The Divine Word College of San Jose is a private, Catholic, coeducational basic and higher education institution run by the Philippine Central Province of the Society of the Divine Word or SVD in San Jose, Occidental Mindoro, Philippines. It holds the distinction of being the first and oldest educational institution in Mindoro island, even predating the island-province's separation in 1950 into two provinces[17] by five years.[18][2]
Established as Southern Mindoro Academy[1][19] in the middle of 1945 by Gabriel Fabrero Fabella,[20][21] a lawyer and prominent historian, the secondary school became exclusive to boys upon its incorporation into the Society of Divine Word (SVD) in 1960. It was renamed to Divine Word Academy a year after its acquisition by the SVD, and again to Divine Word College in 1966,[1] and has since offered complete academic courses from basic to tertiary education and postgraduate and vocational programs. Its patron saints are St. Arnold Janssen, the founder of the Society of the Divine Word, and St. Joseph Freinademetz, a missionary priest in China.
History
Aerial shot of Divine Word College of San Jose seen from northeast side, captured in 2011
Arnoldus Building seen from a distance, which houses the basic education level
The history of Divine Word College of San Jose (DWCSJ) traces its roots to Atty. Gabriel F. Fabella, a UP history professor from Romblon, who envisioned establishing a private secondary school in the town of San Jose towards the end of the Second World War.[22] This led to the founding of Southern Mindoro Academy (SMA) on August 8, 1945, with 30 freshmen and 8 sophomores. The school operated as a non-sectarian institution, with original incorporators including Fabella and other local figures.[c]
In 1946, as San Jose saw growth due to the construction of an American airstrip, SMA moved to a new location, purchased from the Soldevilla family. However, in 1960, due to financial constraints, SMA was sold to the Society of the Divine Word (SVD) in May of that year after 15 years of operation, with Rev. Fr. Carlos Brendel representing the SVD and Mena Quinto facilitating the buyout. The secondary department became an all-boys school, while St. Joseph became exclusive for girls.
DWCSJ began expanding its academic portfolio in the following decades, gaining government recognition for various programs that include Junior Secretarial Diploma (1978), Accountancy (1993), and Computer Science courses (1997).[d] The school also introduced graduate programs such as Master of Arts in Education on March 15, 1995 and Master of Business Administration on June 29, 1993 independent of Divine Word College of Calapan (DWCC).
In the late 1990s and 2000s, DWCSJ introduced new undergraduate programs, including Communications, Hotel and Restaurant Management, Tourism, Nursing, Accounting Technology, and Information Technology. During the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020, the school transitioned to online distance learning to ensure the safety of its students and staff.[23][24]
Academic profile
Continuing Professional Development
Divine Word College of San Jose is an accredited "Continuing Professional Development (CPD) Provider for Professional Teachers" granted by the Professional Regulation Commission in 2017 as one of its regulated programs.[25] A CPD provider refers to a natural or juridical person accredited by the CPD Council to conduct Continuing Professional Development Programs as defined by Republic Act (R.A.) 10912, "An Act mandating and strengthening the Continuing Professional Development Program for all regulated professions, creating the Continuing Professional Development Council, and appropriating funds therefor, and for other related purposes".[26]
The table below shows the school's performance in the past four licensure exams for each listed professional licensing board, encompassing both first timers and repeaters:[29][e]
In response to tuition hikes and concessions made by the board, the student body and other stakeholders, the school implements a socialized tuition program categorized into basic components such as Subsidized Education, Scholarship Grants, and Student Assistantships with the help of various sectors and partner agencies such as the Department of Education (DepEd) through the PEAC Fund,[33]Commission on Higher Education (CHED), local government units (LGUs), charitable institutions, and stipend allowances for part-time working students and other financial assistance and student loan programs.[34][35][36] These assistance programs are listed as follows:
The President of the Divine Word College of San Jose is elected by the Board of Trustees for a three-year term and may be re-elected. The longest serving president was Rev. Fr. Eleuterio Lacaron SVD who held the office for five consecutive terms for a total of fifteen (15) years from 1990 to 2005, while Rev. Fr. Virgilio Bartolome SVD served the shortest term of a single interim year in 1988.
