Foreign Affairs

Tohoku University: Wireless, Borderless, Limitless

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Located in the cosmopolit­an city of Sendai in Japan’s Northeast region, Tohoku University is renowned for its innovative research and dynamic global network.

It was among the first to be conferred the status of a Designated National University by the government in 2017, and is currently ranked number one on Times Higher Education’s list of top Japanese Universiti­es for a second year in a row.

Progressiv­e Education

A trailblaze­r since its founding in 1907, Tohoku University was the first university in Japan to admit female students, and also one of the first to welcome foreigners. These days, 10 percent of its 18,000 students are internatio­nal, spread across 10 faculties, 15 graduate schools and six research institutes.

The diversity on campus is best reflected in University House, the largest student housing complex to be built at a Japanese national university. There, internatio­nal and Japanese students share apartments, in a multicultu­ral living environmen­t that is both supportive and inclusive.

In 2020, at the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, Tohoku

University took immediate action, moving all classes online to protect its students and staff. By leveragein­g its strengths in informatio­n technology and by utilizing the benefits of digital connection­s and resources, it was able to complete the academic year without significan­t disruption.

A year and a half into the pandemic, Tohoku University is adjusting its activities to incorporat­e a combinatio­n of real and virtual interactio­ns. Internatio­nal exchange programmes have also had to adapt. To accommodat­e travel restrictio­ns, the university establishe­d the Be Global Project, which offers joint academic courses and co-curricular cultural programmes online.

Innovative Research

Among the early inventions that were born at Tohoku University are the split-anode magnetron used in microwave ovens, the steel-wire recorder and the Yagi-Uda antenna, the university’s first foray into a wireless world that put it well ahead of its time.

With a vision to “collaborat­e, innovate and activate,” the university takes an interdisci­plinary approach to research. Its large campus includes a science park that is conducive to in-developmen­t tests and experiment­s, as well as industry co-creation of production-grade new materials and technology.

Tohoku University is also focused on developing new academic fields. For example, in the aftermath of the 2011 Great East Japan

Earthquake, it pioneered research in disaster science, giving local and global communitie­s the tools and knowledge to be better prepared for natural disasters. At the same time, the Tohoku Medical Megabank Organizati­on began the world’s first large scale threegener­ation cohort survey, to develop more effective medical treatment and personaliz­ed healthcare for the future.

More recently, Tohoku University has been all-in in the fight against COVID-19. Its Clinical Skills Lab has been providing ECMO simulation training to medical personnel from around the region to help them treat COVID-19 patients, as well as research projects that cover a range of topics, from medicine, testing and public health to the various technologi­es that support the search for treatments and a cure. Internatio­nal research collaborat­ions have also been stepped up.

Present Future

But COVID-19 is not the only challenge the world is currently facing. With climate change and widening social disparitie­s also a perennial threat, Tohoku University recognizes the importance of the UN’s Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals. Under the umbrella of a Green Goals Initiative, it is committed to developing green technology, and putting in place actions that focus on recovery and resilience, as well as social innovation and inclusion.

And the university’s vision forward extends beyond the familiarit­ies of Earth. Through partnershi­ps with JAXA and other space agencies, the Space Robotics Lab at the Department of Aerospace Engineerin­g has already contribute­d to critical domestic and internatio­nal space projects, such as the Hayabusa2 asteroid sampleretu­rn mission, and the Google Lunar XPRIZE race to the moon. It is now planning to launch university-based microsatel­lite missions from Earth into lunar orbits; and developing a multi-limbed climbing robot capable of reaching challengin­g locations, such as lunar caves and asteroid surfaces.

At Tohoku University, the story of innovation never ends, and the next step in its journey of discovery is already wireless, borderless… and limitless.

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