Unibersidad ng Pilipinas Diliman (Filipino) | |
Motto | Honor, Excellence, Service |
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Type | National state university, research university |
Established | June 18, 1908 (116 years and 212 days) 1949 (transfer of main campus to Diliman) |
Academic affiliations |
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Chancellor | Edgardo Carlo Vistan II[1] |
President | Angelo Jimenez |
Academic staff | 3,078 (2023)[2] |
Students | 26,349 (2023)[2] |
Undergraduates | 17,117 (2023)[2] |
Postgraduates | 9,232 (2023)[2] |
Location | Diliman, Quezon City , Philippines 14°39′17.73″N 121°3′53.46″E / 14.6549250°N 121.0648500°E |
Campus | Suburban |
Newspaper | Philippine Collegian |
Colors | UP Maroon UP Forest Green |
Nickname | Fighting Maroons |
Sporting affiliations | University Athletic Association of the Philippines |
Website | upd |
The University of the Philippines Diliman (also called UPD; Filipino: Unibersidad ng Pilipinas Diliman), also referred to as UP Diliman or simply University of the Philippines (UP), is a public, coeducational, research university located in Diliman, Quezon City, Philippines. It was established on February 12, 1949, as the flagship campus and seat of administration of the University of the Philippines System, the national university of the Philippines.
As a member of the University of the Philippines System, it is the fourth oldest and is the largest constituent campus in terms of the number of degree-granting academic units, student population, faculty, and library resources.[3] There are 27 degree-granting units on campus, accounting for 26,349[2] students of which, 17,117 are undergraduates. UP Diliman had a complement of 1,620 regular faculty in 2023, of whom 499 have doctoral degrees.[2]
In addition to the units in the main campus, UP Diliman has extension programs in Angeles City, Pampanga (the Clark Freeport Zone area) and Olongapo, Zambales, as well as a marine laboratory in Bolinao, Pangasinan under the Marine Science Institute,[4] and an annex campus at Bonifacio Global City, Taguig.[5] UP Diliman offers academic programs in 247 major fields.[6] There are 70 programs at the undergraduate level, 109 at the master's level and 68 at the doctoral level.[6]
The UP Diliman campus is also the site of the country's National Science Complex. Notable research units of UP Diliman centered at the National Science Complex include the Marine Science Institute (MSI), the National Institute of Geological Sciences (NIGS), the National Institute of Physics (NIP), the National Institute of Molecular Biology and Biotechnology–Diliman (NIMBB-Diliman), and the National Institute for Science and Mathematics Education Development (NISMED), which are all pioneers of scientific research and development in the Philippines.[7] The Sentro ng Wikang Filipino, devoted to research on the intellectualization of the Filipino language, is also located in the campus.
UP Diliman alumni include a Nobel Peace Prize laureate, Philippine presidents, chief justices of the Philippine Supreme Court, Philippine National Scientists, and Philippine National Artists, the most of any university.[8] Taken as a single university distinct from other UP System campuses, UP Diliman is considered as one of the top 3 institutions of higher learning in the country, based on the reports published by the CWUR University Rankings and the U.S. News & World Report.[9][10]
The Management Review Committee (MRC) was created by UP President Edgardo Angara in the 1980s to evaluate and recommend measures for the university's improvement. The report made by the MRC led to the decision of the Board of Regents to further decentralize the UP administration, declaring UP Diliman an autonomous unit and the system's flagship university on March 23, 1983. This also furthered the reorganization of some major units of the university, with the College of Arts and Sciences being split into three colleges: the College of Science, the College of Arts and Letters and the College of Social Sciences and Philosophy. UP Diliman was formally established as a constituent university on April 23, 1985, at the 976th Meeting of the U.P. Board of Regents.[3]
In the second semester of Academic Year 2012–13, UPD had a student population of 22,031 of whom 15.299 were enrolled in the undergraduate and 6,455 were in the graduate programs. In the same period, UPD offered 70 undergraduate, 109 masters, and 68 doctoral programs in its 27 degree-granting units. These academic programs are under the helm of 1,526 full-time faculty members...
Thirty-four of the country's 57 National Artists are either UP alumni or faculty members. Thirty-six of the 37 National Scientists are from UP.