Many facilities of Tohoku University in Japan are built around the ancient battlefield of Sendai.
19 13, Tohoku University became the first university in Japan to recruit female students. 19 1 1 year, Masataro, the first president of Northeastern University and vice minister of education, was appointed as the president of Northeastern University. Tohoku University is also the first university in Japan to accept foreign students.
In 2009, Tohoku University in Japan was selected by the Japanese government as one of the 13 universities dedicated to providing international-level higher education, and a series of degree courses mainly taught in English were launched.
2. Kyoto University
Kyoto University is located in Yoshida Campus, Yuzhi Campus and Gui Lian Campus. It is one of the oldest universities in Japan and has always been among the best in Asia. Kyoto University has about 22,000 students, 10 colleges, 19 graduate schools, 13 research institutions and 2 1 research and education centers. This university was originally composed of law school, medical school, liberal arts school, science school and engineering school.
In just two years, this university has opened a library and a hospital. Later, the School of Economics, Agriculture and Humanities was established, and the first graduate school was established in the middle of the 20th century. This institution has trained many successful researchers, including 65,438+00 Nobel Prize winners, 2 Fields Prize winners and 65,438+0 Gauss Prize winners.
3. University of Tokyo
The University of Tokyo, founded in 1877, is the first national university in Japan.
The University of Tokyo offers various academic courses. At present, there are 10 college, 15 graduate school,1/affiliated research institute (including advanced science and technology research center), 13 school-level center, 3 libraries and 2 advanced research institutes. Students attend classes in the three main campuses of Hometown, Xiaoyu and cypress, but there are facilities related to this university all over Japan. The curriculum structure of this university is a bit unusual. Students receive liberal arts education in one campus for the first two years before transferring to another campus to study their chosen major. These campuses are close to many cultural attractions in Tokyo, including Yanosen, the hometown of temples, and Ueno Park with museums and cherry blossoms. The campus also has good transportation links with the capital center.
4. tokyo institute of technology
Tokyo institute of technology is a national research university located in Tokyo. It is the largest higher education institution in Japan devoted to science and technology education. This university has 6 colleges and more than 40 departments and research centers. Hideki Shirakawa, the Nobel Prize winner, studied in this university. He was the co-winner of the 2000 Nobel Prize in Chemistry.