As of 2024, two Americans and 12 Filipinos served as President of the Divine Word College of San Jose[update]. Rev. Fr. Erasio Flores SVD served as Assistant Director to Rev. Fr. Limon during his single term from 1960 to 1967. Rev. Fr. Joel Maribao SVD served two non-consecutive terms, first was in 1979 to 1982 and again in 1988 to 1990.
The current and 14th president of DWCSJ is Rev. Fr. Felino B. Javines Jr SVD, a graduate professor and former VP for Academics at the University of San Carlos in Cebu City.[44][45] His installation as president took place at an investiture ceremony held on August 11, 2023 and has assumed office since then.[46]
Student government
The College Student Council (CSC) is the highest student governing body, encompassing all presidents and student leaders from different college departments and organizations. The council conducts various activities and forums such as symposiums on anti-bullying, anti-harassment and anti-drug, and leadership trainings to help raise awareness to students.
Guided by Ms. Ana Mae Tividad, Directress of Office of Student Affairs, the student council is a delegate to the 2014 National Congress of College Councils (NCCC) held at UP Diliman on March 7, 2014, through its president acting as Regional Ambassador for MIMAROPA region, and as such, a member of the National Alliance of Youth Leaders (NAYL).[47][48] The council is also a delegate to the 10th PAPSAS (Philippine Association of Practitioners of Student Affairs and Services, Inc.) Interactive Youth Forum and Workshop for student leaders held on September 20, 2018, at Dauis, Bohol.[49] The student council yearly conducts its election through a computerized system that started in July 2014.[50]
The Pioneer is DWCSJ's official school paper with a news and editorial board comprising 22 contributors and writers in current affairs, literary, sports and opinion pieces, holding its office inside Fr. McSherry gymnasium. It publishes yearly between June to November in tabloid format and is written in both English and Filipino. Ms. Leonila D. Laab is the publication's editor-in-chief from 2018–2019 with Rica Mae S. Diosay as the associate editor, while Mrs. Elvie D. Aragones served as the staff adviser on the same publication year. Its adopted tagline is Standing in a Unified Voice as Witnesses to the Word.[52] Its contributors also participate in division and regional campus journalism contests, winning second place in column writing qualifying for the national level and fourth place in newswriting at the 2018 Regional Schools Press Conference held in Tagaytay City in November of that year.[53]
Academic programs
Divine Word College of San Jose offers 11 undergraduate and 4 postgraduate degree programs since its inception as a Higher Education Institution (HEI).[36] The school offers tertiary programs in the fields of Business, Tourism, Information Technology, and Arts and Sciences. Starting school year 2018-2019, Bachelor of Science in Civil Engineering was added to its roster of degree course offerings.[54][55] Accreditation to operate basic education level from preparatory to senior high school were likewise granted by the government.
The Bachelor of Science in Civil Engineering is offered through an extension program by Divine Word College of Calapan Department of Engineering.[60][54][55] The school also offers a non-diploma program for foreign language studies through its International Language Center, including several European (Spanish, French, Italian) and Asian (Mandarin Chinese) language courses that started in 2016.[61]
In addition to undergraduate and graduate programs, the school also has a senior high school program with Technical-Vocational-Livelihood (TVL) and Academic strands or tracks as part of the implementation of the K to 12 program of the Department of Education (DepEd). A robotics course was offered to Junior High School starting October 2019 in partnership with Quezon City-based educational company TechFactors Inc.'s RoboTek program under JHS-Robotict Club.[62][63]
Senior High School
The Divine Word College of San Jose is accredited by the Department of Education to operate Senior High School through program offerings in five (5) learning strands.[64] This course serves as a preparatory and assessment level to help students choose the right course in college base on their capabilities.[18]
Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics (STEM)
Technical-Vocational-Livelihood (TVL)
Home Economics (HE)
Bread and Pastry Production and Food and Beverage Services
Tour Guiding Services
Information and Communications Technology (ICT)
Computer Programming
Junior High School, Grade School, and Child Development Center
The secondary education level started as early as 1945 with the establishment of Southern Mindoro Academy as the school's predecessor, with a few freshmen and sophomore students. With the implementation of the K to 12 program in 2016, the secondary education was split into upper secondary level comprising the Senior High School, and the lower secondary level comprising the Junior High School level. The elementary level was introduced in 1985;[18] likewise, the pre-school level was introduced through the Child Development Center in 1995.
