Difference between revisions of "Ewha Womans University" - New World Encyclopedia
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{{Infobox University | {{Infobox University | ||
| name = Ewha Womans University | | name = Ewha Womans University | ||
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| image_size = 180px | | image_size = 180px | ||
| motto = Truth, Goodness, and Beauty<br />{{lang|ja|眞 · 善 · 美}} | | motto = Truth, Goodness, and Beauty<br />{{lang|ja|眞 · 善 · 美}} | ||
− | | established = | + | | established = May 31 1886 as Ewha School, college-course installed in 1910, re-established as a university on August 15 1945. |
| type = [[Private school|Private]] | | type = [[Private school|Private]] | ||
| president = Lee Bae-Yong | | president = Lee Bae-Yong | ||
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}} | }} | ||
− | '''Ewha Womans University''' ([[Korean language|Korean]]: 이화여자대학교, [[Hanja]]: 梨花女子大學校) | + | '''Ewha Womans University''' ([[Korean language|Korean]]: 이화여자대학교, [[Hanja]]: 梨花女子大學校), refers to a private women's university in central [[Seoul]], [[South Korea]]. One of the city's largest institutions of higher learning, the world's largest female educational institute, Ewha ranks with the best-known universities in South Korea, and the top women's university. Mary F. Scranton, an [[Methodist Episcopal Church|Methodist Episcopal]] missionary from the United States, founded Ewhain 1886. |
− | The | + | The [[pear]] blossom represents the school flower, a [[Sino-Korean]] term for the school's name. While "Womans" seems grammatical mistake in the name, in the late 19th century, at the time of the university's founding, "womans" (as opposed to women's or woman's) constituted the correct english spelling. |
==History== | ==History== | ||
− | Ewha Womans University traces its roots back to Mary Scranton's '''Ihwa Hakdang''' (also '''Ewha Hakdang'''; 이화학당 梨花學堂) mission school for girls, which opened with only one student on | + | Ewha Womans University traces its roots back to Mary Scranton's '''Ihwa Hakdang''' (also '''Ewha Hakdang'''; 이화학당 梨花學堂) mission school for girls, which opened with only one student on May 31, 1886 (Lee, 2001).<ref>Lee Jeong-kyu. (2001). The establishment of modern universities in Korea and their implications for Korean education policies. In [http://epaa.asu.edu/epaa/v9n27.html ''Education Policy Analysis Archives 9'' (27)]</ref> The name, which means “Pear blossom academy,” was bestowed by the [[Emperor Gojong of Korea|Emperor Gojong]] the following year. The school began to provide college courses in 1910, and professional courses for women in 1925. Immediately following liberation of Korea on August 15, 1945, the college received government permission to become a university. It was the first South Korean university to be officially organized. |
