SANTA CRUZ INSTITUTE - MARINDUQUE INC.
This blog, is not a official representation of Santa Cruz Institute and has been created by a College of Education Student.The creator reserve the right to remove or edit any material deemed inappropriate. Whatever the creator have posted it didn’t reflect the whole institution and not intended to give wrong information that may result a negative feedback to the Institution, its management, staff and administrations.
Wednesday, April 15, 2015
SCI's Grand Alumni Homecoming on April 29,30 2015
Santa Cruz, Marinduque (April 16, 2015)
Sa patuloy na pagtangkilik at pagmamahal ng mga matatagumpay na Alumni ng institusyong ito, muling magsasama sama ang ang mga nagtapos mula Batch 1956 hanggang Batch 2011 upang magdiwang at magsaya sa gaganaping Grand Alumni Homecoming 2015 sa pagsisikap at pagpupursige ng SCIAA President Dra. Ninia Rodil De-Luna kasama ang buong Batch 1989.
Bago pa man magumpisa ang naturang Grand Alumni Homecoming, nauna ng nagbigay ng proyekto ang buong Alumni sa pagpapapintura (repainting) ng palibot ng buong institusyon.
At sa darating na April 29,30 2015, muling magsasaya ang buong Santa Cruz lalong higit ang mga nagsipagtapos sa institusyong ito sa dalawang araw na pagdiriwang.
Muli po ang lahat ay inaanyayahang dumalo sa naturang pagdiriwang. Mangyari magsadya sa tindahan ni SB. Joey Quindoza sa harap ng DEPED Office sa mga karagdagang mga katanungan.
MABUHAY SCI. MABUHAY ALUMNI!
Wednesday, July 30, 2014
Battle of Paye commemorates in Province of Marinduque
The province of Marinduque commemorates one of the most important events that unfolded in the province which was part of the Filipino people’s struggle toward independence, which at that time was being threatened with the creeping American invasion of the Philippine islands a year after General Emilio Aguinaldo’s declaration. It happened on July 31st, 1900 in Sitio Paye, Barangay Balimbing, Boac, Marinduque, where the Filipino revolutionaries fought a gallant stand and attempted to drive the new imperialist powers away from further advancing before being subdued by the American forces. However, the Filipino troops would rebound with a major victory over the aggressors, via the Battle of Pulang Lupa. To date, a historical marker depicted by two cannons now adorn the historical site, and the day is observe as a local holiday throughout the province.
Location: Marinduque
Venue: Sitio Paye, Barangay Balimbing, Boac, Marinduque
Date: From July 31, 2014 to July 31, 2014
Time: 8:00 am
Friday, July 19, 2013
Louie Pineda a new Marinduqueno for a Worldwide tournament
By: Jomar L. Linga
(Louie Pineda after receiving the Medal and Certificate of Appreciation)
(Louie with SCI teaching Staff and School President Mrs. Rachel R. Pedro)
Fourth Year Bachelor of
Secondary Education Student
(Louie Pineda after receiving the Medal and Certificate of Appreciation)
A young boy, only 16 years old, now a Senior High
School as Night High School Dept at
Santa Cruz Institute made it not just on the national event but at a worldwide
venue of sports event in USA.
I first met this boy way back January 2013 for the celebration of 62nd
Foundation Day of Santa Cruz Institute after the School Vice President Mr. Joel
Pedro introduces Louie Pineda who makes it as 8th placer in
Worldwide ranking of Table Tennis Championship game in London.
He returned home with bacon last January after his first
tournament in London as rank 8th placer. And such an honor to know
that he will back again abroad and in early this July in Las Vegas Nevada for another Championship
Match.
(Louie with SCI teaching Staff and School President Mrs. Rachel R. Pedro)
At first and it’s true that Louie is a shy boy a very humble
student and a lovable son. A religious one as member of Iglesia Ni Kristo here
in Santa Cruz Marinduque where he first discovered his talent since this sect
is promoting badminton and table tennis for their youth members.
Louie participate Palarong Pambansa last March in Zamboanga City
and awarded as Gold Medal on his chosen category same with another SCI Student
from Grade 8. They represent Santa Cruz as his home town, Marinduque as his
Province and Region IV – MIMAROPA as his Region.
(Louie with Vice Mayor Ismael Lim and Sangguniang Bayan Member with Mrs. Rachel Pedro)
Last day July 18 2013, exactly 7:00pm at Santa Cruz Town
Plaza, Santa Cruz Institute (Marinduque) Inc. give a warmed welcome to him.