Level
Grade
Principal
Founded
Note
Junior High School (with Computer Literacy program)
Mrs. Margie Ann M. Dela Torre Mrs. Teodora C. Mangilaya
1995
Kindergarten
Nursery
Mangyan Education Program
The Mangyan Education Program is the Community Extension Project of the Divine Word College of San Jose which aims to educate and give livelihood to the indigenous peoples of the province, namely the various Mangyan tribes living on the rural and mountainous areas. The school collaborated with the Local Government Unit (LGU) and the Far Eastern University and has sent 47 students to study at the main campus through the Community Extension Services Office. These students are housed at the Mangyan Education Center in Arnoldus Village and are being trained for livelihood and culture preservation. Some out-of-school Mangyans of different ages living in far-flung regions of Sitio Bamban and Paclolo are taught at the basic education level using modular approach through the Indigenous Learning System, a type of Alternative Learning System (ALS).[65] The program is headed by its director, Bro. Vincent Iopam SVD hailing from Vanuatu.[5][66]
College symbols and traditions
Official Seal
Coat of arms of the Divine Word College of San Jose
Tierced bendwise a dexter chief studded with mountain impaled with the Holy Cross, in sinister charged with an eagle of John the Evangelist below a bend sinister inscribed three Latin alphabets DWC
The Seal of the Divine Word College of San Jose is the official instrument used by the school as its official symbol and identity, and to certify its legal public documents and publications. The seal used when the school was originally established as Southern Mindoro Academy in 1945 features a map of Mindoro island over a white backdrop, enclosed by a circular white band with inner and outer black rings in which the then school abbreviation (SMA), its founding year (1945), and the name of the town of San Jose were inscribed.
When the academy was handed over to the Society of the Divine Word in 1960, the school adopted religious iconography, such as the cross over a mountain which symbolizes the Catholic faith in Occidental Mindoro, and an eagle which symbolically represents St. John the Evangelist from whom the school was named.[67] In the middle was a bend sinister dividing the shield in halves and bearing the school's acronym, DWC, which stands for Divine Word College. Over time, the seal was restyled to include a banderole emblazoned with the institution's original motto, "In the Light of the Word", derived from a passage in the Gospel of John.
Its latest iteration features a wedge-top escutcheon divided into four quadrants. In addition to the religious symbols, the seal now incorporates a Tamaraw on the first quarter (a bovine endemic to Mindoro island) and the logo of the Society of the Divine Word below it on the third quadrant. This version retained the founding years 1945 and 1960 rendered in the original golden tincture to signify the transfer of ownership and change in leadership. Encircling the emblem is the school's complete name and location rendered in slab serif typeface. Superimposed in the middle of the shield is the college nickname, DWCSJ, which now includes "SJ" as the initials for San Jose to distinguish it from other SVD schools in the country. The motto was also changed to its present form, "Witness to the Word".
School colors
The college's official main colors are Orange and Green , primarily used to represent the school's brand identity in publications and athletic events and were seen directly on the official seal. The colors are rendered in the following color schemes:
"We saw thy gleaming glory shine
From out the isles and mountain clod
We hear thy voice, Oh word Divine
We come, Oh Pioneer of God!
Refrain
Rise, sons and daughters, sons of day
Raise high your voices, noble and free
Oh sing the praises, sing the lay
Oh sing the name DWC!
We seek the wisdom of the Word
Like pilgrims lost in aliens sod
Unsheathe for us life's conquering sword
For us, Oh Pioneer of God!
(Repeat Refrain)
Thou standst the fount of age-old lore
God's citadel through rain and flood
Thy name by land and far-flung shore
Resounds, Oh Pioneer of God!"
