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Jose Fabella Memorial School

The Jose Fabella Memorial School (Filipino: Pang-alaalang Paaralang Jose Fabella; abbreviated as JFMS and commonly known as Fabella) is a public integrated special school located in Welfareville Compound, Mandaluyong in Metro Manila, Philippines.[1] Founded on December 3, 1925 as the Welfareville School, it is one of the oldest educational institutions in Mandaluyong and is currently one of the four public special schools in the Philippines.[1][2] It serves as the umbrella organization of 12 special education units located in different parts of Metro Manila and Rizal[3] and offers kindergarten, elementary, secondary (junior and senior high school), alternative learning system, and special education to regular learners and learners with special education needs.[1]

Jose Fabella Memorial School
Pang-alaalang Paaralang Jose Fabella
Address
Welfareville Compound

,
1550

Coordinates14°35′06″N 121°02′04″E / 14.58500°N 121.03444°E / 14.58500; 121.03444
Information
Other nameWelfareville School
TypePublic
EstablishedDecember 3, 1925
(97 years and 255 days)
FounderJose Fabella
OversightDepartment of Education
PrincipalRoberto P. Redobante
Faculty75 (2015)
GradesK to 12
Enrollment2,622 (2014)
LanguageEnglish, Filipino
CampusUrban
Color(s)Green and yellow   
SongThe JFMS March
NicknameFabellan
NewspaperThe Fabellan Journal
Websitejfms.depedmandaluyong.org
Dr. Jose Fabella, the Father of Public Health and Social Welfare in the Philippines.

History Edit

The history of JFMS traces its roots to Act No. 2671 enacted by the Philippine Legislature on January 10, 1917 which established the first government orphanage and marked the beginning of the national child welfare program in the Philippines.[4][5] On December 3, 1924, Act No. 3203 was passed placing "public institutions intended for the care, custody, correction, education and training of orphans, homeless, neglected, abused, defective and delinquent children under the administration and supervision of the Bureau of Public Welfare".[6] On January 6, 1925, the Bureau of Public Welfare purchased a 56-hectare land in the municipality of San Felipe Neri, Province of Rizal, where the government's child-caring institutions were established on December 3, 1925 and collectively called Welfareville Institutions.[4][5][7][8] It originally consisted of 1) the Philippine Training School for Boys and the Philippine Training School for Girls, which catered to delinquent boys and girls; 2) orphanage, to provide for the care of destitute children and children of leprous parents; 3) nursery for non-leprous children below two years of age, to provide care of children of leprous parents born in Culion;[9][10] 4) home for the mentally-defective children, to provide care and treatment of boys and girls who are mentally defective; and 5) home for the aged and the infirm, to provide institutional care for such persons who are destitute.[6] A school was also established, called Welfareville School, to provide academic instruction and vocational training to orphans and wards of Welfareville Institutions.

Due to the increasing number of orphans and other beneficiaries admitted to Welfareville Institutions, a sum of ₱60,000 was appropriated by the end of 1929 for the construction of additional buildings for orphans, invalids, and aged people.[11] A sum of ₱21,000 was also appropriated by virtue of Commonwealth Act No. 61 enacted on October 20, 1936 for the continued operation and maintenance of Welfareville Institutions.[12]

On December 11, 1958, President Carlos P. Garcia issued Executive Order No. 326 reorganizing the Social Welfare Administration (an agency created following the abolition of Bureau of Public Welfare) which used to administer and supervise the Welfareville Institutions. This resulted to the transfer of oversight of Welfareville School to the Department of Education. Under this arrangement, the Welfareville School provided formal education to orphans and wards of Welfareville Institutions which it subsequently called "special education units,'' with the Social Welfare Administration retaining jurisdiction of the institutions.[13][14]

For many years since its establishment, there have been calls to change the name of the school to remove the stigma associated with it as the "dumping ground of society's rejects."[15][16] On June 21, 1963, Republic Act No. 3576 was passed changing the name of Welfareville School to Jose Fabella Memorial School.[17][18] This was in honor of Dr. Jose Fabella, the first Commissioner of the Bureau of Public Welfare[6] and considered as the Father of Public Health and Social Welfare in the Philippines,[19] who laid the plan for the development of Welfareville Institutions.[15][20]

