
ABOUT US
The Naga Parochial School is committed to the formation of children seeking to express their commitment to the person and teaching of Jesus Christ, through the various disciplines, and active participation in the liturgical, sacramental and missionary life of the Church. ​NPS seeks to provide a deeper understanding of the Christian message of salvation and its meaning to today's Filipinos. Thus, helping them to see, feel, and understand the situation in which they are to be redeemed and to redeem, and to effect social change by becoming a community in solidarity with the poor, and by participation in bringing about the Good News of our liberation and the restoration of our God-given dignity as persons.
SCHOOL MISSION
AND
VISION
The Naga Parochial School, in fulfilling the mandate she received from the Holy Mother, the Church, carries out the mission,
"To promote the total and harmonious development of her students, imbibing the Gospel values of Jesus, and committed to the service of faith and promotion of justice."
In response to the current challenges of the times, the Naga Parochial School envisions,
"To become a Christ-centered catholic educational community in Bicol, manned by competent and qualified staff, producing lifelong learners who are globally competent, spiritually and morally upright, and socially responsible K to 12 graduates."

Naga Parochial School was founded by Bishop Pedro Santos after the Second World War, in 1947 at the Casa Parroquial. This same 'casa' , in the late 1860's housed the first school of the Daughters of Charity which later became the Colegio de Santa Isabel.
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In the early part of the 20th century, the Camarines Sur Academy was established at the Cathedral. The academy was the forerunner of the Ateneo.
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Msgr. Porfirio Ramin (front, center), the Vicar General and Parish Priest of the Cathedral was the first Director of the Naga Parochial School.
The old school building of NPS was an 'L-shaped wooden structure' that stretched from the 'convento' to the old quadrangle. The first classrooms and offices were part of the parish convent. The old buildings, however, have been replaced by concrete ones.