Night High School Head Mr. Romeo Jimenez and Night High School teaching Staff
and students, Day High School and College Dept cheers the new athlete after the
SCI Brassband made a short parade to the town. Together with Santa Cruz Vice Mayor
Ismael Lim and four Municipal Councilor, his Mother and Father (fresh from the
church where they are member) and Mrs. Rachel R. Pedro escorted Louie upstairs
of the Plaza.
“Sa mga sumuporta po maraming-maraming salamat po. Sa mga
kapwa ko mag-aaral muli po maraming-maraming salamat po” a short message of
Louie Pineda.
According to Vice Mayor Lim, while at the event in Las Vegas Convention Center, Louie requested to his trainor to wear his shirt “SANTA CRUZ,
MARINDUQUE” are printed before the event.
As a result of hardwork and trainings he bagged the First
Place.
From your SCI family Congratulation, you are such a real
PRIDE and a true blooded MARINDUQUENO.
More photos is at SCI - Marinduque facebook fanpage.
Thursday, July 4, 2013
Farewell Sir Toots
Almost 4 days have past since Mr Gerald Gene "Sir Toots" Querubin passed away last Monday morning.. Heart problem (enlargement of the heart) is the cause of his death. Sir Toots aged 38 was too young to say that this is not the right time for him to passed away.
Sir Toots is an educator (graduate of University of the Philippines ), a professor in Marinduque State College (Boac) and Santa Cruz Institute (Santa Cruz), a proud mountaineer, a tourism advocate, a news correspondent ( of Philippine Daily Inquirer ) a great son to his parents, and a brother to his 2 sister and a brother.
Tomorrow at 2:00pm will be his last funeral rites to be held at Holy Cross Parish Church located here in the town of Santa Cruz. Students both from Marinduque State College and Santa Cruz Institute, co-teachers friends and relatives are all expected to be part of this farewell event.
Central College Organization new sets of Officers (A.Y. 2013-2014)
SANTA CRUZ
INSTITUTE (MARINDUQUE) INC.
Santa Cruz, Marinduque
CENTRAL
COLLEGE ORGANIZATION (CCO)
A.Y.
2013-2014
PRESIDENT : RETIRO, ROY
VICE PRESIDENT : REYNA, PRINCESS KAYE
SECRETARY : RAMIRO, REBECCA
ASSISTANT SECRETARY : QUEZADA, RYAN
TREASURER : RIEGO, CATHERINE
ASST. TREASURER : VILLANUEVA, CHRISTINE
AUDITOR : VILLARON, MJ
P.I.O. / S.I.O. : LINGA, JOMAR
BUSINESS MANAGER : RAMORES, EMMANUEL
REPRESENTATIVES
EDUCATION DEPARTMENT BSBA/BSC
DEPARTMENT
1.
RAMIRO,
MARK 1. RECTO, ARMAN
2.
LIMPIADA,
JIMBOY 2.
PERALTA,MARY GRACE
3.
REANZARES,
RICHARD 3. REVEDIZO, ROSE ANNE
4.
QUINDOZA,
RICHELL 4.
PERALTA, MARY JOYCE
5.
VITTO,
ARABEL 5.
REVILLA, MARY ANNE
COMPUTER SCIENCE
DEPARTMENT COMPUTER
PROGRAMMING DEPT
1.
ARENUA,
RAYMOND 1.
PERNIA, MARY JOYCE
2.
REAL,
CARLO JAY 2.
PALOMARES, JOSELL ANN
3.
POSAS,
LESLIE JOY 3.
GRIMALDO, JHEN ROSE
4.
RODIL,
JENNY LYN 4.
PIEACES, WILMAR
5.
REGIO,
DANICA 5.
GRIMALDO, JOHN ELKIE
HARDWARE
SERVICING DEPARTMENT
1.
PALUSTRE,
MICHAEL
2.
REVIDIZO,
REYZON
3.
PERGIS,
ABEGAIL
5.
REVILLOSA,
RODERICK
MRS.
HONORATA RICAMARA MRS. RONIELDA RICOHERMOSO
CCO ADVISERS
MRS.
RACHEL RETARDO PERDO M.A.
SCHOOL PRESIDENT
The story of ‘Toots’ Querubin
By Jofel Joyce Lancion, Maricar Cinco
Philippine Daily Inquirer
Read more: http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/437813/the-story-of-toots-querubin#ixzz2Y7kCOLFs
Follow us: @inquirerdotnet on Twitter | inquirerdotnet on Facebook
There was so much more to the byline of Gerald Gene R. Querubin, the Inquirer’s correspondent of eight years in Marinduque.