Following an agreement between the Philippine government and the United Nations Children's Fund to upgrade the child welfare services in the Philippines, Republic Act No. 5260 was enacted on June 15, 1968 which called for the dispersion and decentralization of the Welfareville Institutions.[21] This led to the dispersal of the special education units of JFMS in Metro Manila and outskirts. On August 11, 2011, Republic Act No. 9155 was passed which placed JFMS under the Schools Division Office of Mandaluyong.

At present, JFMS is one of the four public special schools in the Philippines[2] and consists of a flagship campus in Mandaluyong which caters to regular learners and learners with learning disabilities and behavioral problems and 12 special education units located in different parts of Metro Manila and Rizal which cater to learners with various special education needs.[3][15]

JFMS Units Edit

Unit Location Learners' Profile
Nayon ng Kabataan Welfareville Compound, Mandaluyong abused, orphaned, abandoned, neglected and exploited children aged 7 to 17 years old
Bagong Sinag Special School National Center for Mental Health, Mandaluyong mentally-handicapped patients
Jose Fabella Center Correctional Road, Mandaluyong strandees, transients, vagrants and mendicants
Dangerous Drugs BoardEuropean Union Treatment and Rehabilitation Center Diliman, Quezon City people with drug dependence
CRIBS Foundation, Inc. Industrial Valley, Marikina abandoned, neglected, surrendered and female minor survivors of child abuse
Special Learning Center City Hall, Quezon City children with behavioral problems
Department of Health Treatment and Rehabilitation Center Bicutan, Taguig children and adults with drug addiction
Elsie Gaches Village Alabang, Muntinlupa abandoned and neglected children with mild to severe mental disorders
National Training School for Girls Alabang, Muntinlupa abandoned female street children
National Training School for Boys Tanay, Rizal male juveniles in conflict with the law aged 9 to 17 years old
Haven for Children Alabang, Muntinlupa boys aged 7 to 13 recovering from substance abuse
Molave Youth Homes Diliman, Quezon City children with behavioral problems

Administration Edit

School Principals of
Jose Fabella Memorial School
Balbino T. Jesusa
Maximo C. Songco
Ignacio F. Lim
Ignacio N. Alcantara
Gerardo A. Consolacion
Fortunata A. Rabang
Aida S. Damian*
Alicia B. Reyes*
Arsenia C. Lara*
Erdelinda G. Diaz*
Olivia L. Pagurayan
Corazon R. Regino
Roberto P. Redobante

*served as Officer-in-Charge of the Office of the Principal

Since its establishment as Welfareville School on December 3, 1925, the school was governed by Bureau of Public Welfare under the Department of Public Instruction from 1925 to 1938 and under the Department of Health and Public Welfare from 1939 to 1946. On October 4, 1947, the administration and supervision of Welfareville School was transferred to the Social Welfare Commission which replaced the Bureau of Public Welfare after its abolition.[14] On January 3, 1951, President Elpidio Quirino issued Executive Order No. 396 converting the Social Welfare Commission into Social Welfare Administration,[22] thereby making it the governing agency of Welfareville School. Following the reorganization of the Social Welfare Administration on December 11, 1958, the oversight of Welfareville School was transferred to the Special Subjects and Services Division, and later to the Special Education Unit of the Department of Education.[14][15]

At present, JFMS is directly supervised by the Schools Division Office of Mandaluyong which oversees all public and private elementary and secondary educational institutions, including alternative learning systems in its jurisdiction.[15][23] JFMS is headed by a Special Education Principal with the assistance of three Assistant Principals, for Grade School, Junior High School, and Senior High School, all of whom are designated by the Schools Division Office. The special education units of JFMS are headed by Teachers-in-Charge designated by the principal.[3]