Ewha is now responsible for many firsts in Korean history: Korea's first female doctor, Esther Park; its first woman to get a doctoral degree, Helen Kim; the first female Korean lawyer, Lee Tai-young; the first female justice on the Constitutional Court, Jeon Hyo-sook, and the first female prime minister, the incumbent Han Myeong-sook, were all Ewha graduates. The "firsts" is in part due to the fact that many Korean women in older generations were discouraged from attending co-ed universities in Korea. Ewha's zeal to remain at the vanguard of women's education in Korea is encapsulated in its new motto, "Frontier Ewha." | Ewha is now responsible for many firsts in Korean history: Korea's first female doctor, Esther Park; its first woman to get a doctoral degree, Helen Kim; the first female Korean lawyer, Lee Tai-young; the first female justice on the Constitutional Court, Jeon Hyo-sook, and the first female prime minister, the incumbent Han Myeong-sook, were all Ewha graduates. The "firsts" is in part due to the fact that many Korean women in older generations were discouraged from attending co-ed universities in Korea. Ewha's zeal to remain at the vanguard of women's education in Korea is encapsulated in its new motto, "Frontier Ewha." | ||
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<gallery> | <gallery> | ||
− | Image:X1pbglk-vqL4BvCVhN49nQSgS84-VOHNOAta01A0sBXG7lGfL6j8YvJeaqsLedOf0jNdF35UsfzBTEy6 XvlrXox8dtZCqJZAejg07TOt3TPrdN2uIaOMWcyF2c9tbnVCy8WSEsXd6zeR JfM6Inj4SHuGwbRq8EyQA.jpg| Welch-Ryang Building, Main structure of the Campus | + | Image:X1pbglk-vqL4BvCVhN49nQSgS84-VOHNOAta01A0sBXG7lGfL6j8YvJeaqsLedOf0jNdF35UsfzBTEy6 XvlrXox8dtZCqJZAejg07TOt3TPrdN2uIaOMWcyF2c9tbnVCy8WSEsXd6zeR JfM6Inj4SHuGwbRq8EyQA.jpg|Welch-Ryang Building, Main structure of the Campus |
Image:X1pbglk-vqL4BvCVhN49nQSgS84-VOHNOAta01A0sBXG7nefysuSwrrhpgRkb566IpJW1hPFTlzF 6hWVQmTt0vmHNwtBiixqRQXWW4rY4Df-rn2asjf1ujz7CjisoK5HFyDkk5Lr1THlUMHODBDaqZm5uWnw7UOezA.jpg|International Studies Building | Image:X1pbglk-vqL4BvCVhN49nQSgS84-VOHNOAta01A0sBXG7nefysuSwrrhpgRkb566IpJW1hPFTlzF 6hWVQmTt0vmHNwtBiixqRQXWW4rY4Df-rn2asjf1ujz7CjisoK5HFyDkk5Lr1THlUMHODBDaqZm5uWnw7UOezA.jpg|International Studies Building | ||
− | Image:X1pbglk-vqL4BvCVhN49nQSgS84-VOHNOAta01A0sBXG7mdQHlotiG k7xfZ6GdhmrPDusNUHJr99EV81ZlpDLglZ8r6yXLC8g7b2idlnI06Wl7 pce3UKCRZDustcEtPTOW32S7lLUQ1tLGBd91pN5ypY ZjEJmyV .jpg| Presidential Residence, Used to be Ceremony House | + | Image:X1pbglk-vqL4BvCVhN49nQSgS84-VOHNOAta01A0sBXG7mdQHlotiG k7xfZ6GdhmrPDusNUHJr99EV81ZlpDLglZ8r6yXLC8g7b2idlnI06Wl7 pce3UKCRZDustcEtPTOW32S7lLUQ1tLGBd91pN5ypY ZjEJmyV .jpg|Presidential Residence, Used to be Ceremony House |
Image:X1pbglk-vqL4BvCVhN49nQSgS84-VOHNOAta01A0sBXG7nMu40 pMR31GFHv7jqZuPvLtWXFQau9 w5X29pnyuZhtAn5b4rwaVv7UnvGdB0-KwxrmMj1yKh0Oa6rzA zvqF5d86uoUTZvHjWj-ME5db2u8vmF0UgfLJ.jpg|Centennial Library | Image:X1pbglk-vqL4BvCVhN49nQSgS84-VOHNOAta01A0sBXG7nMu40 pMR31GFHv7jqZuPvLtWXFQau9 w5X29pnyuZhtAn5b4rwaVv7UnvGdB0-KwxrmMj1yKh0Oa6rzA zvqF5d86uoUTZvHjWj-ME5db2u8vmF0UgfLJ.jpg|Centennial Library | ||
Image:X1pbglk-vqL4BvCVhN49nQSgS84-VOHNOAta01A0sBXG7lbvP0sNc9xDDy20py-m-OeziHsSaeqE8uNa34 VMfi4Jr6uhYPuC6Q19PIJjrLyxoY6T4cdf836imTkJnxv0hWWi2Ygc6LpMEPmeWEZ5EIZ47j0Yc-ELgd.jpg|New Ewha Haktang, Or Ceremonial House, re-established 2006 | Image:X1pbglk-vqL4BvCVhN49nQSgS84-VOHNOAta01A0sBXG7lbvP0sNc9xDDy20py-m-OeziHsSaeqE8uNa34 VMfi4Jr6uhYPuC6Q19PIJjrLyxoY6T4cdf836imTkJnxv0hWWi2Ygc6LpMEPmeWEZ5EIZ47j0Yc-ELgd.jpg|New Ewha Haktang, Or Ceremonial House, re-established 2006 | ||
− | Image:X1pbglk-vqL4BvCVhN49nQSgS84-VOHNOAta01A0sBXG7l4AwN2VnkNFeSkyYfO9L8Kb9dazna7gQ aB5uC0mUMw2y82rpHZ1j7x30HtJmlcne7p7VL1j5Z16 frMRHlkUgD57B8eOQuN-cypAG9nR8uhWJa1Ug1BXK.jpg| Statue of Ms. Scranton | + | Image:X1pbglk-vqL4BvCVhN49nQSgS84-VOHNOAta01A0sBXG7l4AwN2VnkNFeSkyYfO9L8Kb9dazna7gQ aB5uC0mUMw2y82rpHZ1j7x30HtJmlcne7p7VL1j5Z16 frMRHlkUgD57B8eOQuN-cypAG9nR8uhWJa1Ug1BXK.jpg|Statue of Ms. Scranton |
