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SLSU-Sogod (Main) Campus. On July 7, 1969, Sogod
National Trade School was created by virtue of Republic Act No.
4352, a vocational institution tasked to answer the problem of lack
of manpower training for adults and out of school youths. Twelve
years after, the school once again was converted into Southern Leyte
School of Arts and Trade, this time transforming it into an institution
of tertiary education. Republic Act 7930 was enacted by the Congress
of the Philippines on March 1, 1995 further converting the school
into a chartered state College and renamed it Southern Leyte State
College of Science and Technology (SLSCST).
Republic Act 9261 which was enacted and approved by Congress and
the Senate Republic of the Philippines on March 7, 2004, established
the Southern Leyte State University by integrating the Southern
Leyte State College of Science and Technology in the Municipality
of Sogod and Tomas Oppus Normal College in the Municipality of Tomas
Oppus. With this development, five higher education campuses were
integrated to comprise the university since SLSCST has been made
host to three other CHED-supervised institutions in October 1999.
Thus. The Southern Leyte State University is composed of institutions
known as the following: SLSU-Sogod (Main) Campus Sogod, Southern
Leyte SLSU-Tomas Oppus Campus Tomas Oppus, Southern Leyte SLSU-Bontoc
Campus Bontoc, Southern Leyte SLSU-San Juan Campus San Juan, Southern
Leyte SLSU-Hinunangan Campus Hinunangan, Southern Leyte.
This 12-hectare facility is situated in Barangay San Roque (main
mampus), seven hundred meters (700 meters) away from the town hall
of Sogod. With the Phil-Japan Friendship Highway (now Daang Maharlika),
Sogod is accessible to the College making it as the excellent center
for quality and relevant education. It is seventy-two kilometers
from the provincial capital, Maasin, 180 kms. from Tacloban City
and is a port of call for boats from Manila, Mindanao and Cebu.
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