In his native town of Sta. Cruz, he was a community worker, an environmentalist and a mentor.
“Toots,” Querubin’s nickname, came from “Tot,” his grandfather’s pet name for him when he was a child. His elder sister, Sheila, 40, remembered a quiet boy who would often shut himself in his room and read his books.
“Between us, he’s the loner and I was more like the extrovert type,” Sheila said. “I remember when we were in grade school, he would run to me when the other kids bullied him.”
Toots indeed grew into a very private person. He talked less, but worked hard building his community and inspiring the youth.
His death on Saturday, June 29, at the age of 38 came as a shock to his family and colleagues.
“We may not have spent much time together but the bond has become so strong that such loss we all feel deep, deep down,” wrote Melvin Gascon, Inquirer Correspondents’ Guild president and Nueva Vizcaya correspondent, on Facebook.
Love for Marinduque
Toots’ former student, Ahy Ien, said Toots “never thought twice
about helping other people,” and remembered having both a teacher and a
friend in him.
“You’ve taught me a lot of things, not just (academically) but also to be true to myself,” another former student, Japoy Historillo, said.
Glecy Danao, also on Facebook, promised to keep in mind what her former teacher always told them: to “pay it forward.”
After college at the University of the Philippines in Diliman, Quezon City, Toots worked in a coffee company that offered him a job in Malaysia.
“He could have gone abroad, but he said he’d rather go back to Marinduque and teach,” Sheila said in a phone interview.
Toots taught Philosophy and Humanities subjects at Marinduque State College in Boac and at Sta. Cruz Institute, the same year he began writing for the Inquirer.In 2004, he cofounded the Marinduque Youth Volunteers Corps, a school-based youth organization.Sheila, who stays in Laguna, recalled once she came home to Marinduque and saw the sacks of noodles and goods. “Toots said he collected them for donations to poor families and calamity victims,” she said.
Green tourism
Toots also invited speakers, even rock bands, from Manila to Marinduque. “He said he wanted his students to see the bands perform, as not everyone could afford to go to Manila,” Sheila said.
She said it was his brother’s way of promoting the island province, particularly the virgin caves and the long beaches of the Maniwaya island in Sta. Cruz. His advocacy was “green tourism.”
Among the four siblings, it was Toots who took after the parents’ love for public service. He wanted to run in the 2007 local elections but decided not to because their father, Yolando Sr., was a provincial board member then.
He took a leave of absence from the Inquirer and ran for municipal councilor in Sta. Cruz in May but lost. During the campaign, he went house to house, collecting peso coins in a project dubbed “Piso para sa Bayan.”
‘Piso para sa Bayan’
“The money went to every village (in Sta. Cruz) to buy books for students.
He may have lost in the elections, but he was still able to serve,” Sheila said.
Toots never married. She believed it was his brother’s decision to look after their elderly parents.
“Our mother would always say the little money he earned, he would spend on other people. But we let him be, because we knew he was very fulfilled,” she said.
From his hospital bed when Toots was confined early in June after undergoing angioplasty due to a heart condition, he remained passionate about his environmental advocacy and told his sister about a research he was doing on the lingering effects of the mine tailing that Marcopper Mining Corp. had spilled into the Boac River in 1996.
It was a story that he never got the chance to write.
Philippine Daily Inquirer
10:16 pm | Wednesday, July 3rd, 2013
Read more: http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/437813/the-story-of-toots-querubin#ixzz2Y7kCOLFs
Follow us: @inquirerdotnet on Twitter | inquirerdotnet on Facebook
There was so much more to the byline of Gerald Gene R. Querubin, the Inquirer’s correspondent of eight years in Marinduque.
In his native town of Sta. Cruz, he was a community worker, an environmentalist and a mentor.
“Toots,” Querubin’s nickname, came from “Tot,” his grandfather’s pet name for him when he was a child. His elder sister, Sheila, 40, remembered a quiet boy who would often shut himself in his room and read his books.
“Between us, he’s the loner and I was more like the extrovert type,” Sheila said. “I remember when we were in grade school, he would run to me when the other kids bullied him.”
Toots indeed grew into a very private person. He talked less, but worked hard building his community and inspiring the youth.
His death on Saturday, June 29, at the age of 38 came as a shock to his family and colleagues.
