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View Full Version : The Jesuits, Lasallite Bros., Dominicans or Government?


fischer2002
Jun 1, 2002, 05:19 AM
Which is the best educator?

angst
Jun 1, 2002, 05:20 AM
The Jesuits.

mac_bolan00
Jun 1, 2002, 05:34 AM
our sex educator.

Altwegg
Jun 1, 2002, 06:00 AM
The teachers.

:lol:

Oscar01
Jun 1, 2002, 06:35 AM
For making money? Definitely the Jesuits.

KuyaDanny
Jun 1, 2002, 07:05 AM
Originally posted by mac_bolan00
our sex educator.

Does she give private lessons?

mac_bolan00
Jun 1, 2002, 09:00 AM
KD, this was back in grade 5 so she must be well over 50 now. if you're still interested, i'll have her call you.

KuyaDanny
Jun 1, 2002, 09:13 AM
Let me think about that.

I bet she's still better than the Jesuits. :lol:

mac_bolan00
Jun 1, 2002, 09:39 AM
take it from me: the best teacher you could ever have would be your psychiatrist. when was the last time you visited one?

Oscar01
Jun 1, 2002, 11:14 AM
You haven't had a crazy Castillian Jesuit handle your sex ed in Grade 6 or 7?

The things you're glad your parents never find out about...

rabbaddal
Jun 1, 2002, 01:46 PM
Si Fr. Arevalo, S.J. pinakamagaling mag-sermon sa misa.

clawed_out
Jun 2, 2002, 03:33 PM
In my observation, even here in usa, jesuits equate to good education, sadly with price....

it bows down to elitism, my co workers will all agree with that.

Bullydogs
Jun 3, 2002, 06:13 PM
Sadly din even in the USA, De La Salle equates to mediocrity.

Walang De La Salle na nasa Top 1000 schools (source: US News).

Mga Jesuit schools nasa Top 50. Tulad ng Georgetown, Fordham, Holy Cross at marami pang iba.

Hindi lang sa Pinas ang pagka-ebaks ng reputasyon ng La Salle. Maging sa international arena, ganun din. Walang pagbabago.

Wawa naman sila.

Mwahahahhahhahahahaha:lol:

criticguy
Jun 4, 2002, 10:29 AM
jesuits.............

well-disciplined..........

daming site about sa world impressions ng jesuits education......

dito sa philippines....... ok rin ang performance ng jesuit education...


ateneo de zamboanga university.... #1 ng zamboageño...

ateneo de davao university

and

ateneo de cagayan-xavier university

close fight na #1 ng mga mindanaoan.........

ateneo de naga university.......... sa bicol region yan....


ateneo de manila university................d best 4 me...

in cebu?

nandyan ang sacred heart school......... maganda rin ang reputation katulad ng mga ateneo schools.........




in iloilo?

sta. maria school.............. well-respected rin .......


in san juan?

xavier school........ one of the best chinese schools run by the jesuits..............


summa total..............

8 jesuits schools in the philippines

5 ateneo schools


lahat maganda ang reputation..............

at leading schools lahat.............



LUZON, VISAYAS, MINDANAO................

yan ang jesuit education..........

PEACE!

AbulugAdventure
Jun 4, 2002, 03:26 PM
kahit na anong admin basta private sector, kawawa ang estudyante kung government ang hahawak ng school. :(

mac_bolan00
Jun 5, 2002, 12:07 AM
Originally posted by AbulugAdventure
kahit na anong admin basta private sector, kawawa ang estudyante kung government ang hahawak ng school. :(
why 'kawawa'? isn't a gov't-run school a boon for money-conscious people like you?

;)

jeangrey21
Jun 5, 2002, 06:02 AM
Originally posted by criticguy
jesuits.............

well-disciplined..........

daming site about sa world impressions ng jesuits education......

dito sa philippines....... ok rin ang performance ng jesuit education...


ateneo de zamboanga university.... #1 ng zamboageño...

ateneo de davao university

and

ateneo de cagayan-xavier university

close fight na #1 ng mga mindanaoan.........

ateneo de naga university.......... sa bicol region yan....


ateneo de manila university................d best 4 me...

in cebu?

nandyan ang sacred heart school......... maganda rin ang reputation katulad ng mga ateneo schools.........




in iloilo?

sta. maria school.............. well-respected rin .......


in san juan?

xavier school........ one of the best chinese schools run by the jesuits..............


summa total..............

8 jesuits schools in the philippines

5 ateneo schools


lahat maganda ang reputation..............

at leading schools lahat.............



LUZON, VISAYAS, MINDANAO................

yan ang jesuit education..........

PEACE!


agree ako dyan.

yan ang galing ng JESUIT EDUCATION

mrquick
Jun 6, 2002, 02:38 AM
ofcourse, jesuits.

victory
Jun 6, 2002, 02:45 AM
posted by AbulugAdventure

kahit na anong admin basta private sector, kawawa ang estudyante kung government ang hahawak ng school.

The Singapore government seems to be doing a fairly good job at education (among other things).

blueblood1980
Jun 11, 2002, 06:30 AM
Originally posted by victory


The Singapore government seems to be doing a fairly good job at education (among other things).

hey biboy, this is unusually short. is there anything wrong? i'm just concerned.

KuyaDanny
Jun 11, 2002, 07:25 AM
Yeah. So am I, victory.

victory
Jun 11, 2002, 07:47 AM
posted by blueblood1980

hey biboy, this is unusually short. is there anything wrong? i'm just concerned.

Thanks for the concern. I was actually concerned about you: Things need to be kept unusually short and simplistic for you, blueblood1980. :lol:

fischer2002
Jun 11, 2002, 07:57 AM
Originally posted by victory


Thanks for the concern. I was actually concerned about you: Things need to be kept unusually short and simplistic for you, blueblood1980. :lol:

you did not state that that was for me.

victory
Jun 11, 2002, 08:09 AM
posted by fischer2002

you did not state that that was for me.

No, unless you are answering for blueblood1980.

Unless... Oh ho, ho, fischer2002: Are you one of blueblood1980's many alternicks? :lol:

Ali
Jun 11, 2002, 06:12 PM
Sir victory, are these people giving you a hard time? Say the word, and I will use my philosophical prowess to prove that they do not exist.