JFMS is broadly organized into three departments: Grade School, Junior High School, and Senior High School, each headed by a department head; 12 grade levels: Grades 1 to 12, each headed by a grade level chairperson; and eight subject areas for Grade School and Junior High School, each headed by a subject area coordinator.[3]

As of 2015, JFMS had a total of 104 personnel complement, including 39 elementary and 36 secondary special education teachers.[1]

Campus Edit

The main campus of JFMS sits on a portion of 56-hectare government land which is now the sprawling Welfareville Compound.[15] Other government agencies located along the vicinity of JFMS include the Nayon ng Kabataan (front), Welfareville Commission (left) and Commission on Population (right). The units of JFMS are located in Metro Manila, except for the National Training School for Boys which is situated in Tanay, Rizal.[15]

People Edit

People affiliated with JFMS as students, graduates, and teaching and non-teaching personnel are called "Fabellans." Graduates of the school are inducted annually as members of the Jose Fabella Memorial School Alumni Association.

Gallery Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ a b c d "About Jose Fabella Memorial School". Jose Fabella Memorial School. 2019.
  2. ^ a b "Government Special Schools". National Council on Disability Affairs. 2019.
  3. ^ a b c d "Organization of Jose Fabella Memorial School". Jose Fabella Memorial School. 2019.
  4. ^ a b Pangan, Angela Maria (1999). "Looking into the Philippine foster care experience: Trends and challenges". Children Australia. 24 (4): 76–88. doi:10.1017/S1035077200009421. ISSN 1035-0772. S2CID 76391720.
  5. ^ a b Bunye, Alfredo M. (January–March 1958). "The Philippine Prison System". Unitas. 31 (1): 121–169.
  6. ^ a b c Murillo, Agapita (1944). "Public Welfare Services in the Philippines, 1898-1941". Social Service Review. 18 (2): 189–204. doi:10.1086/634860. JSTOR 30014210. S2CID 144726136.
  7. ^ Ramos, Ike (June 1988). "The Glimpses of What Was Welfareville "The Children's Village" by Recollection". The Welfarevillians. Vol. 1. p. 2.
  8. ^ Annual Report of the Governor General of the Philippine Islands, 1925. Washington: U.S. Government Printing Office. 1927. p. 76.
  9. ^ Arcilla, Jose S. (2009). "The Culion Leper Colony, 1900s-1970s". Philippine Studies. 57 (2): 307–326. JSTOR 42634012.
  10. ^ Anderson, Warwick (2006). Colonial Pathologies: American Tropical Medicine, Race, and Hygiene in the Philippines. Duke University Press. ISBN 0822388081.
  11. ^ Public Laws Enacted by the Philippine Legislature during the Period August 9, 1929 to February 7, 1930. Vol. 25. Manila, Philippines: Bureau of Printing. 1930. p. 522.
  12. ^ "Commonwealth Act No. 61". Official Gazette of the Republic of the Philippines. October 20, 1936.
  13. ^ "Executive Order No. 326, s. 1958". Official Gazette of the Republic of the Philippines. December 11, 1958.
  14. ^ a b c de Guzman, Leonora (January 1964). The Philippines' Social Welfare Administration: A Historical Account of its Formation, 1946-1956. Master's Thesis, University of Southern California.
  15. ^ a b c d e f g "History of Jose Fabella Memorial School". Jose Fabella Memorial School. 2019.
  16. ^ "President Ferdinand Marcos' Fourth State of the Nation Address". Official Gazette of the Republic of the Philippines. January 7, 1969.
  17. ^ "Republic Act No. 3576". The LawPhil Project of Arellano Law Foundation. 2019.
  18. ^ "Republic Act No 3576". The Corporis Juris. 2019.
  19. ^ Ricafrente, Gerardo S. (2008). White Hero: Dr. Jose F. Fabella, 1888-1945, Father of Public Health and Social Welfare. Mandaluyong, Philippines: Richforehead Publications. ISBN 9789719236443.
  20. ^ "Dr. Jose F. Fabella". Department of Health. 2019.
  21. ^ "Republic Act No. 5260". Chan Robles Virtual Law Library. 2019.
  22. ^ "Executive Order No. 396, s. 1951". Official Gazette of the Republic of the Philippines. January 3, 1951.
  23. ^ "Schools of DepEd Mandaluyong". DepEd Mandaluyong. 2019.

