Saturday, November 8, 2008

About Fudan Univ 5 / International Student

Education of International Students:


Since the 1950s, Fudan has enrolled international students, as one of the first few institutions in China to do so. Since that time, Fudan has accepted and trained over 10,000 foreign students from 100 different countries and regions worldwide. Many students have received systematic training and have earned Bachelor's , Master's or Doctoral Degree. Presently there are over 2800 long-term international students in Fudan, half of whom are actively pursuing degrees, the rest are general scholars and visiting scholars. Besides, Fudan will also enroll over 1700 short-term students each year.

Fudan accepts international students into its Bachelor’s, Master’s, Doctoral programs as well as advanced programs in liberal arts, sciences, and medicine. The university has also established a Bachelor of Arts program called the Chinese Language for international students and there have been seven groups of graduates. Besides all levels of Chinese language teaching, the university has opened courses such as Chinese literature, Chinese history, Chinese economy, Chinese philosophy and Chinese law for interested international students. According to their different requirements, these courses will introduce basic knowledge of Chinese social economy, history and culture.

The Foreign Students Office is responsible for the management of all international students at Fudan University.
 

Majors & Study Period:



  1. Undergraduate programs, 4 or 5 years
    Start in each September, Application period: Apr-May
    (See our homepage for detailed information), entrance exam will be held in late May.
     
  2. Master's programs, 3 years (2 or 2.5 years for MBA program)
    Start in each September, Application period: Apr-May
    Time for entrance examination: early June.
    (See our homepage for detailed information)
     
  3. Doctoral programs, 3 years
    Start in each September, Application period: Apr-May
    Time for entrance examination:early June.
    (See our homepage for detailed information)
    All the above programs are taught in Chinese. Upon graduation, qualified students will get Fudan's diploma and degrees.
     
  4. General advanced students, half a year to two years
    Start in each September and February
    Application period: March 1 to June 10, October 8 to following December 10.
    A. These students could choose all the majors in undergraduate programs and will have lessons together with Chinese students.
    B. There are special courses for international students like Chinese literature, history, economy, philosophy and law.
     
  5. Senior Advanced Student, half a year to one year
    Start in each September and February
    Application period: March 1 to June 10, October 8 to following December 10. Students could choose all the majors in Master's and Doctoral programs. They could study a major under the guidance of professors from Fudan.
     
  6. Research Scholar,
    Start any time, apply two months beforehand
    Students could choose all the majors in Master's and Doctoral programs.
    They could cooperate with Chinese professors on a certain topic or make research with the help of Chinese professors.
     
  7. Language students, half a year to two years
    Start in each September and February
    Application period: March 1 to June 10, October 8 to December 10.
    We open Chinese language courses for international students.
    Professional Chinese teachers will train the students in listening, speaking, reading and writing. In order to guarantee the quality, we will divide the students into 8 classes of low, middle and high level according to their Chinese language ability. It will be a small class.

    All the above students, having accomplished their study, will be given Study Certificate and transcript.
Eligibility and File Requirements:




 
Category of Students Eligibility File Requirements
Undergraduate Student High school graduates or above A. High school diploma (copy)
B. Related transcript
C. HSK certificate Level 6 (copy)
★ Chinese Language undergraduate program requires only HSK level 3
Master's Candidate 1. Graduated from university or above
2. Three years' working experience after university graduation for MBA applicants
A. University diploma, Certificate of Bachelor's Degree
B. University transcript
C. Two recommendation letters from professor or associate professor
D. HSK certificate Level 6 (copy)
Doctoral Candidate Having obtained Master's Degree A. Certificate of Master's Degree
B. Master's transcript
C. Two recommendation Letters from professor or associate professor
D. HSK certificate Level 6 (copy)
General Advanced Student High school graduates or above A. High school diploma or above
B. Related Transcript
C. HSK certificate Level 6 (copy)
Senior Advanced Student
 
University graduates or above A. University diploma
B. Related transcript
C. Detailed research plan
D. HSK certificate Level 6 (copy)
Research Scholar A. Professor or associate professor
B. Research fellow of academic institute
A. Certificate of service
B. Research Plan
Language Student Age 16 or above

1. Applicants should provide a notarial document of Chinese, English or Japanese version of diploma and transcript. Other files required for all applicants: Application form, Copy of passport (if you have),application fee: 55 U.S.D. or 400 RMB in cash or personal check, traveler's check is not accepted.
★ We won’t accept your application if your documents are not complete. Whether you are accepted or not, all application documents won’t be returned.