That's just one of the many many many useful and powerful things Jesuits teach you in their exclusive and expensive schools around the universe.

The funny thing is, the Jesuits are known for education despite the fact that nowhere in their Constitutions are they instructed to enter into education. It's not even an official function for them at all! I hear that meddling in politics is there, but not running schools. You see, Ignatius wanted them to enter into politics, economy, the Counter-Reformation, the reclamation of Jerusalem from the infidel, the conversion of Asia, and all that jazz.

(Which explains Fr. Tito Caluag, S.J.)

The first Jesuit schools were accidents, really. Napilitan lang sila. And I recall reading somewhere that Jesuits just ran their schools because there was great need, and there was little else to do.

On the other hand, Jean Baptise De La Salle and Saint Dominic explicitly instructed their respective orders to run schools. It's just poignant how today, it's the people who never wanted to get in the action have become major players in the field.

And the structure of the modern university is actually based on a Jesuit revamp of the medieval system of the University of Paris.

Ali
Jun 11, 2002, 06:12 PM
Doble poste.

Move along now.

maroon6969
Jun 12, 2002, 02:09 AM
Originally posted by victory


No, unless you are answering for blueblood1980.

Unless... Oh ho, ho, fischer2002: Are you one of blueblood1980's many alternicks? :lol:

tama ka, alternick yan ni blueblood. ito rin. . . yata. . . di ko lang sure. but, i am answering for blueblood.

Oscar01
Jun 12, 2002, 02:28 AM
Originally posted by Ali
Sir victory, are these people giving you a hard time? Say the word, and I will use my philosophical prowess to prove that they do not exist.

That's just one of the many many many useful and powerful things Jesuits teach you in their exclusive and expensive schools around the universe.
And what are the other useful things?

I remember a story a high school guidance counselor in Xavier once shared. He said one kid said the school would never kick him out even if his grades were deteriorating.

Explanation?

"Because the Jesuits need my money!"

blueblood1980
Jun 12, 2002, 02:50 AM
Originally posted by Oscar01

And what are the other useful things?

I remember a story a high school guidance counselor in Xavier once shared. He said one kid said the school would never kick him out even if his grades were deteriorating.

Explanation?

"Because the Jesuits need my money!"

that can be a rare case to be taken as a generalization. i still believe that the jesuits are just. for insatnce, they kicked out a student whose family name was gothong. he belonged to theone of the richest families in cebu. also, at that time, his father was a member of the board of trustees in the ateneo. aside from this, the jesuits have also kicked out a cojuanco for plagiarism. if the jesuits needed money, they should have kept these two.

mac_bolan00
Jun 12, 2002, 04:12 AM
the jesuits and all the other catholics have been fleecing people of their honest-earned money for centuries now. you'd think they can already offer 'superior' education for free.

:rolleyes:

RECORDER
Jun 12, 2002, 05:17 AM
The Dominicans are better for me. Ive been educated by the dominicans from the very start. Especially in college U.S.T. :)

Oscar01
Jun 12, 2002, 05:55 AM
Originally posted by blueblood1980
that can be a rare case to be taken as a generalization. i still believe that the jesuits are just. for insatnce, they kicked out a student whose family name was gothong. he belonged to theone of the richest families in cebu. also, at that time, his father was a member of the board of trustees in the ateneo. aside from this, the jesuits have also kicked out a cojuanco for plagiarism. if the jesuits needed money, they should have kept these two.
Um... it wasn't a rare case.

It was a common joke. ;)

mrquick
Jun 14, 2002, 03:33 AM
The Jesuits

More than four hundred years ago, Ignatius of Loyola, a Basque noble, was seriously injured by a cannonball while fighting to defend the Spanish garrison at Pamplona, against French invaders.As he was recuperating back in the Castle of Loyola, to ease the monotony of being bed-ridden, Ignatius read the only books available in the castle: a Life of Christ and Lives of Saints. As he read these books, the Lord converted Ignatius from a man who hankered for worldly fame and pleasure to a man who desired to distinguish himself in the service of the Eternal King. Upon recovery, Ignatius offered his knightly arms to Our Lady at her shrine in Montserrat.
He was then led by God through almost a year of prayer in Manresa where he grew in understanding of God’s will for him and became a new man in Christ. After a pilgrimage to Jerusalem, he decided he could serve God best by studying for the priesthood. While at the University of Paris, his manner of life, his religious views, and gift for leadership attracted followers. And later, he gathered a group of friends who vowed themselves to poverty and chastity and placed themselves at the disposal of the Pope.
The Pope entrusted various missions to their care and soon they were traveling all over Europe, for the defense and propagation of the Faith. Eventually, they decided that it was for God’s greater glory that they unite themselves into a formally constituted organization by the vow of religious obedience to a superior. They drew up a document outlining the characteristics of the religious order they had in mind. The Compañia de Jesus (Companions of Jesus) would be primarily apostolic, not hidden away in some monastery, but out in the world. Besides the three vows of poverty, chastity, and obedience, they would make a separate fourth vow to go anywhere the Pope would send them.

On Sept. 27, 1540, Pope Paul III approved their petition to form a religious order and also approved their constitution without a single word altered. And so the Society of Jesus was born. Soon, the Jesuits were all over Europe. And by the time Ignatius died in 1556, there were Jesuits who had journeyed to distant lands so that in the Imperial courts of China and Japan, among the swamis of India, in the Congo, Ethiopia, and Brazil, the Word of God could be shared.

Today there are Jesuits in every continent of the world striving to fulfill the mission entrusted to them by God through the Holy Father and their superiors: to be apostles who will bring the Good News to the ends of the earth.

The Jesuit Vision


Saint Ignatius desired his men to be contemplatives-in-action, men seeking their union with God through active and total service of their fellowmen. He wanted his men to combine a total, personal commitment to Christ and His Cross, with decisive involvement in the transformation and salvation of the world.

Thus, the Jesuit is an apostle: one sent by the Father through Jesus into the world to spread the Good News. The Jesuit then is a man on a mission. He belongs to a community of friends in the Lord who have pledged to accompany Jesus on His mission.

