University of Electronic Science and Technology of China

Public research university in Chengdu, China
  Dark Blue
  Yellow GinkgoAffiliationsMinistry of Education, Double First-Class Construction, 211 Project, 985 Project, AMBAWebsiteuestc.edu.cn
en.uestc.edu.cnChinese nameSimplified Chinese电子科技大学Traditional Chinese電子科技大學
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinDiànzǐ Kējì Dàxué

The University of Electronic Science and Technology of China (UESTC) is a public university in Chengdu, Sichuan, China. Founded in 1956 by the instruction of then Premier Zhou Enlai, the university is affiliated with the Ministry of Education of China. It is co-sponsored by the Ministry of Education, the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology, the Sichuan Provincial Government, and the Chengdu Municipal Government. The university is part of Project 211, Project 985, and the Double First-Class Construction.

UESTC was established on the basis of the incorporation of electronics divisions of then three universities including Jiaotong University (now Shanghai Jiao Tong University and Xi'an Jiaotong University), Nanjing Institute of Technology (now Southeast University), and South China Institute of Technology (now South China University of Technology). Now UESTC is a multidisciplinary research university with electronic science and technology as its nucleus, engineering as its major field, and featured with management, liberal art and medicine.[2]

UESTC is consisted of four campuses: Qingshuihe, Shahe, Jiulidi, and Yongning, with a gross built-up area of 1,490 km2 (370,000 acres) . It has more than 40 schools and 65 undergraduate majors (13 of them are national-level featured majors). In 2022, UESTC has more than 42,000 students and 3,800 faculties.

History

In 1956 summer, under the instruction of Premier Zhou Enlai, the inception of Chengdu Institute of Radio Engineering (CIRE)[3] ushered in the first higher education institution of electronic and information science and technology of China. CIRE was then created from the combination of electronics-allied divisions of three well-established universities: Shanghai Jiao Tong University, Southeast University (then Nanjing Institute of Technology) and South China University of Technology. As early as the 1960s, it was ranked as one of the nation's key higher education institutions, which represents the importance of this university. In 1988, CIRE was renamed University of Electronic Science and Technology of China (USETC). In 1997, UESTC was selected as one of the top 100 key universities by the "State's Education Revival Project" (Project 211). In 2000, UESTC was transferred to the MoE-university system, hence a national key university directly affiliated to the State's Ministry of Education. In 2001, UESTC was selected as one of the 39 research-intensive universities in China that gain special funding under "project 985" for developing into world-class universities. In 2007, the new campus Qingshuihe was put into use. In 2017, UESTC has been included in the state Double First Class University Plan as a Class A Double First Class University.

Today, UESTC has developed into a multidisciplinary university directly reporting to the Ministry of Education, which has electronic information science and technology as its nucleus, science and engineering as its major field, and incorporates management, economics, medicine and liberal arts. UESTC has more than 3,800 faculty members, of whom 8 are academicians of CAS & CAE, 325 full professors, and 483 associate professors, 21 IEEE Fellows, 121 "Thousand Talents Program" recipients, and 15 Elsevier highly cited scholars.[4]

Academic schools

Built on the Stanford Model and as a member of both the "Project 985" and the "Project 211", UESTC is an electronics-centered multidisciplinary leading research university, covering all of the 6 National Key Disciplines categorized for higher education in electronic and information science and technology in China and a broad range of subjects.[5] In 1984 and 2018, many of the schools are reorganized.

Academic Schools
School Founded
School of Information and Communication Engineering 1956
School of Electronic Science and Engineering 2018
School of Materials and Energy 2018
School of Mechanical and Electrical Engineering 1964
School of Optoelectronic Science and Engineering 1956
School of Automation Engineering 1957
School of Resources and Environment 2012
School of Computer Science and Engineering 1979
School of Information and Software Engineering 2011
School of Aeronautics and Astronautics 2006
School of Mathematical Sciences 1958
School of Physics 1984
School of Medicine 2013
School of Life Science and Technology 1984
School of Management and Economics 1982
School of Public Affairs and Administration 1956
School of Foreign Languages 1984
School of Marxism 1956
Glasgow College Hainan 2022
Glasgow College 2013
Institute of Fundamental and Frontier Science 2014
National Key Laboratory of Science and Technology on Communications 1996
Yingcai Honors College 2009
Shenzhen Institute for Advanced Study 2019

In addition to academic schools, UESTC established seven academic institutes:

Institute Founded City
Research Institute of Electronic Science and Technology 2003 Chengdu, Sichuan
Guangdong Research Institute of Electronic Information Engineering of UESTC 2007 Dongguan, Guangdong
Chengdu Research Institute of UESTC 2012 Chengdu, Sichuan
Yibin Park of UESTC 2017 Yibin, Sichuan
Yangtze Delta Region Institute (Quzhou) 2020 Quzhou, Zhejiang
Chongqing Institute of Microelectronics Industry Technology 2020 Chongqing
Yangtze Delta Region Institute (Huzhou) 2020 Huzhou, Zhejiang