2. Undergraduate program applicants may be required to take our entrance exam. The exam dates wil be informed later. We will choose qualified students until the expected number is reached.

3. Master's or doctoral applicants should take our entrance exam. The exam dates wil be informed later. Qualified students will be accepted.

※ The application requirements and application period will change according to real situations. Please consult with Foreign Students Office or go to our web site.
 

Application Method and Procedures:



1. Application Method

Students who need the Chinese Government scholarship should apply to the Education Commission of China through related governmental department of their respective countries.
Self-supporting students should apply directly from the Admission Department of Foreign Students Office.

2. Application Procedures

Step 1: Ask for Application Form For Foreigners Wishing To Study at Fudan from Admission Department of Foreign Students Office.
Step 2: Send by post the Application Form, application fee and other related documents to the Admission Department before the application deadline.
Step 3: Admission Notice, Visa Clearance Form (JW202) and Physical Examination Record will be sent to students who have been admitted.
Step 4: Admitted students should take Physical Examination Record to local public hospital or private hospital to have physical examination. Result from private hospitals should be notarized.
Step 5: Admitted students should take Admission Notice, Visa Clearance Form (JW202) and Physical Examination Record to the Chinese Embassy to apply for visa to China(X visa or F visa). JW202 must be asked back even if the Embassy wants to keep it.
Step 6: Admitted students should take Admission Notice, Visa Clearance Form (JW202) and physical examination record to register at Fudan University within the registration period written in the Admission Notice. Otherwise, one will be deprived of the student status.Exception can be made to student who has informed the school of their special reasons and whose delay has been permitted.

Application Address :

Admission Department
Foreign Students Office
Fudan University
No.220 Han Dan Road
Shanghai 200433,.P. R. China
Tel: 86-21-65117628/65642258
Fax: 86-21-65117298
E-mail: fso@fudan.edu.cn
http://www.fso.fudan.edu.cn
 

About Fudan Univ 4 / Services and Administrations

 Party Affairs Department
The Party Committee Office Undergraduate Affairs Office
Publicity Department Graduate Affairs Office
The Security Office  

Executive Department
 
President's Office Foreign Affairs Office
The Office of Discipline Construction The Department of Liaison and Development
The Personnel Department Foreign Students Office
Graduate School The Finance Office
The Office of Academic Affairs The Office of Industrialization and School Enterprise Administration
The Office of Hospital Administration The Office of Assets Management
The Office of Campus Construction The Office of Science and Technology
The Office for the Construction of Jiangwan Campus The Office of General Services
  The Office of Liberal Arts Research

Other Department
 
Fudan Committee of Youth League Labor Union
Women Committee

About Fudan Univ 3 / Former Administrators

Former Administrators

Administrators
(Before the establishment of the PRC)

President Duration
President Ma Xiangbo 1905-1906
President Yan Fu 1906-1907
Inspector Xia Jingguan 1907-1909
Inspector Gao Fengqian 1909-1910
President Ma Xiangbo 1910-1912
President Li Denghui 1913-1936.7
Acting President Tang Luguo 1918
Acting President Guo Renyuan 1924.7-1925.3
Acting President Qian Xinzhi 1936.8-1940.5
President Wu Nanxuan 1940.5-1943.2
President Zhang Yi 1943.2-1949.7

Presidents
(After the Founding of the People's Republic of China)

ZHANG, Zhi-rang (1893-1978), with Ji-long as his self-selected courtesy name, was a native of Changzhou, Jiangsu Province. Having graduated from the Law Department of Columbia University in 1920, he returned to China and served as a judicial adviser and judge for the Northern Warlords' government, and later a judge of the Supreme Court of Justice of the Nationalist Government at Wuhan. After the April 12th Incident against the Chinese Communists broke out, he refused to hold an official position in the KMT government at Nanjing and returned to Shanghai to enter the bar, taking an active part in rescuing the imprisoned members of the Communist Party of China and other revolutionaries. After the seven eminent progressive members of the Parliament were arrested in 1936, he served as the chief defending lawyer for them. He was appointed as director for the Fudan University's Committee of School Affairs after the 1949 liberation. He served as a vice-president of the Supreme People's Court, a member of the committees of Bill and of Legal Institutions of the National People's Congress, and a member of the Standing Committee of the 5th Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference.



