筑波大学 | |
Motto | Imagine the future |
---|---|
Type | Public (National) |
Established | October 1973 (founded in 1872) |
President | Kyosuke Nagata |
Academic staff
|
2,616 |
Administrative staff
|
2,284 |
Students | 16,459 |
Undergraduates | 9,798 |
Postgraduates | 6,661 |
Location | Tsukuba, Ibaraki, Japan |
Campus | Urban |
Mascot | None |
Website | www.tsukuba.ac.jp www.global.tsukuba.ac.jp |
The University of Tsukuba (筑波大学 Tsukuba daigaku?), one of the oldest national universities (established by Japanese Government) and one of the most comprehensive research universities in Japan, is in the city of Tsukuba (known as Tsukuba Science City), Ibaraki Prefecture in the Kantō region of Japan. The university has 28 college clusters and schools with around 16,500 students (as of 2014). The main Tsukuba campus covers an area of 258 hectares (636 acres), making it the second largest single campus in Japan. The branch campus is in Bunkyo-ku, Tokyo, which offers graduate programs for working adults in the capital and manages K-12 schools in Tokyo that are attached to the university.
The university's academic strength is in STEMM fields (Science, Technology, Engineering, Mathematics, Medicine), physical education, and related interdisciplinary fields. It is by taking located in Tsukuba Science City which has more than 300 research institutions. The university has had three Nobel laureates (two in Physics and one in Chemistry, see also "History"), and about 70 athletes, their students and alumni, have participated in the Olympic Games.
It has established interdisciplinary Ph.D. programs in Human Biology and Empowerment Informatics, and the International Institute for Integrative Sleep Medicine, which were created through the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology's competitive funding projects.
Its Graduate School of Life and Environmental Sciences is represented on the national Coordinating Committee for Earthquake Prediction.
Their founding philosophy states the University of Tsukuba is "a university which is open to all within and outside of Japan."