UESTC also has two independent colleges: Chengdu college and Zhongshan Institute.[6]

Academics and Rankings

China Discipline Evaluation by the Ministry of Education of China

The China Discipline Evaluation (CDE) is the official assessment of the quality of disciplines (grouped into 14 domains and 113 first-level disciplines) in China and is one of the most important rankings for Chinese universities. The CDE is conducted every ~5 years starting in 2002. Ranking rule of the fourth CDE: A+ is among the top 2%, A is 2%-5%, A− is 5%-10%, B+ is 10%-20%, B is 20%-30%, B− is 30%-40%, C+ is 40%-50%, C is 50%-60%, and C− is 60%-70%.[7][8] Previous CDEs are evaluated by a score of 0-100.

Discipline Rank (2017) Rank (2012) Rank (2007) Rank (2004)
Electronic Science and Technology 1st (A+) 1st (92) 2nd (93) 3rd (84.7)
Information and Communication Engineering 1st (A+) 2nd (87) 5th (88) 8th (80.0)
Computer Science and Engineering 5th (A) 12th (76) 19th (74) 20th (69.1)
Optical Engineering 5th (A−) 5th (81) 10th (76) 18th (66.8)
Instrumentation Science and Technology 8th (A−) 7th (78) - 18th (71.0)
Biomedical Engineering 8th (B+) 10th (77) 12th (71) 14th (64.7)
Software Engineering 17th (B+) 34th (70) - -
Management Science and Engineering 19th (B+) - 24th (72) 30th (65.7)
Business Administration 25th (B+) 17th (78) - -
Mechanical Engineering 38th (B) - - 35th (63.2)
Material Science and Engineering 35th (B) - - 37th (66.3)
Control Science and Engineering 33rd (B) - - 24th (66.2)
Public Administration 29th (B) - - -
Electrical Engineering 44th (C) - - -
Chemical Engineering and Technology 87th (C−) - - -
Applied Economics - - - 30th (65.0)
Politics - - - 23rd (64.4)
Foreign Language and Literature - - - 25th (62.1)
Physics - - - 26th (67.3)

General Rankings

University rankings
BCUR National[9] Domestic 28
Wu Shulian National[10] Domestic 33
CUAA National[11] Alumni =29
QS National[12] General 27
THE National[13] General 26–30
QS Asia
(Asia version)[14]
General 195
THE Asia
(Asia version)[15]
General =86
ARWU World[16] Research 101–150
QS World[17] General =486
THE World[18] General 351–400
USNWR World[19] General =231

According to College and university rankings, ARWU, QS, and THE are three most established and influential global rankings.

Global Rankings
Board 2024 2023 2022 2021 2020 2019 2018 2017 2016 2015 2014 2013 2012 2011 2010 2009
ARWU 101-150 151-200 151-200 151-200 151-200 201-300 201-300 301-400
QS 486 561-570 591-600 701-750 751-800
US News 231 272 342 507 555 597 584 572
THE 401-500 501-600 501-600 601-800 n/a 801-1000 801+ 601-800
CWUR 319 346 381 438 484 710 783 783 790
NTUR 236 184 200 280 372 440
RUR 414 476 567 611 631 523
SIR 123 130 181 296 288 283 287 385 388 400 454 528 596 649 698
URAP 129 153 166 191 264

National Rankings

National Rankings
Board 2023 2022 2021 2020 2019 2018 2017 2016 2015 2014 2013 2012 2011 2010 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003
ARWU 11-23 14-26 11-24 14-22 9-17 13-23 10-18 19-31
Best Chinese Universities Ranking by ARWU 28 30 31 32 27 33 34 36 35
Alumni Association China University

(校友会中国大学排名)

30 33 34 37 34 29 37 37 42 45 47 47 49 49 50 49 39 46 37 46
Wushulian (武书连) 34 36 36 39 37 37 39 40 40 38 39 40 37 43 48
RUR 33 40 48 54 42 32


National Key Disciplines

  • Communication and Information System
  • Signal and Information Processing
  • Circuit and System
  • Electromagnetic Field and Microwave Technology
  • Microelectronics and Solid-State Electronics Physical Electronics
  • Optical Engineering
  • Applied Computer Technology [20]

Research Strength

State Key Laboratories

  • SKL of Communication Technology
  • SKL of Electronic Thin Film and Integrated Devices
  • SKL of Microwave Devices
  • SKL of High Power Radiation
  • SKL of Ultra-High Frequency Complicated System

