東吳大學 (
Chinese) | |||||||||||||||
Motto | 養天地正氣 法古今完人 [1] | ||||||||||||||
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Motto in English | Unto A Full Grown Man [2] | ||||||||||||||
Type | Private | ||||||||||||||
Established | Founded 1900, "Reactivated" 1951 | ||||||||||||||
President | Pan Wei-ta (2012-) | ||||||||||||||
Academic staff | 448 full-time, 747 part-time | ||||||||||||||
Undergraduates | 12,000 | ||||||||||||||
Postgraduates | 1,100 | ||||||||||||||
Location | , | ||||||||||||||
Campus | Semi-rural, 37.5 acres (0.152 km2) | ||||||||||||||
Affiliations |
ACUCA U12 Consortium United Board [3] | ||||||||||||||
Mascot | None | ||||||||||||||
Website | www.scu.edu.tw (in English) | ||||||||||||||
Chinese name | |||||||||||||||
Simplified Chinese | 东吴大学 | ||||||||||||||
Traditional Chinese | 東吳大學 | ||||||||||||||
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Soochow University ( Chinese: 東吳大學) is a private university in Taipei, Taiwan. Soochow University maintains a church and a Methodist [4] minister in residence, though it may be considered a secular institution. The university is noted for studies in comparative law and accounting. [5] [6] [7][ better source needed]
The original Soochow University was founded by Methodists in Suzhou, Jiangsu, Qing dynasty in 1900 as a merger of three institutions: the Buffington Institute and the Kung Hang School in the city of Soochow (now spelled Suzhou), in Jiangsu Province, and the Anglo-Chinese College in Shanghai.
After the Chinese Civil War, members of the Soochow Alumni Association who fled to Taiwan established a new institution there in 1951. A law school was opened in 1954, and a full university was certified in 1971. [8]
Meanwhile in Suzhou, the original university merged with the Southern Jiangsu College of Culture and Education and the Department of Mathematics and Physics at Jiangnan University to form the Jiangsu Teacher's College in 1952, which revived the name Soochow University in 1982. However, while the English names are identical, the one in Suzhou uses the Chinese name 蘇州 (Soochow), not the original 東吳 (Tung-wu).
The campus is home to the tomb of the prominent Chinese politician and diplomat Wang Ch'unghui, who fled to Taiwan after the establishment of the People's Republic of China in 1949.
In 2014, the Japan–Taiwan Exchange Association listed Soochow University as one of the seven well-known Taiwanese universities. [9]
In 1981, the first joint-issued class-made magazine, completely founded by students, called Xu Ai, appeared in Soochow University.[ citation needed] Students voiced political opinions as to temporal society, but the magazine was quickly banned by the strong commend of the college.
However, the next year, the political students published another critical magazine, Monthly Political Magazine of Soochow University. It was banned, a result from publishing an advertisement of Shen Geng, which was a magazine of the Chinese Nationalist Party control.[ citation needed]
On 9 September 1982, the Academic Conference of Political Department [10] organized an audit for second year students about Taipei City Council.[ citation needed] But the lead teacher Huang Erxuan[ citation needed] was charged by leading a group of students to the council to listen the interpolation produced by the outside party senator. He was fired the next year.
Soochow University (Taiwan) rankings | |
---|---|
Global – Overall | |
QS World [11] | 1401+ (2024) |
Regional – Overall | |
QS Asia [12] | 551–600 (2024) |
Soochow University is a member of the Excellent Long-Established University Consortium of Taiwan (ELECT), [13] which is an organization devoted to inter-school cooperation and sharing resources between schools. The twelve union universities were all founded over half a century with each of their own strengths covering professional fields of science and technology, commerce, agronomy, medicine, media, law, education, art and design, etc. These schools allow students to have multiple options, cross-domain learning and a broader adaptive development for their education.
Soochow University in Taiwan has two branches: a downtown branch near the Republic of China (ROC) presidential office in Taipei's
Zhongzheng district and the main campus near the
National Palace Museum in Taipei's
Shilin district. The law and business colleges are in the downtown campus. All other colleges are located in the main campus.
The Shilin Campus is in the mountainous terrain of the Shilin District.
Faculty and student housing are available on the main campus although they cannot meet demand. There are three female student dorms and two male student dorms with a total occupancy of 1,500. Many students commute to campus by bus and the subway system.
The Downtown Campus is in the Zhongzheng District.
Taiwan's first private university is headed by a president and a board of trustees. The University is divided into six schools or colleges, each having a variety of departments:
Sports play an important role in campus life. The downtown campus has tennis and basketball courts. The main campus has indoor and outdoor basketball courts, tennis courts, a race track, a mini rock climbing wall, and a field that is used for softball and soccer. Each year the university holds two major student athletic events.
Much of the sports facilities on the main campus are on land owned by the Taipei city government rather than by the university. The city government has considered reclaiming the land to build an expressway but has decided to back off with this project.
The university has 183 student clubs or societies, such as Association for Diplomacy Research (SCU A.D.R.).