Image:X1pbglk-vqL4BvCVhN49nQSgS84-VOHNOAta01A0sBXG7nx5mC2kkHsBqkXWQ3unEa6C5pD5ZLGDNs0mc9xi2a61JsbdaiJhwE4Nls6 xOR4Wz9E cpdQXI5hEgzP0F6staW8dC2UpeSKgKMMAHk oWUsGO6SwHcQ7V.jpg|Back Gate of the University | Image:X1pbglk-vqL4BvCVhN49nQSgS84-VOHNOAta01A0sBXG7nx5mC2kkHsBqkXWQ3unEa6C5pD5ZLGDNs0mc9xi2a61JsbdaiJhwE4Nls6 xOR4Wz9E cpdQXI5hEgzP0F6staW8dC2UpeSKgKMMAHk oWUsGO6SwHcQ7V.jpg|Back Gate of the University | ||
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Image:X1pbglk-vqL4BvCVhN49nQSgS84-VOHNOAta01A0sBXG7nhQe5XTsz tkakNbZW94IvmfDvZ8qqorwngugQGNz7GjQqJslcyhslCOOZrC5BEiJTdWgfi cGiZORXuuVEhSkip FMnDiM-s3WuqhbN7rqXVuBnW5LtMO.jpg|Sunset View of Street outside University Main Gate | Image:X1pbglk-vqL4BvCVhN49nQSgS84-VOHNOAta01A0sBXG7nhQe5XTsz tkakNbZW94IvmfDvZ8qqorwngugQGNz7GjQqJslcyhslCOOZrC5BEiJTdWgfi cGiZORXuuVEhSkip FMnDiM-s3WuqhbN7rqXVuBnW5LtMO.jpg|Sunset View of Street outside University Main Gate | ||
Image:X1pbglk-vqL4BvCVhN49nQSgS84-VOHNOAta01A0sBXG7mqFi04NDOEhGKxaRAwpq3GTQc 0zXpFtfEdDIufH3fayyh3ZHz9oMGVydFAHQBZEMF1pfh3jZyqoJl2RiQZ9d2PugiuyjT6sioVplclIILRi32hnwAIwY0.jpg|Main Entrance to the Korean Dormitory, Hanwoori Kisuksa | Image:X1pbglk-vqL4BvCVhN49nQSgS84-VOHNOAta01A0sBXG7mqFi04NDOEhGKxaRAwpq3GTQc 0zXpFtfEdDIufH3fayyh3ZHz9oMGVydFAHQBZEMF1pfh3jZyqoJl2RiQZ9d2PugiuyjT6sioVplclIILRi32hnwAIwY0.jpg|Main Entrance to the Korean Dormitory, Hanwoori Kisuksa | ||
− | Image:X1pbglk-vqL4BvCVhN49nQSgS84- | + | <!--Image:X1pbglk-vqL4BvCVhN49nQSgS84-VOHNOAta01A0sBXG7kh8—dkqWAasfO0H171X0cmf5o7F6eTv4GqmKH0W3ItGlSI3eeWyi0onUGgVIn1xlxh65IF7J W0bmYAE3QJ27eJwwMyzA0i04PkhkCoqrJqkoRa9wQ7uu.jpg|Protective Statue, like those in Jeju-do [Island], in front of the dormitory—> |
− | |Protective Statue, like those in Jeju-do [Island], in front of the dormitory | ||
</gallery> | </gallery> | ||
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Ewha has largely 8 specialization areas: Life science, Nanoscience, IT, Design Technology, Women’s studies, Korean Studies, Business Management and International Studies. | Ewha has largely 8 specialization areas: Life science, Nanoscience, IT, Design Technology, Women’s studies, Korean Studies, Business Management and International Studies. | ||
− | Life science triggered Ewha's specialization efforts and represents the school's 8 specialization programs. It started to grab attention by receiving 3.5 billion KRW of funding as it earned the spot in BK21 project promoted by MOE. Ewha's life science program also received extra funding of 9.9 billion KRW from the Ministry of Science and Technology. Industry-academia cooperation is brisk as well earning funding of 9 billion KRW from SK over a 3-year period and 5 billion KRW from | + | Life science triggered Ewha's specialization efforts and represents the school's 8 specialization programs. It started to grab attention by receiving 3.5 billion KRW of funding as it earned the spot in BK21 project promoted by MOE. Ewha's life science program also received extra funding of 9.9 billion KRW from the Ministry of Science and Technology. Industry-academia cooperation is brisk as well earning funding of 9 billion KRW from SK over a 3-year period and 5 billion KRW from LF—a life science startup—for 5 years. |