CHEN, Wang-dao (1891-1977), originally named Chen Can-yi, with Fo-tu and Xue-fan as his pen names, was a native of Yiwu, Zhejiang Province. In his early years, he went to Japan for studies and obtained his bachelor's degree from the Law Department of Chuo University. After returning to China, he played an active role in promoting the New Culture Movement. He translated and published the first complete Chinese version of The Communist Manifesto as an editor of the journal New Youth. He was among the few who initiated the Communist Party of China in Shanghai. Chen attended the first National Congress of the CPC in July 1921, and was elected to be the secretary for the Shanghai Committee. He began to teach at Fudan University in 1927 and was elected a member of the standing committee of 4th National People's Congress, a member of the standing committee of the 3rd and the 4th Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference, a vice-president of the 3rd Central Committee of the China Democratic League. In 1955, he was elected as a member of the Committee of Philosophy and Social Sciences of the Chinese Academy of Sciences and was engaged for the rest of his life in improving modern Chinese and the research and education of the great language. As a renowned scholar, Chen developed a scientific system of studying Chinese rhetoric and made great achievements in philosophy, ethics, literature theory, and aesthetics. He was the editor in chief of Ci Hai (literally "the sea of words", a most famous encyclopedia in contemporary China), and the author of Introduction to Rhetoric and A Brief Introduction to Syntax.


SU, Bu-qing (1902-2003), a native of Pingyang of Zhejiang Province, graduated from the Department of Mathematics of Tohoku Imperial University, Japan in 1927. Then he studied at the research institute of the university until he obtained his Ph.D. degree. After returning home, he was invited to work at the Mathematics Department of Zhejiang University. The 1952 readjustment and reshuffling of the colleges and universities found him new positions at Fudan University. He was appointed successively as Dean of Academic Affairs, Vice-president, and finally President of the University. In 1983 he became honorary president of Fudan. Besides, he was a vice-chair for the 7th and the 8th Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference, a member of the Standing Committee of the 5th and the 6th National People's Congress, a vice-president of the Central Committee of the China Democratic League. In 1955 he was elected a member of the Committee of Mathematics and Physics of the Chinese Academy of Sciences and of the Standing Committee of the academy. Celebrated as "first geometer in the Orient", Su founded a new school of differential geometry. He was the author of more than ten monographs, such as An Introduction to the Projective Curve and An Introduction to the Projective Curved Surface. He won the National Scientific Conference Award and a second prize of National Awards for the Advancement of Science and Technology respectively for his achievements in "A Program of Hull Lofting" and "A Production Process of the Hull Form by the Curved-Surface Method".


XIE, Xi-de (1921-2000) was a native of Quanzhou, Fujian Province. She graduated from the Department of Mathematics and Physics of Amoy University in 1946. Then she studied in the U.S. and obtained her doctor's degree from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. After returning home in October 1952, Xie taught at Fudan University and served successively as Director of the Institute of Modern Physics, Vice-president, and President of the University. After her retirement in 1988, she became an advisor for Fudan. She was elected as a National Standard Bearer on International Women's Day in 1979 and 1980, a member of the 12th and the 13th Central Committee of the Communist Party of China, and chair of the 7th Shanghai CPPCC. In 1980, she was elected a member of the Committee of Mathematics and Physics of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, and a Presidium Member of the academy in 1981, and an academician of the Third World Academy of Sciences in 1988. As a master of surface physics and semiconductor physics, she wrote four monographs on related topics, such as Semiconductor Physics, Solid State Physics and Group Theory and Its Application in Physics.




HUA, Zhong-yi (1931 -) is a native of Wuxi, Jiangsu Province. He graduated from the Physics Department of Jiaotong University in 1951. At the end of 1952, he was transferred to Fudan, which acquired his X-ray tube laboratory from his alma mater. He served successively as Dean of the Physics Department, Associate Director of the Institute of Modern Physics, Dean of the Technology School, Vice-president and President of the University. He was awarded with the national honorary title of "Middle-aged Expert with Distinguished Contributions" in 1984. From 1952 to 1956, he took part in the production of China's first X-ray tube for medical purposes and high-pressure ballast tube. With his academic interest focused on electric vacuum physics, he is the author of more than ten monographs, among which are High Vacuum: Technology and Instruments, Essential Vacuum Technology, and Vacuum Technology in the Recent Thirty Years.




YANG, Fu-jia (1936 -), born in Shanghai in 1936, graduated from the Physics Department of Fudan in 1958. He served successively as Chair of the Department of Atomic Nucleus Science, Director of the Institute of Modern Physics, Dean of the Graduate School, Vice-president, and President of the University. He was awarded with the national honorary title of "Middle-aged Expert with Distinguished Contributions" in 1984, and was elected an academician of the Chinese Academy of Sciences. He was the chief founder, leader and organizer of the atom and nucleus physics laboratory based on the accelerator, and has made quite a number of important research achievements that are internationally noteworthy. He is the author of several monographs, including Atomic Physics and Applied Nucleus Physics.
 