As apostles, Jesuits must be “all things to all men”: men ready to go anywhere, live anywhere, do anything, suffer anything, be anything, in order to be instruments of God’s salvation. Thus, the Society has no one particular apostolate: there is literally no work that a Jesuit may not do, if it is for the greater glory of God.

For the greater glory of God: concretely, that means that the Society must direct its apostolates, firstly, towards whatever reaches more people and does more universal good; secondly, to whatever answers urgent needs which cannot be delayed without endangering the people of God; and lastly, to works that are neglected and that few want to do.

Today, the Society of Jesus, considering these criteria of Ignatius, and aware of the needs and hopes of men to today, focus their service of God and man on “the service of faith and the promotion of justice.


"What is it to be a Jesuit today?
It is to know that one is a sinner,
yet called to be a companion of Jesus,
as Ignatius was, who begged the Blessed
Virgin to place him with her Son,
and who then saw the Father Himself
ask Jesus, carrying His cross,
to take this pilgrim into his company…”
“It is to engage, under the standard of the cross,
in the crucial struggle of our time
the struggle for faith
and that struggle for justice
which it includes.”

- from the 32nd General Congregation Decree on “Jesuits Today”

just sharing.

mac_bolan00
Jun 14, 2002, 04:06 AM
thanks for the correction: the jesuits have been fleecing honest workers and businessmen and sponsoring parasites for more than 400 years now.

:)

mrquick
Jun 14, 2002, 04:20 AM
Jesuit Institutions, Colleges, and Universities worldwide.

North America

Canada
St. Paul's College, (University of Manitoba), Winnipeg, Manitoba
Campion College, (University of Regina), Regina, Saskatchewan
Regis College in the University of Toronto.

United States
Boston College, Chestnut Hill, MA
Canisius College, Buffalo, NY
College of the Holy Cross, Worcester, MA
Creighton University, Omaha, NE
Fairfield University, Fairfield, CT
Fordham University, Bronx, NY
Georgetown University, Washington, D.C.
Gonzaga University, Spokane, WA
John Carroll University, Cleveland, OH
Le Moyne College, Syracuse, NY
Loyola College in Maryland, Baltimore, MD
Loyola Marymount University, Los Angeles, CA
Loyola University Chicago, Maywood, IL
Loyola University New Orleans, New Orleans, LA
Marquette University, Milwaukee, WI
Regis University, Denver, CO
Rockhurst University, Kansas City, MO
Saint Joseph's University, Philadelphia, PA
Saint Louis University, St. Louis, MO
Saint Peter's College, Englewood Cliffs
Santa Clara University, Santa Clara, CA
Seattle University, Seattle, WA
University of Detroit Mercy, Detroit, MI
University of San Francisco, San Francisco, CA
University of Scranton, Scranton, PA
Wheeling Jesuit University, Wheeling, WV
Xavier University, Cincinnati, OH

Central America

El Salvador
Universidad Centroamericana José Simeón Cañas (UCA), San Salvador.
Universidad Rafael Landívar, Guatemala
Universidad Iberoamericana, Mexico, DF
Universidad Centroamericana, Managua

South America

Argentina
Universidad Católica de Córdoba, Córdoba
Universidad del Salvador, Buenos Aires

Brazil
Universidade Católica de Pernambuco (UNICAP), Recife
Pontifícia Universidade Católica, Rio de Janeiro
Universidade do Vale do Rio dos Sinos (UNISINOS), Sao Leopoldo
Escola Superior de Administraçao de Negócios, Sao Paolo
Escola Superior de Administraçao de Negócios - SBC, Sao Bernardo do Campo

Chile
Universidad Jesuita Alberto Hurtado, Santiago

Colombia
Pontificia Universidad Javeriana, Santafé de Bogotá

Ecuador
Pontificia Universidad Católica del Ecuador, Quito

Peru
Universidad del Pacifico, Lima

Uruguay
Universidad Católica del Uruguay Damaso Antonio Larrañaga, Montevideo

Venezuela
Universidad Católica Andrés Bello, Caracas
Universidad Católica del Táchira, San Cristóbal

Europe

Austria
Jesuitenkolleg Innsbruck, Innsbruck
Katholisch-Theologische Fakultät, Innsbruck

Belgium
Universitaire faculteiten Sint-Ignatius, Antwerp
Collége St. Michel in Brussels, Belgium

Croatia
Institute of Philosophy and Theology of the Society of Jesus (Croatian)

France
Centre Sèvres, Paris
Ecole, collège, lycée Saint-Joseph - Rheims (France)

Germany
Philosophisch-Theologische Hochschule Sankt Georgen, Frankfurt am Main.
Oswald von Nell-Breuning Institute
Sankt Georgen Library
Munich School of Philosophy, the Faculty of Philosophy of the Society of Jesus

Great Britain
Campion Hall, Oxford
Heythrop College, London

Ireland
Institute of Theology and Philosophy, Dublin
Milltown Park Irish Scholl of Ecumenics, Dublin
University Hall, Dublin

Italy
Pontifical Gregorian University (PUG), Rome.
Collegio S. Roberto Bellarmino, Rome
Pontificio Istituto Orientale, Rome
Italian Philosophical Institute
Pontificio Istituto Biblico, Rome
"Pedro Arrupe" Political Formation Institute, Palermo.
Facoltá Teologica dell'Italia Meridionale, Naples
Istituto Superiore di Scienze Umane e Religiose, Messina
Pontificia Facoltá Teologica della Sardegna
Seminario Interregionale Campano, Naples

Poland
Wydzial Teologiczny, "Bobolanum" Towarzystwa Jezusowego, Warsaw
Jesuit Philosophical Faculty, Krakow.
Instytut Kultury Religijneg, Krakow
Wydzial Teologiczny, Towarzystwa Jezusowego, Krakow

Portugal
Universidade Católica Faculdade de Filosofía, Braga Codex

Spain
Universidad de Deusto, Bilbao
Universidad Pontificia Comillas, Madrid and Instituto Católica de Artes e Industria (ICAI-ICADE), Madrid
Centro de Estudios Superiores Empresariales, Santander
Escuela Superior de Administración y Dirección de Empresas (ESADE), Barcelona
Institut Quimic de Sarria, Universidad Ramon Llull, Barcelona
Universidad de Córdoba, Facultad de Ciencias Económicas y Expresariales, Escuela Universitaria de Estudios Empresariales, Córdoba
Instituto Nevares de Empresarios Agricolas (INEA), Universidad de Valladolid

