Generated by GPT-5-mini| University of the Philippines College of Science | |
|---|---|
| Name | University of the Philippines College of Science |
| Established | 1983 (as College; sciences date to 1910) |
| Type | Constituent college |
| City | Quezon City |
| Country | Philippines |
University of the Philippines College of Science is a constituent college within the University of the Philippines Diliman system, hosting undergraduate and graduate programs in the natural sciences. It serves as a hub for scholarship linking historic Philippine institutions such as the Philippine National Scientist program, national research mandates like the Science and Technology Act of 1982, and regional networks including the Association of Southeast Asian Institutions of Higher Learning. The college maintains collaborations with agencies including the Department of Science and Technology, the National Research Council of the Philippines, and international partners such as the International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry.
The college traces roots to the early science instruction at University of the Philippines Manila and the establishment of the College of Liberal Arts and College of Medicine and Surgery in the early 20th century, later consolidated in University of the Philippines Diliman after World War II and the Battle of Manila (1945). Landmark developments include curricular reforms following the passage of the Higher Education Act of 1994 and infrastructural rebuilding inspired by postwar reconstruction efforts similar to those after the Battle of Leyte Gulf. Notable historical affiliations include collaborations with the International Council for Science, partnerships modeled on exchanges with the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and participation in national scientific policy shaped by leaders honored as National Scientist of the Philippines.
The college offers degree programs in departments such as Department of Biology (UP), Department of Chemistry (UP), Department of Physics (UP), Department of Mathematics (UP), Institute of Biology (UP), and units aligned with professional societies like the Philippine Society of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, the Philippine Institute of Chemistry, and the Physical Society of the Philippines. Graduate offerings include master’s and doctoral degrees that prepare students for fellowships with bodies such as the Fulbright Program, the Australian Awards, and the Japan International Cooperation Agency. The curriculum emphasizes linkages to international standards from organizations like the International Mathematical Union, the International Council on Archives, and the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change for interdisciplinary tracks.
Research centers affiliated with the college conduct investigations in fields connected to agencies including the Philippine Atmospheric, Geophysical and Astronomical Services Administration, the Philippine Genome Center, and the National Institute of Geological Sciences (UP). Key laboratories collaborate with projects funded by the National Science Foundation (United States), the European Research Council, and the Asian Development Bank. Centers host programs that engage with conservation entities such as the World Wildlife Fund and climate initiatives related to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change. Research outputs have been presented at conferences organized by the American Chemical Society, the American Physical Society, and the Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics.
The college is administered under the governance structures of University of the Philippines Diliman alongside other units like the College of Engineering (UP Diliman), the College of Social Sciences and Philosophy (UP Diliman), and the College of Arts and Letters (UP Diliman). Its leadership includes a dean appointed through procedures aligned with the Commission on Higher Education guidelines and works with committees similar to those in the Board of Regents of the University of the Philippines. Administrative coordination extends to partnerships with state institutions such as the Department of Education (Philippines), the Department of Science and Technology (Philippines), and municipal agencies in Quezon City.
Faculty include recipients of honors comparable to the National Scientist of the Philippines, awardees of the Outstanding Young Scientist Award (National Academy of Science and Technology), and fellows of international academies like the Third World Academy of Sciences. Alumni have taken leadership roles in institutions such as the Philippine Tropical Disease Association, the Philippine Genome Center, the National Institute of Physics (UP), as well as public service in offices akin to the Senate of the Philippines and executive posts in agencies like the Department of Health (Philippines). Graduates have pursued advanced study at universities including the Harvard University, the University of Cambridge, the University of Tokyo, and the University of California, Berkeley.
Facilities are concentrated on the UP Diliman campus with research buildings comparable to the National Institute of Molecular Biology and Biotechnology (BIOTECH), teaching laboratories modeled on those in the College of Medicine and Surgery (UP Manila), and observatories linked with the National Astronomical Observatory of Japan network. The campus hosts museums and collections like the Zoological Museum (UP), the Herbarium (UP), and specimen repositories used in collaboration with the National Museum of the Philippines. Support infrastructure connects to utilities and transport services coordinated with Quezon City local government.
Student organizations include academic societies similar to the UP Astronomical Society, the UP Chemistry Society, the UP Biological Society, and the Mathematical Society of the Philippines student chapters, plus community outreach groups modeled after the UP Volunteer Network. Student publications and events bring speakers from institutions like the Academia Sinica, the Royal Society, and the National Academy of Sciences (United States), while competitions engage with national contests such as the Philippine Mathematical Olympiad and international programs like the International Biology Olympiad.