Secretaries of the CPC Committee of Fudan University

LI Zheng-wen (1908 -), a native of Wei County, Shandong Province, studied at Northeast University and Tsinghua University. In the spring of 1933, he joined the Communist Party of China and was sent to study in the Soviet Union in 1934. After returning home, he was engaged in underground work and taught as a professor at Aurora Women's College of Arts and Sciences and then at Great China University. In June 1949, the Shanghai Military Control Committee appointed Li as the representative to take over Fudan University, and, in the meantime, as the Director for the Committee of School Affairs of Chi Nan University, Shanghai. He became Vice-president of the People's Revolutionary University of East China in 1951, Party Secretary and Vice-president of Fudan University in January 1952. In 1954 he was transferred to Beijing to be Head in the Section of Political Education under the Ministry of Higher Education, Director of the Lecture Group of Peking Professors, Honorary Chair of the China Association of Senior Professors, etc. He was devoted to Marxist education in higher education institutions for many years. He wrote papers like "The Classes on Party History Should Be an Integral Part of Marxism-Leninism Education in the Colleges", translated A Political Economy Coursebook by the Russian scholar, Lapidus and Materialistic Dialectics by Rosenthal.



YANG, XiGuang (1915-1989) was a native of Wuhu, Anhui Province. He joined the Communist Party of China in 1936 and was sent to the Northeastern Army to do underground work. He played a part in the famous Xi'an Incident. Transferred out of the army in 1939, he served successively as Director of the POW Office under the Enemy Conversion Department, Head of the Political Instruction Office, and Assistant Commissar in the Mid-China Field Army and the East-China Military Command. In August 1949 he was transferred to a Fujian Province and worked as Associate Director and then Director of the Publicity Department of the CPC Committee of Fujian, Chief Member of the Committee of Culture and Education of the People's Government of Fujian, and a member of the CPC Committee of the province. Yang was appointed as the Party secretary of Fudan in 1954 and then began to hold a concurrent post of a vice-president of the University. Besides, he was a member of the 2nd and the 3rd Party Committee of Shanghai. In 1959, he became Director of the Department of Education and Public Health under the Shanghai CPC Committee, and an alternate secretary of the committee in 1965. Yang became editor-in-chief of Guangming Daily in 1978. It was he who directed the revision of the commentary "Practice Is the Sole Criterion for Testing Truth" and approved its publication. The article gave rise to a nationwide heated discussion about the way to tell truth and non-truth apart. He was elected to be a delegate to the 12th National CPC Congress, a member of the Standing Committee of the 6th and 7th Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference, and Chair of the Presidium of the All China Journalists' Association.


WANG, Ling (1918 -), a native of Qianshan, Anhui Province, participated in the revolution in 1937 and joined the Chinese Communist Party in 1939. He was Director of the 10th Squad of the North Yangtse Guerilla Army of the New Fourth Army, a member of and then a member of the Standing CPC Committees of Yan-Fu Region and Sheyang County, Secretary of the 5th Area of the county, Deputy Secretary and Director of the Publicity Department of the Party Committee of Wuxi County, a member of the Party Committee of Bohai Area, and Party Secretary of Zhanhua County. He began to work at Fudan University in 1952, and served successively as First Deputy Secretary, and Deputy Secretary of the Party Committee of the University. He was also Director of the Political Instruction Division, Chair of the Atomic Energy Science Department, Associate Director of the Institute of Atomic Energy, and Vice-president of Fudan. In the October of 1965 he was appointed as Acting Secretary of Fudan. After the Cultural Revolution, Wang was in charge of the Office of Political Campaigns of the University, trying hard to get everything back to normal. In 1978 he was appointed Second Party Secretary and Vice-president of Fudan. In 1981 he was transferred to Tongji University, where he served as Party Secretary.


XIA, Zheng-nong (1904 -), originally named Xia Zheng-he, with Zi-meiXia as his courtesy name and Zhengnong as his penname, is a native of Xinjian, Jiangxi Province. He studies at Nanking University and Fudan University. He joined the Communist Party of China in 1926 and became the leader of the Party branch in Xinjian in 1927. In 1928 he was appointed as the branch secretary of the CYLC Committee of Fudan University and was arrested and imprisoned in 1929 by the KMT government.

Released from prison, he became a secretary of the Publicity Division of the Central CYLC Committee. Then he joined the Left-wing Federation in 1933 and became one of its leaders in the later stage of the federation. He worked as an editor for Reading and Living and Tai Po and editor-in-chief for New Cognition, all the three being magazines.