Ewha's life science recorded the highest IF (Impact Factor: A quantitative measure of the frequency with which the "average article" published in a given scholarly journal has been cited in a particular year or period) in Korea recording a whopping 8.6 last year. It also holds 6 international patents and 13 domestic patents. | Ewha's life science recorded the highest IF (Impact Factor: A quantitative measure of the frequency with which the "average article" published in a given scholarly journal has been cited in a particular year or period) in Korea recording a whopping 8.6 last year. It also holds 6 international patents and 13 domestic patents. | ||
Ewha's Nanoscience program received support from the school in earnest as it won the spot in Ewha specialization project in 2003. The Division of Nanoscience was established at the graduate school in the same year. It achieved excellent performance in a short period in industry-academia cooperation with 15 companies such as Amorepacific, Leadgene, Scinco, and Bipolymed. Life Science and Nanoscience are the two engines that lead Ewha’s strength in engineering and natural science. | Ewha's Nanoscience program received support from the school in earnest as it won the spot in Ewha specialization project in 2003. The Division of Nanoscience was established at the graduate school in the same year. It achieved excellent performance in a short period in industry-academia cooperation with 15 companies such as Amorepacific, Leadgene, Scinco, and Bipolymed. Life Science and Nanoscience are the two engines that lead Ewha’s strength in engineering and natural science. |
Revision as of 15:54, 11 October 2007
| |
Motto | Truth, Goodness, and Beauty 眞 · 善 · 美 |
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Established | May 31 1886 as Ewha School, college-course installed in 1910, re-established as a university on August 15 1945. |
Type | Private |
Staff | 369 Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; name cannot be a simple integer. Use a descriptive title
|
President | Lee Bae-Yong |
Faculty | 856Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; name cannot be a simple integer. Use a descriptive title
|
Students | 19,503Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; name cannot be a simple integer. Use a descriptive title
|
Undergraduates | 14,904Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; name cannot be a simple integer. Use a descriptive title
|
Postgraduates | 4,559Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; name cannot be a simple integer. Use a descriptive title
|
Location | Seodaemun, Seoul South Korea |
Campus | Urban 587,159 m²Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; name cannot be a simple integer. Use a descriptive title
|
Website | www.ewha.ac.kr |
Ewha Womans University | ||||||||
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Ewha Womans University (Korean: 이화여자대학교, Hanja: 梨花女子大學校), refers to a private women's university in central Seoul, South Korea. One of the city's largest institutions of higher learning, the world's largest female educational institute, Ewha ranks with the best-known universities in South Korea, and the top women's university. Mary F. Scranton, an Methodist Episcopal missionary from the United States, founded Ewhain 1886.