jose, fabella, memorial, school, confused, with, jose, fabella, memorial, hospital, filipino, pang, alaalang, paaralang, jose, fabella, abbreviated, jfms, commonly, known, fabella, public, integrated, special, school, located, welfareville, compound, mandaluyo. Not to be confused with Dr Jose Fabella Memorial Hospital The Jose Fabella Memorial School Filipino Pang alaalang Paaralang Jose Fabella abbreviated as JFMS and commonly known as Fabella is a public integrated special school located in Welfareville Compound Mandaluyong in Metro Manila Philippines 1 Founded on December 3 1925 as the Welfareville School it is one of the oldest educational institutions in Mandaluyong and is currently one of the four public special schools in the Philippines 1 2 It serves as the umbrella organization of 12 special education units located in different parts of Metro Manila and Rizal 3 and offers kindergarten elementary secondary junior and senior high school alternative learning system and special education to regular learners and learners with special education needs 1 Jose Fabella Memorial SchoolPang alaalang Paaralang Jose FabellaAddressWelfareville CompoundMandaluyong Metro Manila 1550PhilippinesCoordinates14 35 06 N 121 02 04 E 14 58500 N 121 03444 E 14 58500 121 03444InformationOther nameWelfareville SchoolTypePublicEstablishedDecember 3 1925 97 years and 255 days FounderJose FabellaOversightDepartment of EducationPrincipalRoberto P RedobanteFaculty75 2015 GradesK to 12Enrollment2 622 2014 LanguageEnglish FilipinoCampusUrbanColor s Green and yellow SongThe JFMS MarchNicknameFabellanNewspaperThe Fabellan JournalWebsitejfms wbr depedmandaluyong wbr orgDr Jose Fabella the Father of Public Health and Social Welfare in the Philippines Contents 1 History 1 1 JFMS Units 2 Administration 3 Campus 4 People 5 Gallery 6 ReferencesHistory EditThe history of JFMS traces its roots to Act No 2671 enacted by the Philippine Legislature on January 10 1917 which established the first government orphanage and marked the beginning of the national child welfare program in the Philippines 4 5 On December 3 1924 Act No 3203 was passed placing public institutions intended for the care custody correction education and training of orphans homeless neglected abused defective and delinquent children under the administration and supervision of the Bureau of Public Welfare 6 On January 6 1925 the Bureau of Public Welfare purchased a 56 hectare land in the municipality of San Felipe Neri Province of Rizal where the government s child caring institutions were established on December 3 1925 and collectively called Welfareville Institutions 4 5 7 8 It originally consisted of 1 the Philippine Training School for Boys and the Philippine Training School for Girls which catered to delinquent boys and girls 2 orphanage to provide for the care of destitute children and children of leprous parents 3 nursery for non leprous children below two years of age to provide care of children of leprous parents born in Culion 9 10 4 home for the mentally defective children to provide care and treatment of boys and girls who are mentally defective and 5 home for the aged and the infirm to provide institutional care for such persons who are destitute 6 A school was also established called Welfareville School to provide academic instruction and vocational training to orphans and wards of Welfareville Institutions Due to the increasing number of orphans and other beneficiaries admitted to Welfareville Institutions a sum of 60 000 was appropriated by the end of 1929 for the construction of additional buildings for orphans invalids and aged people 11 A sum of 21 000 was also appropriated by virtue of Commonwealth Act No 61 enacted on October 20 1936 for the continued operation and maintenance of Welfareville Institutions 12 On December 11 1958 President Carlos P Garcia issued Executive Order No 326 reorganizing the Social Welfare Administration an agency created following the abolition of Bureau of Public Welfare which used to administer and supervise the Welfareville Institutions This resulted to the transfer of oversight of Welfareville School to the Department of Education Under this arrangement the Welfareville School provided formal education to orphans and wards of Welfareville Institutions which it subsequently called special education