Middle East, Africa

Lebanon
Université Saint-Joseph, Beirut

Asia, Oceania

India
Loyola College, Madras.
St. Joseph's Colleges, Bangalore.
St. Joseph's College, North Point, Darjeeling, West Bengal, India
St. Xavier's College, Mumbai (Bombay).
St. Xavier's College, Mumbai (Xavier Institute of Management).
St. Xavier's College, Mumbai (Xavier Institute of Communications).
Xavier Labour Relations Institute, Jamshedpur
Xavier Institute of Management, Bhubaneshwar

Southeast and East Asia

Indonesia
Sanata Dharma University, Yogyakarta

Japan
Sophia University, Tokyo
Elisabeth University of Music, Hiroshima

Korea
Sogang University, Seoul



Philippines
Ateneo de Manila University, Loyola Schools, Manila
Ateneo de Manila Professional Schools, Rockwell, Makati
Ateneo de Davao University, Davao
Ateneo de Naga University, Naga City
Ateneo de Zamboanga, Zamboanga City
Ateneo de Cagayan de Oro (Xavier University), Cagayan de Oro



Taiwan
Fu Jen Catholic University, Hsinchuang

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
And here are the Jesuit secondary schools (i.e., high schools) worldwide.

United States

Arizona
Brophy College Preparatory, Phoenix, AZ

California
Loyola High School, Los Angeles, CA
Jesuit High School, Sacramento, CA
Saint Ignatius College Preparatory, San Francisco, CA
Bellarmine College Prep, San Jose, CA

Colorado
Regis Jesuit High, Aurora, CO

Connecticut
Fairfield College Preparatory School, Fairfield, CT

District of Columbia
Gonzaga College High School, Washington, D.C.

Florida
Jesuit High, Tampa, FL
Belén Jesuit Preparatory School, Miami, Fl.

Illinois
Cristo Rey High School, Chicago, IL
St. Ignatius College Prep, Chicago, IL
Loyola Academy, Wilmette, IL

Indiana
Brebeuf Jesuit Preparatory, Indianapolis, IN

Louisiana
Jesuit High School, New Orleans, LA

Maine
Cheverus High School, Portland, ME

Maryland
Loyola High School, Baltimore, MD
Georgetown Prep, North Bethesda, MD

Massachusetts
Boston College High School, Boston, MA

Michigan
Loyola Academy, Detroit, MI
University of Detroit Jesuit High School, Detroit, MI

Missouri
Rockhurst High School, Kansas City, MO
DeSmet Jesuit High School, St. Louis, MO
St. Louis University High School, St. Louis, MO

Nebraska
Creighton Preparatory School, Omaha, NE

New Jersey
St. Peter's Preparatory School, Jersey City, NJ

New York
Fordham Preparatory School, Bronx, NY
Canisius High School, Buffalo, NY
Loyola School, New York, NY
Regis High School, New York, NY
Xavier High School, New York, NY
McQuaid Jesuit High School, Rochester, NY

Ohio
St. Xavier High School, Cincinnati, OH
St. Ignatius High School, Cleveland, OH
Walsh Jesuit High School, Cuyahoga Fall, OH
St. John's Jesuit High School, Toledo, OH

Oregon
Jesuit High School, Portland, OR

Pennsylvania
St. Joseph's Preparatory School, Philadelphia, PA
Scranton Preparatory School, Scranton, PA

South Dakota
Red Cloud Indian School, Pine Ridge, SD

Texas
Jesuit College Preparatory School, Dallas, TX
Strake Jesuit College Preparatory, Houston, TX

Washington
Seattle Preparatory School, Seattle, WA
Gonzaga Preparatory School, Spokane, WA
Bellarmine Preparatory School, Tacoma, WA

Wisconsin
Marquette University High School, Milwaukee, WI
CAMPION Jesuit High School

Canada
Loyola High School, Montreal, Quebec
St. Paul's High School, Winnipeg, Manitoba

