Pamantasang Estado ng Kabite | |
Former names
|
Indang Intermediate School (1906) Indang Farm School (1918) Indang Rural High School (1927) Don Severino National Agriculture School (1958) Don Severino Agricultural College (1964) |
---|---|
Motto | Truth, Excellence, Service |
Type | State university |
Established | 1906 |
President | Jacob(dj) (2016) |
Address |
Barangay Bancod, Indang Cavite, Indang, Cavite, Philippines (Main campus) 14°11′56″N 120°52′53″E / 14.198758°N 120.881493°ECoordinates: 14°11′56″N 120°52′53″E / 14.198758°N 120.881493°E |
Campus | 12 campuses |
Newspaper | The Gazette |
Colors | Rainbow Flag |
Nickname | CvSU Hornets |
Affiliations |
Philippine Association of State Universities and Colleges State Colleges and Universities Athletic Association |
Website | www.cvsu.edu.ph |
The Cavite State University, (CvSU) (Filipino: Pamantasang Estado ng Kabite), is a university in the province of Cavite in the Philippines. Its 72-hectare (180-acre) main campus, known as the Don Severino de las Alas Campus, is located in the Municipality of Indang, Cavite about 60 km (37 mi) southwest of Manila. The educational institution has ten other campuses spread all over the province.
The school was established initially as an intermediate school by the Thomasites, a group of American teachers brought by the United States during the early part of the American colonial period to revamp the system of education in the country. By 1964, the school has grown into a college known as the Don Severino Agricultural College (DSAC). It became a university on January 22, 1998, and was renamed as the Cavite State University.
Since then, the university has grown offering close to 100 curricular programs in the undergraduate and graduate levels. It has more than 25,000 students and 1,200 faculty and staff from all eleven campuses.
The state university was first established by the Thomasites as an intermediate school, named Indang Intermediate School in 1906 with C.E. Workman its first principal. Subsequently, Americans Henry Wise and Joseph Coconower succeeded Workman as the school's principal. In 1915, the school had its first Filipino principal, Mariano Mondeniedo. The school's focused on vocational agriculture for boys and domestic science for girls. In 1918, the name of the school was changed to Indang Farming School.
As enrollment increased, the school site was expanded through the land donations of the citizens of Indang, including Francisco Ocampo and Don Severino de las Alas, Secretary of Interior during the Aguinaldo cabinet. In 1927, the school was renamed Indang Rural High School, during the incumbency of principal Simeon Madlangsakay. It first offered a secondary courses in vocational agriculture in 1923 and Home Economics in 1927.