units with the Social Welfare Administration retaining jurisdiction of the institutions 13 14 For many years since its establishment there have been calls to change the name of the school to remove the stigma associated with it as the dumping ground of society s rejects 15 16 On June 21 1963 Republic Act No 3576 was passed changing the name of Welfareville School to Jose Fabella Memorial School 17 18 This was in honor of Dr Jose Fabella the first Commissioner of the Bureau of Public Welfare 6 and considered as the Father of Public Health and Social Welfare in the Philippines 19 who laid the plan for the development of Welfareville Institutions 15 20 Following an agreement between the Philippine government and the United Nations Children s Fund to upgrade the child welfare services in the Philippines Republic Act No 5260 was enacted on June 15 1968 which called for the dispersion and decentralization of the Welfareville Institutions 21 This led to the dispersal of the special education units of JFMS in Metro Manila and outskirts On August 11 2011 Republic Act No 9155 was passed which placed JFMS under the Schools Division Office of Mandaluyong At present JFMS is one of the four public special schools in the Philippines 2 and consists of a flagship campus in Mandaluyong which caters to regular learners and learners with learning disabilities and behavioral problems and 12 special education units located in different parts of Metro Manila and Rizal which cater to learners with various special education needs 3 15 JFMS Units Edit Unit Location Learners ProfileNayon ng Kabataan Welfareville Compound Mandaluyong abused orphaned abandoned neglected and exploited children aged 7 to 17 years oldBagong Sinag Special School National Center for Mental Health Mandaluyong mentally handicapped patientsJose Fabella Center Correctional Road Mandaluyong strandees transients vagrants and mendicantsDangerous Drugs Board European Union Treatment and Rehabilitation Center Diliman Quezon City people with drug dependenceCRIBS Foundation Inc Industrial Valley Marikina abandoned neglected surrendered and female minor survivors of child abuseSpecial Learning Center City Hall Quezon City children with behavioral problemsDepartment of Health Treatment and Rehabilitation Center Bicutan Taguig children and adults with drug addictionElsie Gaches Village Alabang Muntinlupa abandoned and neglected children with mild to severe mental disordersNational Training School for Girls Alabang Muntinlupa abandoned female street childrenNational Training School for Boys Tanay Rizal male juveniles in conflict with the law aged 9 to 17 years oldHaven for Children Alabang Muntinlupa boys aged 7 to 13 recovering from substance abuseMolave Youth Homes Diliman Quezon City children with behavioral problemsAdministration EditSchool Principals of Jose Fabella Memorial SchoolBalbino T JesusaMaximo C SongcoIgnacio F LimIgnacio N AlcantaraGerardo A ConsolacionFortunata A RabangAida S Damian Alicia B Reyes Arsenia C Lara Erdelinda G Diaz Olivia L PagurayanCorazon R ReginoRoberto P Redobante served as Officer in Charge of the Office of the PrincipalSince its establishment as Welfareville School on December 3 1925 the school was governed by Bureau of Public Welfare under the Department of Public Instruction from 1925 to 1938 and under the Department of Health and Public Welfare from 1939 to 1946 On October 4 1947 the administration and supervision of Welfareville School was transferred to the Social Welfare Commission which replaced the Bureau of Public Welfare after its abolition 14 On January 3 1951 President Elpidio Quirino issued Executive Order No 396 converting the Social Welfare Commission into Social Welfare Administration 22 thereby making it the governing agency of Welfareville School Following the reorganization of the Social Welfare Administration on December 11 1958 the oversight of Welfareville School was transferred to the Special Subjects and Services Division and later to the Special Education Unit of the Department of Education 14 15 At present JFMS is directly supervised by the Schools Division Office of Mandaluyong which oversees all public and private elementary and secondary educational institutions including alternative learning systems in its jurisdiction 15 23 JFMS is headed by a Special Education Principal