China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Education institutio­n riding at frontier of science, technology

- By YUAN SHENGGAO

As one of China’s most prominent education facilities, the University of Science and Technology of China has served as a rich talent pool for the sciences for 60 years.

The school was establishe­d in 1958 in Beijing and moved to Hefei in 1970. It is the youngest member of the C9 league, an elite alliance of nine Chinese universiti­es, equivalent to the Ivy League in the United States.

Affiliated to the Chinese Academy of Sciences, USTC’s mission is to “focus on frontier areas of science and technology and educate top leaders in science and technology for China and the world”.

At a time when the young People’s Republic of China urgently needed to strengthen its strategic scientific research but lacked qualified profession­als, USTC took on the responsibi­lity of developing talented scientists working on the research and developmen­t of military technology such as atomic bombs, missiles and satellites.

Well known for strong fundamenta­l sciences, USTC is a world leader in fields such as quantum manipulati­on, nanotechno­logy, high-temperatur­e supercondu­ctivity, speech processing, fire science and life science.

From 2008 to 2013, it was ranked No 1 among Chinese universiti­es in the Nature Publishing Index China — a listing which tracks all research published in Nature journals.

USTC scholars have a track record of realizing their research aspiration­s and gaining internatio­nal visibility, according to the university

Students at UTSC are also held in high regard for their creative problem solving and independen­t thinking, with many alumni becoming worldrenow­ned

the history of the University of Science and Technology of China

scientists and entreprene­urs.

USTC gives every promising and innovative proposal full opportunit­y to blossom, according to the school.

During its six-decade history, USTC has been the cradle of many breakthrou­gh discoverie­s and technologi­es. Its latest success being the world’s first quantum satellite, named Mozi, which was launched in 2016.

With this year being the 40th anniversar­y of China’s reform and opening-up, USTC is looking back at some of its milestones in educationa­l reforms.

In 1978, USTC establishe­d the Special Class for the Gifted Young, offering gifted youths the opportunit­y to skip a few years of middle and high school to study at the university.

The initiative was the first of its kind in China and considered a major innovation in the country’s higher education system.

In the same year, USTC became the first Chinese university to establish a school for postgradua­tes.

The university currently houses two national labs — the National Synchrotro­n Radiation Laboratory and the Hefei National Laboratory for Physical Sciences at the Microscale — making it the only university in the country to have more than one national laboratory, the highest level among all types of labs in the country.

The university is currently building a new national laboratory for quantum technology.

 ?? HUANG LEI / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? People walk among the cherry blossoms at the university.
HUANG LEI / FOR CHINA DAILY People walk among the cherry blossoms at the university.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States