Instituto de Ciencias in Zapopan, Jalisco, Mexico, claims its origin to 1591 when the Jesuits first opened a college in Guadalajara. It was then called the Jesuit college of Saint Thomas Aquinas, but was closed with the suppression of the Jesuits in 1767. It reopened in 1906 under the name San José College and in 1920, after the Mexican Revolution, was named Instituto de Ciencias de Jalisco, in the metropolitan area of Guadalajara.[1]

Instituto de Ciencias
Address
Map
Av. Manuel Ávila Camacho 2935, Col. Jacarandas, C.P. 45160, Zapopan, Jalisco, Mexico

Information
TypeJesuit, Catholic
MottoHombres y Mujeres para los Demás (Spanish)
Men and women for others
Established1906; 118 years ago (1906)
RectorGustavo González Castañeda
Teaching staff210
GradesPreschool to 12
GenderCoeducational
Enrollment2,944[1]
Color(s)Red and White
MascotWolves
WebsiteInstituto de Ciencias

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b "Jesuit Flacsi". Retrieved 2017-08-09.

20°42′50.17″N 103°22′47.27″W / 20.7139361°N 103.3797972°W / 20.7139361; -103.3797972