The pear blossom represents the school flower, a Sino-Korean term for the school's name. While "Womans" seems grammatical mistake in the name, in the late 19th century, at the time of the university's founding, "womans" (as opposed to women's or woman's) constituted the correct english spelling.
History
Ewha Womans University traces its roots back to Mary Scranton's Ihwa Hakdang (also Ewha Hakdang; 이화학당 梨花學堂) mission school for girls, which opened with only one student on May 31, 1886 (Lee, 2001).[1] The name, which means “Pear blossom academy,” was bestowed by the Emperor Gojong the following year. The school began to provide college courses in 1910, and professional courses for women in 1925. Immediately following liberation of Korea on August 15, 1945, the college received government permission to become a university. It was the first South Korean university to be officially organized.
Ewha is now responsible for many firsts in Korean history: Korea's first female doctor, Esther Park; its first woman to get a doctoral degree, Helen Kim; the first female Korean lawyer, Lee Tai-young; the first female justice on the Constitutional Court, Jeon Hyo-sook, and the first female prime minister, the incumbent Han Myeong-sook, were all Ewha graduates. The "firsts" is in part due to the fact that many Korean women in older generations were discouraged from attending co-ed universities in Korea. Ewha's zeal to remain at the vanguard of women's education in Korea is encapsulated in its new motto, "Frontier Ewha."
1886 - In May, Mary F. Scranton, an American Methodist missionary, opens Korea's first school for women in her house with a single student. In November, the construction of a school building (the former base of Ewha Womans University) is completed in Jeong-dong.
1887 - King Gojong officially names the school "Ihwa (also Ewha)."
1910 - College courses begin.
1925 - Ewha Women's Professional School opens.
1935 - The campus moves to its current location.
1946 - Ewha becomes Ewha Womans University, Korea's first university for women.
1950 - Ewha graduate schools open.
1977 - Women's Studies classes begin.
1984 - The School of Continuing Education opens.
1996 - Ewha opens its College of Engineering, the first such school in a women's university.
2001 - Division of International Studies established.
2006 - Ewha offers inaugural Ewha Global Partnership Program and completes the restoration of Ewha Hakdang.
Photos
The following are some photos of the Campus taken by Anya Gonzalez while studying at Edae as an exchange student, 2005.
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Welch-Ryang Building, Main structure of the Campus
- X1pbglk-vqL4BvCVhN49nQSgS84-VOHNOAta01A0sBXG7nefysuSwrrhpgRkb566IpJW1hPFTlzF 6hWVQmTt0vmHNwtBiixqRQXWW4rY4Df-rn2asjf1ujz7CjisoK5HFyDkk5Lr1THlUMHODBDaqZm5uWnw7UOezA.jpg
International Studies Building
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Presidential Residence, Used to be Ceremony House