(Repeat Refrain)
Demetrio M. Maglalang, c. 1970s
Divine Word College of San Jose Hymn is the college's official alma mater song. The lyrics were written by Demetrio Maglalang, an alumnus of the college who emigrated to Indianapolis, Indiana, United States, in the 1970s.[68][69] The melody for the song was composed by Rev. Fr. Erasio Flores SVD, former assistant director of the school and Major Superior for SVD Philippine Central (PHC) region in Mindoro during the late 1970s.[70]
Divine Got Talent and other activities
The Divine Word College of San Jose hosts a variety of school activities and events, mainly to commemorate the college's founding anniversary as a pioneering educational institution in the province and to celebrate its Christian teachings deeply influenced by its Filipino SVD culture. Some of the activities are annual events, such as religious celebrations like the Feast of the Immaculate Conception and the Holy Eucharist every first Wednesday of the month to mark the start and end of the academic year, orientation and acquaintance programs for freshmen and new students, annual talents exhibitions, and intercollegiate sporting competitions.
Rear view of Fr. McSherry Gymnasium in 2014 as seen from Arnoldus Building
Inside the retroffited school gym where most indoor athletic sports and stage events are held
Main eastern gate facing General Lukban Street, captured in February 2024
The school hosts the yearly Divine Got Talent (DGT) talent exhibition to showcase the students' talents in different fields such as singing, dancing, acting, and beauty pageantry. Started in 2017, it is a spin-off of the popular Got Talent global talent show franchise. Every students from basic education to tertiary level are encouraged to join the competition. The event is usually held during the first week of February to mark the college's founding anniversary.[h] Winners in different competition categories are given prizes and trophies.[71]
The Gabi ng Parangal is an annual service awards given to outstanding employees, students and alumni for their exemplary leadership, dedication and service to the school. The event coincides with the founding anniversary held during the first week of February.[h] The event confers awards and special citations to candidates of various sectors and categories, such as the Ten Outstanding Students, Service Awardees for Years of Service, Special Award for Punctuality, and Loyalty Awards.[72]
The college also joins the annual Alay Lakad together with other schools, government institutions, non-governmental organizations and other delegations from various sectors. Initiated by the Local Government Unit (LGU), it is a nationwide "walk for a cause" campaign that aims to raise funds for the out-of-school youth and provide scholarship grants to deserving but marginalized students. The fundraising campaign was started in 1972 by Alay Lakad Foundation, Inc. and has since been observed by various sectors around the country. The walkathon culminates with the awarding of Mr. and Ms. Alay Lakad and other special awards.[73][74][75]
Divine Word College of San Jose also participates in several intercollegiate athletics tournaments such as the Private Schools Athletic Association (PRISAA)[76][15] and the Inter-Catholic Schools Sports and Academic Meet (ICSSAM).[16] The school hosted the 2018 Regional PRISAA Meet in March of that year.[77] Aside from these, the school also holds its own college intramural sports every September led by the Sports Club Committee to celebrate team spirit and sportsmanship.[78]
Campus life
Student enrollment
Enrollment in DWCSJ (First & second terms)
Academic year
Total Enrollment
College Population
2016–2017
2,674
1,190
2017–2018
2,441
857
2018–2019
–
688
±% p.a.