“We may not have spent much time together but the bond has become so strong that such loss we all feel deep, deep down,” wrote Melvin Gascon, Inquirer Correspondents’ Guild president and Nueva Vizcaya correspondent, on Facebook.
Love for Marinduque
“You’ve taught me a lot of things, not just (academically) but also to be true to myself,” another former student, Japoy Historillo, said.
Glecy Danao, also on Facebook, promised to keep in mind what her former teacher always told them: to “pay it forward.”
After college at the University of the Philippines in Diliman, Quezon City, Toots worked in a coffee company that offered him a job in Malaysia.
“He could have gone abroad, but he said he’d rather go back to Marinduque and teach,” Sheila said in a phone interview.
Toots taught Philosophy and Humanities subjects at Marinduque State College in Boac and at Sta. Cruz Institute, the same year he began writing for the Inquirer.In 2004, he cofounded the Marinduque Youth Volunteers Corps, a school-based youth organization.Sheila, who stays in Laguna, recalled once she came home to Marinduque and saw the sacks of noodles and goods. “Toots said he collected them for donations to poor families and calamity victims,” she said.
Green tourism
Toots also invited speakers, even rock bands, from Manila to Marinduque. “He said he wanted his students to see the bands perform, as not everyone could afford to go to Manila,” Sheila said.
She said it was his brother’s way of promoting the island province, particularly the virgin caves and the long beaches of the Maniwaya island in Sta. Cruz. His advocacy was “green tourism.”
Among the four siblings, it was Toots who took after the parents’ love for public service. He wanted to run in the 2007 local elections but decided not to because their father, Yolando Sr., was a provincial board member then.
He took a leave of absence from the Inquirer and ran for municipal councilor in Sta. Cruz in May but lost. During the campaign, he went house to house, collecting peso coins in a project dubbed “Piso para sa Bayan.”
‘Piso para sa Bayan’
“The money went to every village (in Sta. Cruz) to buy books for students.
He may have lost in the elections, but he was still able to serve,” Sheila said.
Toots never married. She believed it was his brother’s decision to look after their elderly parents.
“Our mother would always say the little money he earned, he would spend on other people. But we let him be, because we knew he was very fulfilled,” she said.
From his hospital bed when Toots was confined early in June after undergoing angioplasty due to a heart condition, he remained passionate about his environmental advocacy and told his sister about a research he was doing on the lingering effects of the mine tailing that Marcopper Mining Corp. had spilled into the Boac River in 1996.
It was a story that he never got the chance to write.
Sunday, June 16, 2013
The positions: CCO OFFICERS 2013-2014
Santa Cruz Institute (Marinduque) Inc. | |||||||
College Department | |||||||
OFFICIAL RESULT | |||||||
Positon | Candidates | Precinct 1 | Precinct 2 | Precinct 3 | Precinct 4 | TOTAL | |
PRESIDENT | Daya, Juvarts | ||||||
Retiro, Roy | |||||||
V-PRESIDENT | Penaflorida, Myrna | ||||||
Reyna, Princess Key | |||||||
SECRETARY | Ramiro, Rebecca | ||||||
Real, Christine | |||||||
ASST. SEC | Jurado, Jennifer | ||||||
Quezada, Ryan | |||||||
TREASURER | Riego, Catherine | ||||||
Tagle, Audrey | |||||||
ASST. TREA. | Villanueva, Kristine | ||||||
Zulueta, Jordan | |||||||
AUDITOR | Salaza, Christy | ||||||
Villaron, MJ | |||||||
PIO | Linga, Jomar | ||||||
Rey, Rodalyn | |||||||
BUSS. MANA. | Ramores, Emmanuel | ||||||
Roces, Dennis | |||||||
REPRESENTATIVES | |||||||
EDUCATION DEPT. | |||||||
1 | |||||||
2 | |||||||
3 | |||||||
4 | |||||||
5 | |||||||
BSBA/COMMERCE | |||||||
1 | |||||||
2 | |||||||
3 | |||||||
4 | |||||||
5 | |||||||
BSCS DEPT | |||||||
1 | |||||||
2 | |||||||
3 | |||||||
4 | |||||||
5 | |||||||
COMP PROG | |||||||
1 | |||||||
2 | |||||||
3 | |||||||
4 | |||||||
5 | |||||||
HARDWARE | |||||||
1 | |||||||
2 | |||||||
3 | |||||||
4 | |||||||
5 |
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)