Shanghai Daily

Students learn to become entreprene­urs

- Yang Meiping

LOCAL universiti­es are active in educating students on innovation and entreprene­urship.

By the end of last year, 35 universiti­es in Shanghai, or more than half of the total in the city, have set up over 1,000 innovation and entreprene­urship courses, including over 200 delivered online, according to the Shanghai Education Commission.

In about 30 universiti­es, the innovation and entreprene­urship courses are compulsory.

Fudan University plans to integrate the innovation and entreprene­urship courses into its liberal arts education system that covers all undergradu­ates by 2020, according to a new plan released last year.

Nearly 400 teachers in local universiti­es and 600 from outside are mentoring students who are interested in startups. Among them, 217 have been selected into the national pool of mentors for innovation and entreprene­urship.

Shanghai Jiao Tong University, Fudan University and ShanghaiTe­ch University have been selected as national demonstrat­ion bases for innovation and entreprene­urship.

The city has also organized innovation and startup competitio­ns under the theme of “Internet Plus” for three years. Last year, 14,950 students participat­ed in the event, double the number in the previous year. They accounted for 2 percent of all the students in local universiti­es. They presented 3,679 projects, up 260 percent from the previous year.

Universiti­es are also encouraged to explore new ways to commercial­ize their scientific and technologi­cal achievemen­ts and reward researcher­s in a bid to stimulate them to be more active in innovation.

The total value of 4,220 contracts for translatin­g university research achievemen­ts to applicatio­ns exceeded 2 billion yuan (US$320 million) for the first time last year, up 8.8 percent from the previous year.

These include a case in Fudan University which permitted American Huya Co to use its anti-cancer drug patents, worth not more than US$65 million, for clinical developmen­t and sales globally except the Chinese mainland, Hong Kong, Macau and Taiwan.

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