- X1pbglk-vqL4BvCVhN49nQSgS84-VOHNOAta01A0sBXG7nMu40 pMR31GFHv7jqZuPvLtWXFQau9 w5X29pnyuZhtAn5b4rwaVv7UnvGdB0-KwxrmMj1yKh0Oa6rzA zvqF5d86uoUTZvHjWj-ME5db2u8vmF0UgfLJ.jpg
Centennial Library
- X1pbglk-vqL4BvCVhN49nQSgS84-VOHNOAta01A0sBXG7lbvP0sNc9xDDy20py-m-OeziHsSaeqE8uNa34 VMfi4Jr6uhYPuC6Q19PIJjrLyxoY6T4cdf836imTkJnxv0hWWi2Ygc6LpMEPmeWEZ5EIZ47j0Yc-ELgd.jpg
New Ewha Haktang, Or Ceremonial House, re-established 2006
- X1pbglk-vqL4BvCVhN49nQSgS84-VOHNOAta01A0sBXG7l4AwN2VnkNFeSkyYfO9L8Kb9dazna7gQ aB5uC0mUMw2y82rpHZ1j7x30HtJmlcne7p7VL1j5Z16 frMRHlkUgD57B8eOQuN-cypAG9nR8uhWJa1Ug1BXK.jpg
Statue of Ms. Scranton
- X1pbglk-vqL4BvCVhN49nQSgS84-VOHNOAta01A0sBXG7nx5mC2kkHsBqkXWQ3unEa6C5pD5ZLGDNs0mc9xi2a61JsbdaiJhwE4Nls6 xOR4Wz9E cpdQXI5hEgzP0F6staW8dC2UpeSKgKMMAHk oWUsGO6SwHcQ7V.jpg
Back Gate of the University
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Law and Humanities Library
- X1pbglk-vqL4BvCVhN49nQSgS84-VOHNOAta01A0sBXG7lCdG20g2Chcfs-fBPW1 BWK3GxsHm6A-lYHEat0dH2GbMQ9K0sVcpLJQ-s1Nc4Tv6xH5cGWHxfmRoOo3oQ9Dt04H6mqUOWRJ5UoYPTO3sQww zWlZfYoa3.jpg
Magnolias on Campus during Spring
- X1pbglk-vqL4BvCVhN49nQSgS84-VOHNOAta01A0sBXG7nbDpnlDQvJM1-Nrv59vw9ileMCwCH2vEuCcEG0V- P5sVa0QB4bYYiz2hae68FR4dOpmRe1Ar7fp v0VkTIyr 5CxbhZBmCPlbsYFEchipgZGRb6Vd9T1 .jpg
One of many garden/parks inside the campus
- X1pbglk-vqL4BvCVhN49nQSgS84-VOHNOAta01A0sBXG7ncYTmiKVD9SPe5AZWQn0puOZnIie3ispJJUIBk5fPRf1NX5-ADX9CxMdb2 x3r6pwcTP7qOj6wH5uGwyC77RBIsNMxIc-fayh7NbgYw0x3PZCU7xvLp76G.jpg
Statues outside the Museum by the Main Gate
- X1pbglk-vqL4BvCVhN49nQSgS84-VOHNOAta01A0sBXG7nZ8KsQ8NajSSbnTGTkddHkBOkCHsxe4aucQae54C1L3AM7f -auYdfmHYvyoFolHjtzKW9n5XkEA71K1yEVnJgGmkqlKPgwjVaLLYPgTMLDv5NOEqFTz7Q.jpg
Towards the Ceramic Institute and Museum, at the back. Building to the right is Music department
- X1pbglk-vqL4BvCVhN49nQSgS84-VOHNOAta01A0sBXG7kz9m2vHkJgj71x8ujC9rSj0vW DkNtji3NkSn5 9unN3fWytfbP72bGUCoLz2IohpUyeBpODZoPAK4c-kwxI DHHn7 aIYid9jEzJ5K8-8bgXp-25OSmtf.jpg
Humanities Building
- X1pbglk-vqL4BvCVhN49nQSgS84-VOHNOAta01A0sBXG7lhhpIl8dBYa0N-VQvpL05LYEeVmFKfF lgrwD1QV9NM wizftyo98hRRbPPOtvaMPPGQ RKR0VBO DNArh38NmYfiouRAQdwQNbS7-VMJ-OZ7h7yAGMPFq.jpg
View from Main Gate
- X1pbglk-vqL4BvCVhN49nQSgS84-VOHNOAta01A0sBXG7lXhob7dynOUovI9iEeul7Kp2IUvWdRc3RzGAGezWmc7MvgoMw9Um9CEp3l G1CX5vsAgobk9yEZ 4RCuX QyA181sWCJXSniAOjPYVa8t8MKExq9vXHnG.jpg
POSCO Building
- X1pbglk-vqL4BvCVhN49nQSgS84-VOHNOAta01A0sBXG7n0ByriCqF1xB22rtWdR1Dofd4QLjrQjE00IDmRc4hfdi apzrZ34iBMNaJhhMEeSa2V6LTvv8MvebqFBTfQoWYYEcFZCmz5fFVW4d4Wm6PpFzZx257Lch1.jpg
View of Campus at Night from atop the mountain
- X1pbglk-vqL4BvCVhN49nQSgS84-VOHNOAta01A0sBXG7nhQe5XTsz tkakNbZW94IvmfDvZ8qqorwngugQGNz7GjQqJslcyhslCOOZrC5BEiJTdWgfi cGiZORXuuVEhSkip FMnDiM-s3WuqhbN7rqXVuBnW5LtMO.jpg
Sunset View of Street outside University Main Gate
- X1pbglk-vqL4BvCVhN49nQSgS84-VOHNOAta01A0sBXG7mqFi04NDOEhGKxaRAwpq3GTQc 0zXpFtfEdDIufH3fayyh3ZHz9oMGVydFAHQBZEMF1pfh3jZyqoJl2RiQZ9d2PugiuyjT6sioVplclIILRi32hnwAIwY0.jpg
Main Entrance to the Korean Dormitory, Hanwoori Kisuksa
Reputation & Ranking