University Research Centers

  • Big Data Center
  • Robot Research Center
  • Medical Information Center
  • Photoelectric Detection and Sensor Integration Technology Research Center
  • IC Research Center
  • Earth Science Information Center
  • Cyberspace Security Research Center

Students

National Electronic Designing Contest: Top scoring team since 2005

  • 6 first prizes and ranked 1st among 729 competing universities (2007)
  • 6 first prizes and ranked 1st among 790 competing universities the only NEC Cup winner (2009)
  • Ranked 1st in the National Postgraduate Electronic Design Contest (2010)
  • 11 first prizes and ranked 2nd among 1044 competing universities (2013)
  • 10 first prizes and ranked 1st among 805 competing universities (2015)

The Asia-Pacific Robot Contest (ABU Robocon)

  • Champion in ABU Robocon (China-site), July, 2010; 2012; 2013; 2015
  • Champion in ABU Robocon (final in Egypt), Sept, 2010
  • Champion in ABU Robocon (final in HK), Aug, 2012

Mathematical Modeling Contest

  • No.1 in National Mathematic Modeling Contest for University Students (2004, 2006, 2015)
  • Outstanding Winner in American MCM & ICM (2004, 2011, 2012, 2014)

International Genetic Engineering Machine Competition, iGEM

  • Gold Medal at Asia-Pacific site, 2013, 2014
  • Gold Medal in the world final at MIT, 2013, 2014

International collaboration

International Cooperation

UESTC has collaborative and solid relationships with over 200 universities and research institutes in 67 countries, as reflected in visits for academic purposes, joint research and joint application of research projects, joint academic conferences and workshops, joint supervisions of Master and Ph.D. degrees and student exchange programs. There are over 1000 students from 67 countries study for bachelor, master and Ph.D degrees in UESTC as well as over 500 short term international students in UESTC every year.

Joint Education Projects authorized by the MOE

  1. International MBA Joint Program by UESTC and Webster University (USA, 2003)
  2. DBA Joint Program by UESTC and ISCTE (Portugal, 2009)
  3. AF-Chengdu: UESTC-Alliance Française Joint Center of French Training (2003)
  4. Glasgow College, UESTC (with University of Glasgow, UK, 2013)
  5. UESTC - University of Montpellier Confucius Institute (France, 2013)
  6. UESTC - KTH Joint Master's Programs on SoC (Sweden, 2016)

Campus

UESTC now has three campuses—Qingshuihe, Shahe and Jiulidi, occupying a total of 16.6 km² (4100 acres). The three campuses are located in Chengdu.[citation needed]

Notable alumni

References

  1. ^ "学校简介 - 电子科技大学 Uestc".
  2. ^ "Introduction to the University". Homepage of UESTC. Retrieved 22 August 2022.
  3. ^ "About page-oice.uestc". faculty-en.uestc.edu.cn. Retrieved 2023-03-05.
  4. ^ "电子科技大学".
  5. ^ "University of Electronic Science and Technology of China". en.uestc.edu.cn (in English and Chinese). Retrieved 8 April 2023.
  6. ^ "独立学院 - 电子科技大学 UESTC". www.uestc.edu.cn. Retrieved 2022-08-21.
  7. ^ "全国第四轮学科评估".
  8. ^ "China Discipline Evaluation".
  9. ^ "2023 Best Chinese Universities Ranking". Shanghai Ranking. 2023. Retrieved March 5, 2024.
  10. ^ "Wu Shulian University Ranking". Chinese Academy of Management Science. 2023. Retrieved March 5, 2024.
  11. ^ Chinese Universities Alumni Association (2024). "Alumni Association (22nd Edition): Chinese University Rankings 2024". Retrieved January 16, 2024. Alternative URL
  12. ^ "QS University Rankings 2024 - China (Mainland)". Top Universities. 2024. Retrieved June 27, 2023.
  13. ^ "THE University Rankings 2024 - China". Times Higher Education (THE). 2024. Retrieved October 21, 2023.
  14. ^ "QS World University Rankings: Asia 2024". QS Quacquarelli Symonds Limited. 2024. Retrieved November 8, 2023.
  15. ^ "Asia University Rankings 2023". Times Higher Education. 2023. Retrieved August 21, 2023.
  16. ^ "Academic Ranking of World Universities". Institute of Higher Education, Shanghai Jiao Tong University. 2023. Retrieved August 20, 2023.
  17. ^ "QS World University Rankings". QS Quacquarelli Symonds Limited. 2024. Retrieved June 27, 2023.
  18. ^ "THE World University Rankings". Times Higher Education. 2024. Retrieved October 21, 2023.
  19. ^ U.S.News & World Report (2022). "Best Global Universities - US News". Retrieved July 20, 2023.
  20. ^ "Key Disciplines". UESTC. Retrieved 17 November 2021.

External links

  • UESTC official website (Chinese)
  • UESTC official website (English)
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