with the assistance of three Assistant Principals for Grade School Junior High School and Senior High School all of whom are designated by the Schools Division Office The special education units of JFMS are headed by Teachers in Charge designated by the principal 3 JFMS is broadly organized into three departments Grade School Junior High School and Senior High School each headed by a department head 12 grade levels Grades 1 to 12 each headed by a grade level chairperson and eight subject areas for Grade School and Junior High School each headed by a subject area coordinator 3 As of 2015 JFMS had a total of 104 personnel complement including 39 elementary and 36 secondary special education teachers 1 Campus EditThe main campus of JFMS sits on a portion of 56 hectare government land which is now the sprawling Welfareville Compound 15 Other government agencies located along the vicinity of JFMS include the Nayon ng Kabataan front Welfareville Commission left and Commission on Population right The units of JFMS are located in Metro Manila except for the National Training School for Boys which is situated in Tanay Rizal 15 People EditPeople affiliated with JFMS as students graduates and teaching and non teaching personnel are called Fabellans Graduates of the school are inducted annually as members of the Jose Fabella Memorial School Alumni Association Gallery Edit JFMS quadrangle facing the administration building One of the high school buildings Special education building National Training School for Girls in Alabang Muntinlupa Haven for Children in Alabang Muntinlupa Former Gabaldon building ca 1980sReferences Edit a b c d About Jose Fabella Memorial School Jose Fabella Memorial School 2019 a b Government Special Schools National Council on Disability Affairs 2019 a b c d Organization of Jose Fabella Memorial School Jose Fabella Memorial School 2019 a b Pangan Angela Maria 1999 Looking into the Philippine foster care experience Trends and challenges Children Australia 24 4 76 88 doi 10 1017 S1035077200009421 ISSN 1035 0772 S2CID 76391720 a b Bunye Alfredo M January March 1958 The Philippine Prison System Unitas 31 1 121 169 a b c Murillo Agapita 1944 Public Welfare Services in the Philippines 1898 1941 Social Service Review 18 2 189 204 doi 10 1086 634860 JSTOR 30014210 S2CID 144726136 Ramos Ike June 1988 The Glimpses of What Was Welfareville The Children s Village by Recollection The Welfarevillians Vol 1 p 2 Annual Report of the Governor General of the Philippine Islands 1925 Washington U S Government Printing Office 1927 p 76 Arcilla Jose S 2009 The Culion Leper Colony 1900s 1970s Philippine Studies 57 2 307 326 JSTOR 42634012 Anderson Warwick 2006 Colonial Pathologies American Tropical Medicine Race and Hygiene in the Philippines Duke University Press ISBN 0822388081 Public Laws Enacted by the Philippine Legislature during the Period August 9 1929 to February 7 1930 Vol 25 Manila Philippines Bureau of Printing 1930 p 522 Commonwealth Act No 61 Official Gazette of the Republic of the Philippines October 20 1936 Executive Order No 326 s 1958 Official Gazette of the Republic of the Philippines December 11 1958 a b c de Guzman Leonora January 1964 The Philippines Social Welfare Administration A Historical Account of its Formation 1946 1956 Master s Thesis University of Southern California a b c d e f g History of Jose Fabella Memorial School Jose Fabella Memorial School 2019 President Ferdinand Marcos Fourth State of the Nation Address Official Gazette of the Republic of the Philippines January 7 1969 Republic Act No 3576 The LawPhil Project of Arellano Law Foundation 2019 Republic Act No 3576 The Corporis Juris 2019 Ricafrente Gerardo S 2008 White Hero Dr Jose F Fabella 1888 1945 Father of Public Health and Social Welfare Mandaluyong Philippines Richforehead Publications ISBN 9789719236443 Dr Jose F Fabella Department of Health 2019 Republic Act No 5260 Chan Robles Virtual Law Library 2019 Executive Order No 396 s 1951 Official Gazette of the Republic of the Philippines January 3 1951 Schools of DepEd Mandaluyong DepEd Mandaluyong 2019 Philippines portal Schools portal Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Jose Fabella Memorial School amp oldid 1170475920, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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