Northwestern University (Philippines)

Northwestern University (NWU) is a private higher educational institution in Laoag, Philippines. It was formally known as Northwestern Academy before becoming Northwestern College and eventually renaming itself to Northwestern University. The school is not affiliated with Northwestern University in Evanston, Illinois. It is the largest private University in Northern Luzon.[1]

Northwestern University
TypePrivate university
Established1932
PresidentFerdinand Nicolas
Location, ,
18°11′8″N 120°34′1″E / 18.18556°N 120.56694°E / 18.18556; 120.56694
Campus9 hectares (22 acres)
Websitewww.nwu.edu.ph
Northwestern University (Philippines) is located in Luzon
Northwestern University (Philippines)
Location in Luzon
Northwestern University (Philippines) is located in Philippines
Northwestern University (Philippines)
Location in the Philippines

History

edit

In 1932, it was as the Northwest Academy and was converted into a University in 1992.[2]

Academics

edit

Northwestern University has eleven academic departments. Each college has specific target plans which guide them in designing programs which are vertically articulated from the undergraduate to graduate studies. The university offers doctorate, master's, diploma and certificate courses.

Publications

edit
  • The Review is the official college student publication of Northwestern University which is published as a broadsheet and includes an annual literary supplement titled Flame.
  • The Gazette is the bi-annual news magazine of the university reporting on news and events. The Gazette is also supplemented by a newsletter which comes out once a month.
  • Balintataw is the high school student publication of Northwestern University and is published as a broadsheet.
  • The NWU Research Journal is an annual interdisciplinary journal featuring research works of the faculty, personnel, and graduate school students of the University.

References

edit
  1. ^ Hicap, Jonathan M. (8 May 2007). "Honorary Doctorate For Pj Reyes". The Manila Times. Retrieved 5 March 2022.
  2. ^ Bueza, Michael (3 May 2017). "FAST FACTS: Law schools of the 2016 Bar topnotchers". RAPPLER. Retrieved 5 March 2022.
edit