022, the UP College of Law in Manila opened a law extension program on the Iloilo City campus.

In May 2022, The UPV Graduate Program Office (UPV-GPO) has been elevated to the UPV Graduate School (GS) by the UP Board of Regents (BOR).[7]

UP Visayas University Student Council

The University Student Council of UP Visayas is the highest governing student body in the university.

Notable people

This list includes current and former faculty members, notable graduates, non-graduate former students, and current students of the University of the Philippines Visayas.

Miriam Defensor Santiago earned her BA degree in Political Science from UP Visayas in 1965. She graduated magna cum laude.

See also

References

  1. Fernandez, Lyncen (October 30, 2020). "Babaran turns over the UPV Chancellorship to Camposano". University of the Philippines Visayas. Archived from the original on November 1, 2020. Retrieved November 1, 2020.
  2. 1 2 "UP Statistics 2018" (PDF). upsbo.up.edu.ph. University of the Philippines System. 2018. pp. 91, 103. Archived from the original (PDF) on August 19, 2020. Retrieved August 19, 2020.
  3. 1 2 3 "University of the Philippines Visayas Enrollment Report" (PDF). crs.upv.edu.ph. University of the Philippines Visayas. Retrieved August 19, 2020.
  4. "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on November 30, 2010. Retrieved November 1, 2010.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  5. Manticajon, Atty Ian Vincent. "UP Cebu turns a new chapter". Philstar.com. Retrieved June 13, 2023.
  6. Alelis, Carlson (April 28, 2023). "UP Tacloban gains autonomous status after BOR approval". University of the Philippines Visayas. Retrieved June 13, 2023.
  7. UPV graduate program gets nod to level up
  8. "SEI director discusses scholarship grants; IRC pays tribute to former PSHSS Executive Director". irc.pshs.edu.ph. Philippine Science High School Ilocos Region Campus. Retrieved May 2, 2017.
  9. Fernandez, R. A. (February 2, 2003). Small planet named after Pinoy science teacher. The Philippine Star. Retrieved from http://www.philstar.com/headlines/193829/small-planet-named-after-pinoy-science-teacher
  10. Tejano, Ivy C. (April 11, 2015). "Trusted Leader". Sun.Star Davao.
  11. Governor Arthur D. Defensor, Sr. Official Website of the Provincial Government of Iloilo.
  12. Fernandez, L. M. (2012, Jul – Aug).Gov Defensor, proud to be a UP Alumnus. UPViews.
  13. Senate of the Philippines - Biography of Senator Franklin Drilon. Retrieved Oct 30, 2018
  14. Profile: Associate Justice Francis H. Jardeleza (2014)
  15. Supreme Court of the Philippines - Justice Francis H. Jardeleza - http://sc.judiciary.gov.ph/aboutsc/justices/j-jardeleza.php
  16. "UP Visayas' top student: 'I want to live a life of purpose'". Rappler. June 17, 2015. Archived from the original on August 12, 2022. Retrieved October 22, 2022.
  17. Argosino, Faith (June 30, 2022). "Know the Party-List Rep: Raoul Manuel, Kabataan Partylist". Manila Bulletin. Archived from the original on October 22, 2022. Retrieved October 22, 2022.
  18. Peter Solis Nery Biography (2014) - http://petersolisnery.com/?page_id=4
  19. Senate of the Philippines, 16th Congress. Senator Miriam Defensor Santiago - http://www.senate.gov.ph/senators/sen_bio/santiago_bio_copy(1).asp
  20. Buan-Deveza, Reyma (July 8, 2012). "Iloilo 'cutie' wins PBB Teen Edition 4". ABS-CBN News. Retrieved May 2, 2017.

10°38′30.08″N 122°13′51.65″E / 10.6416889°N 122.2310139°E / 10.6416889; 122.2310139

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