Carribean /Central America
Saint John's College, Belize, Central America
Colegio Loyola, Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic
Liceo Secundario Diversificado "Manuel Acevedo Serrano", Cutupú, Dominican Republic
Externado San José, San Salvador, El Salvador
Colegio Loyola, Guatemala,
Colegio "Liceo Javier", Guatemala
Instituto San José, El Progresso, Honduras
Instituto Técnico Loyola, El Progresso, Honduras
Campion College, Kingston, Jamaica, W.I.
Saint George's College, Kingston, Jamaica, W.I.
Ciudad de los Niños, Guadalajara, Jal., Mexico
Instituto de Ciencias, Zapopan, Jal., Mexico
Instituto Cultural Tampico, Tamo., Mexico
Instituto Lux, León, Gto., Mexico
Instituto Oriente, Puebla, Pue., Mexico
Bachillerato UIA-Noroeste, Tijuana, B.C.
Escuela Carlos Pereyra, Torreón Coahuila, México
Colegio Centroamérica, Managua, Nicaragua
Instituto Loyola de la Iglesia de Santo Domingo, Managua, Nicaragua
Colegio Javier, Panama, Republic of Panama
Colegio San Ignacio de Loyola, Rio Piedras, Puerto Rico.
South America Colegio de la Inmaculada Concepción, Santa Fe, Argentina
Colegio de la Sagrada Familia, Córdoba, Argentina
Colegio del Salvador, Buenos Aires, Argentina
Colegio Juan XXIII, Cochabamba, Boliva
Colegio Sagrado Corazón, Sucre, Boliva
Colegio San Calixto, La Paz, Bolivia
Colegio San Igancio, La Paz, Bolivia
Colégio Anchieta, Nova Friburgo, Brazil
Colégio Anchieta, Porto Alegre, Brazil
Colégio António Vieira, Salvador, Brazil
Colégio Catarinense, Florianópolis, Brazil
Colégio dos Jesuitas, Juiz de Fora, Brazil
Colégio Loyola, Belo Horizonte, Brazil
Colégio Na. Sra. Medianeira, Curitiba, Brazil
Colégio Nóbrega, Recife, Brazil
Colégio Santo Inácio, Fortaleza, Brazil
Colégio Santo Inácio, RIo de Janeiro, Brazil
Colégio Santo Inácio, Salvador do Sul, Brazil
Colégio Sao Francisco de Sales, Teresina, Brazil
Colégio Sao Francisco Xavier, Sao Paolo, Brazil
Colégio Sao Luis, Sao Paulo, Brazil
Colegio San Francisco Javier, Puerto Montt, Chile
Colegio San Ignacio, Santiago, Chile
Colegio San Ignacio "El Bosque", Santiago, Chile
Colegio San Luis, Antofagasta, Chile
Colegio San Mateo, Osorno, Chile
Colegio de San José, Barranquilla, Colombia
Colegio Mayor de San Bartolomé, Bogotá, Colombia
Colegio San Bartolomé La Merced, Santafé de Bogotá, Colombia
Colegio San Francisco Javier, Pasto, Colombia
Colegio San Ignacio, Medellín, Colombia
Colegio San Juan Berchmans, Cali, Colombia
Colegio San Luis Gonzaga, Manizales, Colombia
Colegio San Pedro Claver, Bucaramanga, Colombia
Instituto San José, Barranquilla, Colombia
Colegio Cristo Rey, Portoviejo, Ecuador
Colegio Gonzaga, Quito, Ecuador
Colegio Javier, Guayaquil, Ecuador
Colegio San Felipe Neri, Riobamba, Ecuador
Colegio San Gabriel, Quito, Ecuador
Colegio Veinte de Abril, Guayaquil, Ecuador
Unidad Educativa Borja, Cuenca, Ecuador
Colegio de Cristo Rey, Asunción, Paraguay
Colegio Técnico Javier, Asunción, Paraguay
Colegio Santa Rosa, Santa Rosa, Paraguay
C.E.P. "San Ignacio de Loyola", Castilla, Piura, Peru
Colegio del la Inmaculada, Lima, Peru
Colegio Parroquial Cristo Rey, Tacna, Peru
Colegio San Francisco Javier, Lima, Peru
Colegio San José, Arequipa, Peru.
Colegio San Luis Gonzaga, Jaen, Peru
Colegio Sagrado Corazón, Montevideo, Uruguay
Colegio San Francisco Javier, Tacuarembó, Uruguay
Colegio Gonzaga, Maracaibo, Venezuela
Colegio y Liceo Javier, Barquisimeto, Venezuela
Colegio San Ignacio, Caracas, Venezuela
Unidad Educative Colegio Loyola - Gumilla, Puerto Ordaz, Veneuela

Europe
Kollegium Aloisianum, Linz a.d. Donau, Austria
Kollegium Kalksburg, Vienna, Austria
Centre Scolaire du Sacre Coeur, Charleroi, Belgium
Centre Scolaire Saint-François-Xaiver, Verviers, Belgium
Centre Scolaire Saint-Michel, Brussels, Belgium
Centre Scolaire Saint-Servais, Liège, Belgium
Centre Scolaire Saint-Stanislas, Mons, Belgium
Collège Notre-Dame de la Paix, Erpent, Belgium
Collège Saint-Paul, Godinne, Belgium
Jan van Ruusbroec-Kollege, Brussels, Belgium
Onze-Lieve-Vrouwecollege, Antwerp, Belgium
St. Barbaracollege, Ghent, Belgium
St. Jan Berchmanscollege, Brussels, Belgium
St-Jozefscollege, Aalst, Belgium
St-Jozefscollege, Turnhout, Belgium
Xaveriuscollege, Borgerhout - Antwerp, Belgium
Niels Steensens Gymnasium, Copenhagen, Denmark.
Centre Scolaire Saint-Marc, Lyon, France
Collège La Providence, Amiens, France
Collège Saint-Joseph, Rheims, France
Ecole de Provence, Marseilles, France
Ecole Saint-Stanislas, Toulouse, France
Etablissement Saint-Louis-de-Gonzague, Paris, France
Etablissement Scolaire Saint-Joseph-de-Tivoli, Bordeaux, France
Externat Saint-Michel, St-Etienne, France
La Caousou, Toulouse, France
Lycée Privé Le Marais, St-Etienne, France
Lycée Privé St-Joseph, Avignon, France
Notre-Dame de Sainte-Croix Lycée et Ecole Privés Catholiques, Le Mans, France
Aloisiuskolleg, Bonn, Germany
Canisius-Kolleg (Gymnasium), Berlin, Germany
Kolleg St. Blasien, St. Blasien, Germany
Sankt Ansgar Schule, Hamburg, German
Campion House College, Isleworth, Middlesex, England
Mount St. Mary's College, Spinkhill, Sheffield, England
St Ignatius College, Turkey Street, Enfield, Middlesex, England
St. John's Beaumont, Old Windsor, Berkshire, England.
St. Aloysius' College Music School, Glasgow, Scotland.
Stonyhurst College, Stonyhurst, Lancashire, England
Wimbledon College, London, England
Collegio S. Ignazio, Messina, Sicily
Istituto Di Cagno-Abbrescia, Bari, Italy
Centro Educativo Ignaziano (CEI), Palermo, Italy
Istituto Leone XIII, Milan, Italy
Istituto Massimo, Rome-EUR, Italy
Istituto Pontano, Naples, Italy
Istituto Sociale, Turin, Italy.
Kauno Jezuitu, Gimnazija, Kaunas, Lithuania
Vilniaus Jezuitu Gimnazija (Vilnius Jesuit High School), Vilnius, Lithuania
St. Aloysius' College, Birkirkara, Malta
Jesuit High School, Gdynia, Poland.
Jesuit High Schools in Portugal.
Colegio Inmaculada PP Jesuitas, Gijón, Asturias, Spain.
Colegio Nuestra Señora del Recuerdo, Madrid, Spain
Colexio Apóstol Santiago, Vigo, Spain.

