Changhua Girls' Senior High School

Coordinates: 24°04′53″N 120°32′37″E / 24.0813°N 120.5437°E / 24.0813; 120.5437
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Changhua Girls' Senior High School
國立彰化女子高級中學
School entrance
Location
Map
No.62, Guangfu Rd.,
Changhua City, Changhua County,
500, Taiwan (R.O.C.)
Information
TypePublic
MottoHonesty, Diligence, Dignity, Patience
Founded1919
PrincipalCheng Yao-Chung Ph.D.
Staff136
Number of students1767
CampusDowntown
Area36,949 m2 (397,720 sq ft)

The National Changhua Girls’ Senior High School (CHGSH; Chinese: 國立彰化女子高級中學), founded in April 1919, is a high school in Changhua City, Changhua County, Taiwan. There are 45 classes with 1,900 students and 140 faculty members.

Principals of the school[edit]

Japanese Colonial Period[edit]

Since 1919, six Japanese were assigned as principals of the school.

Since World War II[edit]

Since 1945, the school has been led by fourteen principals and all of them have been women, except the present principal, Kong Jian-Kuo.

  • Chou Ze Lan (丑澤蘭 December 1945~May 1946)
  • Huang Jun (黃 濬 June 1946~February 1947)
  • Huang Fu Gui (皇甫珪 March 1947~June 1950)
  • Lin Shi Ge (林詩閣 July 1950~August 1950)
  • Fu Xiao Fong (傅曉峰 August 1950~January 1953)
  • Wu Zi Wo (吳子我 February 1953~February 1956)
  • Huang Dong Sheng (黃東生 February 1956~June 1957)
  • Ye Shu Ren (葉淑仁 June 1957~June 1959)
  • Shen Ya Li (沈雅利 June 1959~August 1966)
  • Jing Sheng Ran (景生然 August 1966~September 1968)
  • Bu Qing Kui (卜慶葵 September 1968~August 1979)
  • Xie Yu Ying (謝玉英 August 1979~January 1992)
  • He Yu Qing (賀玉琴 February 1992~January 1998)
  • Chen Yue Qiong (陳月瓊 February 1998~January 2000)
  • Xiao Hui Lan (蕭惠蘭 February 2000~July 2004)
  • Kong Jian-Kuo (孔建國 August 2004~July 2012)
  • Cheng Yao-Chung Ph.D.(鄭曜忠 August 2012~present)

Information[edit]

  • The school has had many names, becoming the National Changhua Girls' Senior High School in 2000.
  • To promote the creed of "learning in serving," students, teachers, alumnae and parents are encouraged to do volunteer services.
  • School clubs include a marching band and honor guard clubs. School has speech contestants in Chinese, English, and Taiwanese who attend speech contests.
  • The school's foreign language courses are taught by foreign teachers. Educational tours to Japan are held every year.
  • The school's alumnae are scattered throughout Taiwan and overseas, and there is an alumnae association.

Facilities[edit]

  • The school boasts a natural environment with green trees. The school makes efforts to plant vegetation and beautify the campus. There are "Blackies" (Malay night herons) on the campus.
  • The school was chosen as the model school of environmental protection by Taiwan's Department of Environmental Protection.
  • The school has a library with a Video On Demand (VOD) system, set up to facilitate students’ learning at any time and to provide special programs as well as movies every month.
  • The school dormitory can accommodate 500 students.

Annual events[edit]

October[edit]

  • College visits for the second graders
  • Target practice for the second graders in Cheng-Kung Hill
  • The performance of school band and honor guards in Double Ten Day

December[edit]

  • Anniversary celebrations and sports meet

January[edit]

  • Year-end banquet

May[edit]

  • School Carnival, held biennially

June[edit]

  • The exhibition of students’ clubs
  • Graduation

Visits to and from Japan[edit]

2004[edit]

2005[edit]

  • In January, the Director of Education Committee of Japan, visited Changhwa Girls’ Senior High.
  • In May, 114 teachers and students from the school visited Himeji Nishi Senior High School in Hyōgo Prefecture and Osaka Prefectural Kitano High School.
  • In August, ten staff who were principal, teachers, and students' parents visited Changhwa.
  • For five days in September, principal Kong went to Japan for the Educational Communication Conference. On September 9, principal Kong visited Matsumoto Agatagaoka high school in Nagano Prefecture.

2006[edit]

  • In May, 155 teachers and students visited the Director of Education Committee of Japan and Prefectural Shingu Senior High School and Seishoukai High School.

2007[edit]

2008[edit]

  • In May, an official from Japan National Tourism Organization's publicity department came to visit. That same month, 190 teachers and students visited Hashimoto High School and Prefectural Shingu Senior High School.

24°04′53″N 120°32′37″E / 24.0813°N 120.5437°E / 24.0813; 120.5437

Notable alumni[edit]

See also[edit]