Current location - Education and Training Encyclopedia - University ranking - Is the School of Foreign Languages of Jilin University public or private?
Is the School of Foreign Languages of Jilin University public or private?
Hello!

1, the second-level college of Jilin University, belongs to the public sector.

2. You can sign up for the senior high school entrance examination (online registration).

3. Look at school profile:

The School of Foreign Languages of Jilin University was founded in 1993, and its predecessor was the Department of Foreign Languages and Literature of Jilin University. Its establishment and development are synchronized with the development of China's diplomacy, foreign trade and foreign cultural exchanges. 1950 has only one Russian class, and 1953 established the Russian language department. 1960 A new English major was added, and in the same year it was renamed the Department of Foreign Languages and Literature. 1963 Add Japanese major. At the end of 1970s, with the development of China's reform, opening up and career, the Department of Foreign Languages and Literature of Jilin University was approved as one of the first batch of master's degree authorization points in China, and it was qualified to recruit English language and literature, Japanese language and literature, and Russian language and literature graduate students, and it was expanded into the School of Foreign Languages of Jilin University in 1993.

For decades, Foreign Languages Institute has trained a large number of undergraduates and postgraduates for our country. They are found in all walks of life at home and abroad, and many of them have become the business backbones, well-known experts and scholars and main leaders of their own units and departments.

At present, the School of Foreign Languages of Jilin University has six departments of English, Japanese, Russian, Korean, Spanish and German and five master's degree authorization points. Every year, not only undergraduate students majoring in English, Japanese, Russian, Korean and Spanish are enrolled, but also graduate students majoring in English language and literature, Japanese language and literature, Russian language and literature, foreign linguistics and applied linguistics, and Asian-African language and literature (Korean language and literature). In 2003, there were faculty members 1 12, including 53 professors and associate professors. In 2002-2003, there were 1 126 undergraduates and 282 postgraduates.