Admission to Ewha Womans University is relatively selective. According to the Joongang Daily's ranking of universities in Korea, Ewha Womans University was ranked 9th in 2003, and 14th in 2004. However, the university has been ranked within the top 3 in the NCSI (National Consumer Satisfaction Index) University rankings for 4 consecutive years.
Areas of Specialization
Ewha has largely 8 specialization areas: Life science, Nanoscience, IT, Design Technology, Women’s studies, Korean Studies, Business Management and International Studies.
Life science triggered Ewha's specialization efforts and represents the school's 8 specialization programs. It started to grab attention by receiving 3.5 billion KRW of funding as it earned the spot in BK21 project promoted by MOE. Ewha's life science program also received extra funding of 9.9 billion KRW from the Ministry of Science and Technology. Industry-academia cooperation is brisk as well earning funding of 9 billion KRW from SK over a 3-year period and 5 billion KRW from LF—a life science startup—for 5 years. Ewha's life science recorded the highest IF (Impact Factor: A quantitative measure of the frequency with which the "average article" published in a given scholarly journal has been cited in a particular year or period) in Korea recording a whopping 8.6 last year. It also holds 6 international patents and 13 domestic patents. Ewha's Nanoscience program received support from the school in earnest as it won the spot in Ewha specialization project in 2003. The Division of Nanoscience was established at the graduate school in the same year. It achieved excellent performance in a short period in industry-academia cooperation with 15 companies such as Amorepacific, Leadgene, Scinco, and Bipolymed. Life Science and Nanoscience are the two engines that lead Ewha’s strength in engineering and natural science.
Organization
The undergraduate departments of Ewha are divided among 11 colleges, 1 division with 65 departments. Likewise, the graduate courses are divided into 13 graduate schools.
College of Liberal Arts
College of Social Sciences
College of Engineering
College of Natural Sciences
College of Arts (Music/Fine Arts/Design)
College of Law
College of Pharmacy
College of Education
College of Business Administration
College of Health Sciences
University College
Division of International Studies
ReferencesISBN links support NWE through referral fees
- ↑ Lee Jeong-kyu. (2001). The establishment of modern universities in Korea and their implications for Korean education policies. In Education Policy Analysis Archives 9 (27)
Notable alumni
- Bang Jee Young – Pianist
- Han Myung-Sook - Prime Minister of South Korea
- Grace Park - LPGA golfer
- Yuko Fueki - Japan and Korea-based actress
See also
- Education in South Korea
- List of colleges and universities in South Korea
- List of Korea-related topics
- Ewhaian
- Ewha Womans University Station
External links
- Official website, in Korean and English
- Official website for international programs, in Korean and English
- Open Directory category
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