China Daily (Hong Kong)

University opens graduate institute in Singapore

- By CAO CHEN in Shanghai caochen@chinadaily.com.cn

Shanghai Jiao Tong University has unveiled its Asia-Pacific Graduate Institute in Singapore, which represents the university’s efforts to expand the reach of its education and research endeavors.

According to Dong Ming, vicedean of the institute, the facility is aimed at promoting scientific innovation and exploring new prospects around the world.

“We hope to nurture internatio­nal talent that can make contributi­ons to the developmen­t of China and influence the world,” said Dong at the opening ceremony of the institute in Singapore on Nov 28.

The institute was registered as a private education institutio­n by Singapore’s Ministry of Education in October.

The MBA program in the institute will gather teachers with knowledge of the economic developmen­t in both China and Singapore to educate students through business practice case studies. Opportunit­ies for talent exchange and enterprise visits to China will also be provided.

Regarding scientific research, the institute aims to address the common challenges faced by humankind in the future, such as those related to energy, environmen­t and the applicatio­n of artificial intelligen­ce.

The collaborat­ion between SJTU and Singapore started in 1992 when Singapore’s Ministry of Education approved the launch of an MBA program by the university.

In 2001, following the signing of an agreement to bridge economic, trade and cultural collaborat­ion between Singapore and China,

SJTU’s MBA program in Singapore was hosted at Nanyang Technologi­cal University.

The university has also joined CREATE, a large-scale scientific research project initiated by the

National Research Foundation of Singapore, says Dong.

The project aims to pool internatio­nal wisdom to solve major global scientific and technologi­cal problems through multidisci­plinary research.

In addition, since 2012, SJTU has been collaborat­ing with the National University of Singapore in the Energy and Environmen­tal Sustainabi­lity Solutions for Megacities (E2S2) program, exploring solutions to problems related to the developmen­t of cities.

“China-Singapore relations have maintained a good momentum of developmen­t, and I hope the institute will deepen the opening-up of China’s education to the world, and contribute to Singapore’s developmen­t as well as the future of all mankind,” says Hong Xiaoyong, the Chinese ambassador in Singapore.

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