Africa /Middle East
Lycée Du Saint-Ésprit, Bujumbura, Burundi
Collège Libermann, Douala-Alwa, Cameroon
Collège Charles-Lwange, Sarh, Chad
Collège de la Sainte Famille, Cairo, Egypt
Collège Notre Dame de Jamhour, Jamhour, Lebanon.
Collège Saint Grégoire, Beirut, Lebanon
Loyola Jesuit College, Abuja, Nigeria.
Collège Inyemeramihigo, Giseny, Rwanda
Canisius Secondary School, Chisekesi, Zambia
St. George's College, Causeway, Harare, Zimbabwe
St. Ignatius College, Chisipite, Harare, Zimbabwe

Asia / Pacific
Saint Ignatius College, Adelaide, S.A., Australia
St Ignatius' College, Riverview, Sydney, N.S.W., Australia
St. Aloysius' College, Sydney, N.S.W., Australia
Xavier College, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.
Ponape Agricultural and Trade School (PATS), Ponape (Pohnpei), Federated States of Micronesia.
Xavier High School, Chuuk, Federated States of Micronesia
Wah Yan College, Hong Kong
Wah Yan College, Kowloon
A.K.J.M. High School, Kanjirapally, Kerala, India
Campion School, Arera Colony, Bhopal
Catholic Ashram School, Bhadaninagar, Hazaribagh
Catholic High School, Ara, Bojpur
De Britto Higher Secondary School, Devakottai, Tamil Nadu
De Nobili School, Dhanbad
Dnyanamata Vidyalaya, Sangamner, Ahmednagar
Gnanmata Adivasi High School, Tai Talasari, Thane
Holy Family High School, Andheri East, Bombay
Khrist Raja High School, Bettiah, Bihar
Loyola High School, Kalena Agrahara, Bangalore
Loyola High School, Jarunbagarm Andhra
Loyola High School, Margao, Goa
Loyola High School, Pune, Mahrashtra
Loyola High School, Ranchi, Bihar
Loyola High School, Vinukonda, Andhra Pradesh
Loyola Higher Secondary School, Raigarh, Madhya Pradesh
Loyola Public School, Guntur, Andhra Pradesh
Loyola School, Kohima, Nagaland
Loyola School, Jamshedpur, Bihar
Loyola School, Thiruvananthapuram, Kerala
Prabodhan Vidyalaya, Nashik, Maharashtra
Rosary English High School, Kolhapur, Maharashtra
Rosary High School, Vadodara, Gujarat
Shantiniketan High School, Surat, Gujarat
St. Aloysius' High School, Kurseong, Darjeeling, West Bengal
St. Arulanandar Higher Secondary School, Ramanathapuram, Tamil Nadu
St. Britto High School, Mapuca, Goa
St. Ignatius' High School, W. Dinajpur Dt., West Bengal
St. Ignatius' High School, Gurnia Dt., Bihar
St. John Berchman's High School, Tinpahar, Bihar
St. John's High School, Ranchi, Bihar
St. John of the Cross High School, Sanquelim, Goa
St. Joseph's Boys High School, Calicut
St. Joseph's College High School, North Point, Darjeeling
St. Joseph's College Higher Secondary School, Tiruchirapalli, Tamil Nadu
St. Joseph's High School, Hassan
St. Joseph's High School, Baramulla, Kashmir
St. Joseph's High School, Kozhikode, Kerala
St. Joseph's High School, Palamau Dt., Bihar
St. Joseph's High School, Thiruvananthapuram, Kerala
St. Joseph's High School, Vododara, Gujarat
St. Joseph's Indian High School, Bangalore
St. Joseph's Night High School, Pune
St. Lawrence High School, Calcutta, West Bengal
St. Mary's Higher Secondary School, Dindigul, Tamil Nadu
St. Mary's High School - Smatoli, Gumia Dt., Bihar
St. Mary's High School, Bombay
St. Mary's High School, Madurai, Tamil Nadu
St. Mary's School, Kheda Dt., Gujarat
St. Michael's Anglo-Indian School, Kannur, Kerala
St. Michael's High School, Patna, Bihar
St. Patrick's High School, Secunderabad, Andhra Pradesh
St. Paul's High School, Belgaum, Karnataka
St. Paul School, Raghabpur, West Bengal
St. Peter's Higher Secondary School, Gayaganga, West Bengal
St. Robert's Higher Secondary School, Darjeeling, West Bengal
St. Robert's High School, Hazaribagh, Bihar
St. Stanislaus' High School, Patratoli, Bihar
St. Stanislaus' High School, Bandra West, Bombay
St. Vincent's High School, Pune, Mahrashtra
St. Xavier's Boys Academy, Bombay
St. Xavier's Collegiate School, Calcutta, West Bengal
St. Xavier's Higher Secondary School, Surguja Dt., Madhya Pradesh
St. Xavier's Higher Secondary School, Palayamkottai, Tamil Nadu
St. Xavier's High School, Ahmedabad, Gujarat
St. Xavier's High School, Anand, Kheda Dt.
St. Xavier's High School, Bharuch, Gujarat
St. Xavier's High School, Bombay
St. Xavier's High School, Chaibasa, Bihar
St. Xavier's High School, Gandhinagar, Gujarat
St. Xavier's High School, Kolhapur, Maharashtra
St. Xavier's High School, Manikpur
St. Xavier's High School, Manmad, Mahrashtra
St. Xavier's High School, Nasik Road, Mahrashtra
St. Xavier's High School, Bundu, Ranchi Dt.
St. Xavier's High School, Sabakhanta Dt., Gujarat
St. Xavier's High School, Suryapet, Andhra Pradesh
St. Xavier's Higher Secondary School, Tuticorin, Tamil Nadu
St. Xavier's Night High School, Bombay
St. Xavier's School, Behror, Rajasthan
St. Xavier's School, Bokaro Steel City, Bihar
St. Xavier's School, Burdwan, West Bengal
St. Xavier's School, Delhi
St. Xavier's School, Durgapur, Bengal
St. Xavier's School, Midnapore Dt., West Bengal
St. Xavier's School, Hazaribagh, Bihar
St. Xavier's School, Jaipur, Rajasthan
St. Xavier's School, Patna, Bihar
St. Xavier's School, Ranchi
St. Xavier's School, Sahibganj, Bihar
St. Xavier's School, Surat, Gujarat
St. Xavier's School, Nesargi, Karnataka
Kolese de Britto, Yogyakarta, Indonesia
Kolese Kanisius, Jakarta, Indonesia
Pastoran Loyola, Semarang, Jawa Tengah, Indonesia
Eiko Gakuen High School, Kamakura-shi, Japan
Hiroshima Gakuin, Hiroshima-shi, Japan
Rokko Gakuin, Kobe-shi, Japan
Taisei Kotto Gakko, Fukuoka-shi, Japan
Colégio Estrela do Mar, Macao
Colégio Mateus Ricci, Macao
Instituto D. Melchior Carneiro, S.J., Macao
St. Xavier's School, Kathmandu, Nepal


