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Assumption College (Philippines)

Assumption College San Lorenzo
Location
Makati City, Metro Manila
Philippines
Information
Type Private, Catholic women's college, exclusive all-girls college-preparatory school
Established 1892 in Intramuros
1904 in Herran St. (Pedro Gil), Manila
1958 in San Lorenzo, Makati
Founder Marie Eugénie Milleret de Brou
President Dr. Carmen Lourdes B. Valdes
Dean Dr. Angela F. Regala
Campus San Lorenzo Drive, San Lorenzo Village
Colour(s) Gold, White, Blue               
Nickname Assumptionists, Assumptionistas
Website

Assumption College (AC, Assumption SanLo, Assumption Makati), formerly known as the Assumption Convent, is a private, Roman Catholic school exclusively for girls located in San Lorenzo Village, Makati City, Philippines established in 1958. Assumption San Lorenzo is the successor of the Assumption Convent along Herran Street, Ermita, Manila. It provides education from pre-school, elementary, secondary, tertiary, to graduate level. The alumnae and present students of this school include daughters and granddaughters of Presidents, industrialists, politicians, and prominent figures in the Philippines.

Assumption College is recognized by the Department of Education and the Commission on Higher Education and also a charter member of the Philippine Accrediting Association of Schools, Colleges and Universities. It has earned Level IV accreditation on all of its respective departments and schools. The school is a member of Strategic Educational Alliance of Southeast Asia.

Sister Marie Eugénie Milleret de Brou (later canonised as Saint Marie-Eugénie de Jésus; 1817–1898) established the Congregation of the Religious of the Assumption in Paris on 30 April 1839 as a means to make a Christian transformation of society through education. The order arrived in Spanish colonial Philippines in 1892, and at the request of Queen María Cristina, consort of King Alfonso XII of Spain, they established the Superior Normal School for Women Teachers in Intramuros in 1892 which pioneered women education in the Philippines. Among its first alumnae were Rosa Sevilla de Alvero, Foundress of the Instituto de Mujeres; Librada Avelino and Carmen de Luna, who founded Centro Escolar University. At the outbreak of the Philippine Revolution of 1896, the order ceased operation of the school and returned to Europe.


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