−0.013%
−14.06%
Note: Per annum growth rate or PGR (Population Growth Rate) was computed using the formula PG = (t1−t0)/t0 × 100, where t0 indicates initial population, t1 means latest population, and PG refer to Population Growth. PG was then divided to 3 (number of years) to get the PGR
The school experienced a decline in overall student enrollees between the Academic Years 2016–2017 and 2017–2018 from 2,674 on the first half of 2016 down to 2,441 on the latter half of 2017, per report from the Education Apostolate of SVD Philippine Central Province chapter.[5] That same period saw a significant drop in the population of college students from 1,190 in 2016[14] down to 857 by the end of 2018,[12] with a faculty-to-student ratio of one instructor for every 33 students[14] down to 1 per 27 the following year.[12] The downturn in college population continued as the tertiary level department reported a 7.53% drop in enrollment when compared to previous years, dwindling to just 688 college enrollees for AY 2018–2019 based on data from the Office of the School Registrar.[79]
The school also implements an online enrollment system through a proprietary learning and academic management software by the company Digital Software Corporation, called the SIAS Online System,[80] which can also be utilized to access class schedules, grading rubrics, attendance and statements of account.[81] Registration for incoming fresh enrollees require documents such as the previous report card, PSA-issued birth certificate and transcript of records.[82] Admission is open to any nationality and non-Catholics though everyone is required to attend religion classes and Mass celebrations.[83]
Campus
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
Buildings in Divine Word College of San Jose
1
Chapel of St. Arnold
2
Arnoldus Building
3
Fr. McSherry Gymnasium
4
College building
5
College library
6
Cafeteria
7
Auditorium
8
Student lounge
The school occupies a central location within the poblacion area of San Jose, in the jurisdiction of Barangay 8. It sits on an approximately 3.91-acre (1.58 ha)[b] block of rectangular plot of land southeast of the Pandurucan River in close proximity to downtown activity centers such as the San Jose Tennis Court, St. Joseph the Worker Cathedral and the municipal plaza, and is bounded by Hidalgo Street to the north, General Lukban Street to the east, Roxas Street to the west and Mabini Street to the south.
Its original site in 1945 when it was formed as a secular high school was at a large quonset building bought by the founders of SMA in the old town of Barangay Central.[2] It then transferred to its present urban location formerly owned by the prominent family of Soldevillas a year after the construction of McGuire Field in 1946.[84] Several new additions to the facilities were added over the years of its growth, such as the recently renovated fully-airconditioned gymnasium, a state-of-the-art auditorium with a 250-seating capacity,[85] student lounge, mock hotel and cafe, and automated entrance turnstiles accessible through the contactless student ID. Students and faculty can purchase items from the school canteen through cashless POS payments using their reloadable ID card which can be topped up at loading stations near the school bookstore.[86]
^These included former congressman Raul Leuterio, former mayor Isabelo Abeleda Sr, former governor Cipriano Liboro, and Cosme Tria[19]
^Two-year Computer Secretarial and Associate Computer Science courses in 1997, and BS Computer Science in 2001
^Percentage ratings were rounded off (breakdown of scores and the number of examinees were provided on the reference notes); rankings were computed using MS Excel RANK function
^ abRankings for LET were only rough estimates as the documents used have limited access
^Used as secondary color and was the main color of the old logo; also used in graduation garb of accountancy graduates
^ abAlthough the school was originally established as Southern Mindoro Academy on August 8, 1945, it celebrates its founding anniversary annually in February, the time when the academy was ceded to the Society of the Divine Word in 1960[1]
^By authority granted through G.R. No. R028, s. 1993
^By authority granted through G.R. No. R011, s. 1995
^By virtue of Government Recognition Nos. 27 and 28, s. 1997
^Through Divine Word College of Calapan Graduate School Extension Program
^ ab"2023 LEPT Level Performance of Schools in Alphabetical Order". PRC Modernization Act of 2000 Section 7(m). Professional Regulation Commission. March 2023. Retrieved November 9, 2023. For LET-Secondary: 24 passed and 47 failed out of 71 combined total examinees for an overall performance score of 33.80%; for LET-Elementary: 12 passed and 18 failed out of 30 combined total examinees for an overall performance score of 40%
^"Nurse Licensure Examination"(PDF). Commission Resolution No. 2010-547 s.2010. Professional Regulation Commission. June 2012. Retrieved November 9, 2023. Overall performance score was 46.67% in which only 7 passed and 8 failed out of 15 combined total examinees
Diosay, Rica Mae S.; et al. (June–November 2018). Laab, Leonila D. (ed.). "The Pioneer". Vol. 28, no. 1. San Jose, Occidental Mindoro: DWCSJ Publishing. Retrieved November 6, 2023 – via Issuu.
Candelario, Rudy A. (2000). Maikling Kasaysayan ng Occidental Mindoro [Brief History of Occidental Mindoro] (in Filipino). Vol. 2. Occidental Mindoro Historical Society. Fil DS68.02.