Ateneo de Davao University High School, Davao City, Philippines
Ateneo de Manila, Manila, Philippines
Ateneo de Naga, Naga City, Philippines
Ateneo de Zamboanga, Zamboanga City, Philippines
Sacred Heart School, Cebú City, Philippines
Xavier School, Manila, Philippines
Xavier University High School, Cagayan de Oro City, Philippines
Santa Maria, Iloilo, Philippines


St. Ignatius' High School, Taipei hsien, Taiwan

Rambus
Jun 14, 2002, 04:42 AM
Utang na loob.

Another list of Jesuit schools? What's next? A list of La Salle schools followed by a post from Bu11ydog?

mrquick
Jun 14, 2002, 05:43 AM
Originally posted by Rambus
Utang na loob.

Another list of Jesuit schools? What's next? A list of La Salle schools followed by a post from Bu11ydog?

for educated people, listing of schools is informative.

for uneducated? don't know.

listing of jesuits schools makes sense, and relevant to the thread topic.

and i don't know what's next. let us see.

Oscar01
Jun 14, 2002, 06:20 AM
Originally posted by mrquick
for educated people, listing of schools is informative.
I'm with Rambus. Lists are long, boring, unimaginative and a waste of bandwith.

An "educated" person should be able to sum up the list in a single phrase or sentence.

On the other hand, cheesy graphics... ;)

mrquick
Jun 14, 2002, 07:12 AM
Originally posted by Oscar01

I'm with Rambus. Lists are long, boring, unimaginative and a waste of bandwith.

An "educated" person should be able to sum up the list in a single phrase or sentence.

On the other hand, cheesy graphics... ;)

Depends on what kind a person is.

for you, boring? then fine.

my intention? just want to share

summing up the list? no need.

Oscar01
Jun 14, 2002, 08:31 AM
Haiku time?

mac_bolan00
Jun 14, 2002, 09:17 AM
even that one was too long for a haiku.

Oscar01
Jun 14, 2002, 11:04 AM
Hmmmm... frustrated haiku time?

rabbaddal
Jun 14, 2002, 06:28 PM
Originally posted by clawed_out
In my observation, even here in usa, jesuits equate to good education, sadly with price....

it bows down to elitism, my co workers will all agree with that.

Not all leading Jesuit schools charge exorbitant fees. The Louis-le-Grand, for example, has a socialized tuition structure because it's subsidized by the French government in the same way that state universities are subsidized by the Philippine government. The French believe that if a school or system is that good, then it is worth spending taxpayers' money on if it means that the school will be producing the next generation of leaders and thinkers.

fischer2002
Jun 16, 2002, 03:18 AM
Originally posted by rabbaddal


Not all leading Jesuit schools charge exorbitant fees. The Louis-le-Grand, for example, has a socialized tuition structure because it's subsidized by the French government in the same way that state universities are subsidized by the Philippine government. The French believe that if a school or system is that good, then it is worth spending taxpayers' money on if it means that the school will be producing the next generation of leaders and thinkers.

dapat, gawin din yan ng philippine government.

rabbaddal
Jun 16, 2002, 05:12 AM
Originally posted by fischer2002


dapat, gawin din yan ng philippine government.

Hehehe...That'll be the day. The French have a different view on taxes than what Pinoys have. They're willing to pay very high taxes and let their government subsidize private endeavors because they see their taxes being put to good use. They have a very efficient public school system so it's OK for them if their government subsidizes Jesuit schools as well. The Philippine government, on the other hand, should first prioritize the improvement of public schools.

mac_bolan00
Jun 16, 2002, 05:14 AM
wrong, it should first find a way to make businessmen pay their due taxes.

rabbaddal
Jun 16, 2002, 05:22 AM
And see their taxes squandered on politicians' pork barrels? That's one reason why Pinoys aren't so enthusiastic about paying taxes in the first place, unlike in many European countries where, even if taxes are higher, people are more willing to pay and so their governments have to exert less effort in running after deadbeats.

rabbaddal
Jun 16, 2002, 05:34 AM
Originally posted by mrquick


Depends on what kind a person is.

for you, boring? then fine.

my intention? just want to share

summing up the list? no need.

mrquick,

If you're really interested to get informed about the Jesuits, I suggest that you read the following books:

“As One Sent”
(Story of Peter Kenney, S.J.)
by Thomas Morrissey

“The Wise Man from the West”
(Story of Matteo Ricci, S.J.)
by Vincent Cronin

“The Jesuits”
by Malachi Martin

“Passionate Uncertainty”
(Inside the American Jesuits)
by Peter McDonough and Eugene Bianchi

“The First Jesuits”
by John W. O’Malley

mac_bolan00
Jun 16, 2002, 05:36 AM
read this: BUSINESSES IN THE PHILIPPINES DECLARE LESS THAN HALF THEIR ACTUAL REVENUES. for small businesses, it can be as small as 1/10. the gov't, with or without the pork barrel, lacks funds from tax collections. while this goes on, PEXers will continue to dream of an 'improved public school system'.

:rolleyes:

rabbaddal
Jun 16, 2002, 05:54 AM
Has the government made good use of the funds that it has on hand so far? Even, lets say, for the sake of visibility. Every year, how much have LGUs squandered on digging holes in the ground just so they could liquidate their budgets by the end of the year? How many government procurement contracts have been overpriced so someone else runs off with another portion of the taxpayers' money? There has to be a stimulus somewhere, somehow.

It's OK if PEXers want to dream of a better public school system - or a better public anything for that matter. Some of them will one day have a say about how much gets paid to the government, and how much gets spent for the people. PEX is home to the idealistic dreamers as it is to the jaded.

mac_bolan00
Jun 16, 2002, 06:39 AM
it must put at least part of it to good use. otherwise, there'd be no government, no police force, no army, no UP. the fact that state colleges continue to crank out graduates and that there are still hospitals that give free service must tell you SOME of your tax money is put to good use.

mrquick
Jun 19, 2002, 01:18 PM
Originally posted by rabbaddal


mrquick,

If you're really interested to get informed about the Jesuits, I suggest that you read the following books:

“As One Sent”
(Story of Peter Kenney, S.J.)
by Thomas Morrissey

“The Wise Man from the West”
(Story of Matteo Ricci, S.J.)
by Vincent Cronin

“The Jesuits”
by Malachi Martin

“Passionate Uncertainty”
(Inside the American Jesuits)
by Peter McDonough and Eugene Bianchi

“The First Jesuits”
by John W. O’Malley

rabbadal, thanks anyway!

but i'm not interseted reading books. i'm satisfied with the site " www.jesuit.org " atleast i can have info about jesuits and others.

rabbaddal
Jun 19, 2002, 01:46 PM
Originally posted by mrquick


rabbadal, thanks anyway!

but i'm not interseted reading books. i'm satisfied with the site " www.jesuit.org " atleast i can have info about jesuits and others.

Saw that website also. Lots of info. I guess you've seen the link - "Do you know your Ignatian?". But if there's one book you should ever want to read once you get the knack, it's "The Wise Man from the West". It's an inspiring story.

mrquick
Jun 20, 2002, 02:31 AM
Originally posted by rabbaddal


Saw that website also. Lots of info. I guess you've seen the link - "Do you know your Ignatian?". But if there's one book you should ever want to read once you get the knack, it's "The Wise Man from the West". It's an inspiring story.

i've seen the link already.

"The wise man from the west" hmm.. seems, it's an interesting book. where can I avail that?

rabbaddal
Jun 20, 2002, 06:04 AM
Originally posted by mrquick


i've seen the link already.

"The wise man from the west" hmm.. seems, it's an interesting book. where can I avail that?

Do a search for the title and the author in Amazon.Com, Barnes & Noble.Com, or Borders.Com. I'm not sure if it's being sold in Manila. I saw the book in one of the New York bookstores and over here, shoppers can read the books in the shelves for free. The book is really good. It's about a Jesuit priest who trailblazed his way to China during the Ming dynasty and eventually became one of imperial China's most notable figures.

mrquick
Jun 20, 2002, 10:34 AM
Originally posted by rabbaddal


Do a search for the title and the author in Amazon.Com, Barnes & Noble.Com, or Borders.Com. I'm not sure if it's being sold in Manila. I saw the book in one of the New York bookstores and over here, shoppers can read the books in the shelves for free. The book is really good. It's about a Jesuit priest who trailblazed his way to China during the Ming dynasty and eventually became one of imperial China's most notable figures.

ok, thanks!

i'll just try if ever.

Oscar01
Jun 20, 2002, 11:11 AM
Originally posted by rabbaddal
It's about a Jesuit priest who trailblazed his way to China during the Ming dynasty and eventually became one of imperial China's most notable figures.
Mateo Ricci?

rabbaddal
Jun 20, 2002, 02:18 PM
Originally posted by Oscar01

Mateo Ricci?

Yup. Ewan ko lang kung related siya kay Cristina Ricci.

Oscar01
Jun 20, 2002, 02:36 PM
His story is interesting, if I have the right name, because he was able to relate the Christian concepts of God to the Chinese concepts of Heaven, and captured the imagination of Confucian scholars.

Later missionaries screwed it up and decided to attack Confucianism along with the other religions in the empire (like Buddhism).

rabbaddal
Jun 20, 2002, 02:54 PM
Originally posted by Oscar01
His story is interesting, if I have the right name, because he was able to relate the Christian concepts of God to the Chinese concepts of Heaven, and captured the imagination of Confucian scholars.

Later missionaries screwed it up and decided to attack Confucianism along with the other religions in the empire (like Buddhism).

You're right except that his first name is Matteo w/ a double T. His methods were so effective that, according to the book, his Jesuit colleagues in China at that time were able to convert the Dowager Empress (queen mother) and the baby crown prince to Christianity. Unfortunately, the Ming Dynasty was already being overrun by the barbarians by then and so the accomplishment went for naught. One can only imagine what the world and Asia in particular would have been like today had a Chiristian Chinese empire perpetuated.

lesterd
Jun 21, 2002, 03:51 AM
the svd's are better administrators than anybody else's

rabbaddal
Jul 3, 2002, 12:07 AM
Originally posted by mrquick


rabbadal, thanks anyway!

but i'm not interseted reading books. i'm satisfied with the site " www.jesuit.org " atleast i can have info about jesuits and others.

Here's another website:

http://www.companysj.com/

It's an online magazine. It's good to know what's happening elsewhere in the Ignatian world.

A couple of interesting articles:

http://www.companysj.com/v181/century.htm

http://www.companysj.com/v172/ontime.html

mrquick
Jul 3, 2002, 06:22 AM
Originally posted by rabbaddal


Here's another website:

http://www.companysj.com/

It's an online magazine. It's good to know what's happening elsewhere in the Ignatian world.

A couple of interesting articles:

http://www.companysj.com/v181/century.htm

http://www.companysj.com/v172/ontime.html

wow! thanks ulit.

nice one.

Econ_major
Jul 3, 2002, 07:45 AM
i think that it really depends on how the student is educated and whether the teachings of the school are installed into the minds of the students.

Lasallian, Jesuit, Dominican education are all-centered into making the individual more holistic. thus they have their own logos.

ADMU = "Im a man for others."

DLSU = " Christian Achiever for God and Country "

mrquick
Jul 3, 2002, 08:10 AM
Originally posted by Econ_major
i think that it really depends on how the student is educated and whether the teachings of the school are installed into the minds of the students.

Lasallian, Jesuit, Dominican education are all-centered into making the individual more holistic. thus they have their own logos.

ADMU = "Im a man for others."

DLSU = " Christian Achiever for God and Country "


i think all the jesuits schools used this "men and women for others" and not only ADMU.

Xgames
Jul 21, 2002, 01:22 PM
ofcourse, the jesuits.

ATENEO EDUCATION is great