He was Director of the divisions of Politics, of the United Front, and of Civil Campaigns of the New Fourth Army, Secretary-general of the Military and Political Committee of Middle Jiangsu, Deputy Secretary of Shandong CPC Committee and Secretary of the Secretariat of the committee. He became First Secretary of the Party Committee of Fudan in 1978. He became a member of the Standing Committee of Shanghai Party Committee and then Secretary of Shanghai CPC Committee in 1979. He used also to serve as Chair of the Shanghai Federation of Social Sciences, Chair of the Shanghai Federation of Literary and Art Circles, Editor-in-chief of Ci Hai, the encyclopedia, Associate Director of the Editorial Board of Encyclopedia Sinica, a member of the Advisory Commission of the Central Committee of the CPC. He was elected to be a delegate to the 1st National People's Congress and the 8th National Party Congress. His major works include Zheng-nong's Comments on Art and Literature, Zheng-nong's Theory on Creative Writing and Selected Political Essays of Zheng-nong.


SHENG, Hua (1913-1997), a native of Yizheng, Jiangsu Province, studied at Kaifeng University and the Agricultural College of National Peking University. In 1935 he went to Japan and studied at Sendai Imperial University. He joined the Chinese Communist Party in 1929 and the New Fourth Army in 1938. He used to be Associate Director of the Social Investigation Team of the Logistics Division of the New Fourth Army Headquarters. He served successively as Chief of the Enemy Work Division of the 3rd Section of Middle Jiangsu, Director of the Enemy Work Department and of the City Work Department of the 3rd Prefecture of Middle Jiangsu, Party Secretary of the Party School of the 1st Prefecture of Middle Jiangsu, Director of the POW Officer Conversion Office of the Mid-China Field Army, Associate Director of the Liaison Office of the Party Committee of Middle Jiangsu, and Director of the Education Office of the Party school of the Mid-China Work Committee.

After the founding of the People's Republic of China, he was appointed Director of the Publicity Division of the Party Committee of North Jiangsu, Chief of the Education Section of the Personnel Department of East China, President and Party Secretary of East China Textile Technology Institute, a member of the Party Committee of Zhejiang Province, Associate Director of the Publicity Department of the province, Deputy Party Secretary of Zhejiang University, Party Secretary and Director of the Education Department of Zhejiang, Party Secretary and Director of the Science and Technology Committee of Zhejiang, Party Secretary and President of Nanjing Technology Institute. He came to work at Fudan in 1959 and 1979. He served successively as a member of the Party standing committee, Vice-president, Second Party Secretary, Party Secretary of the University.


LIN, Ke (1923 -), originally named Yuan Pu, is a native of Rugao, Jiangsu Province. He left Nantong Middle School for the Anti-Japanese Military-political School of the New Fourth Army in 1940. He joined the Communist Party of China in 1941. He held a series of posts before the Liberation: Political Instructor in the Execution Squad of the Military Law Division of the New Fourth Army Headquarters, Commissioner for Underground CPC Work in Nantong, and Deputy Secretary of the Work Committee of Nantong-Rugao. After the People's Republic of China was founded, he was appointed Director of the Publicity Department of the Nantong CPC Committee, Deputy Secretary of the Nantong CPC Committee, Mayor of Nantong, Party Secretary and President of Nanjing Medical College, Party Secretary of Nanjing Technology Institute, Deputy Secretary and Secretary of Tsinghua University. In 1984, he came to Fudan to be its Party Secretary and Deputy Director of the Committee of University Administration. Retired from the Fudan positions, he became Deputy Director of the Editorial Board of the Shanghai Chronicle. He is editor-in-chief of Path to the Ideal (, a volume of the series readers Reflections on Chinese Society) and author of books like Reform and Ideological Education of the Colleges.



QIAN, Dong-sheng (1932-), a native of Wuxi, Jiangsu Province, studied at the Chemical Industry Department of Dalian Technology Institute (now Dalian University of Technology) in 1950 and was transferred to be an assistant professor for the course of "Chinese History of Revolution", and studied at the sub-program of the Chinese history of revolution of the program of Marxism-Lenism at the Chinese People's University from 1955 to 1957. For quite a long period he was engaged in the teaching of fundamental Marxist theory and Party history at Dalian Technology Institute. In 1982 he began to lecture on Western Organizational Behavior and to work for the Party. At the college, he served successively as Party Secretary of a department, Director of the Publicity Division, Deputy Party Secretary, and Party Secretary. In August 1990, he was appointed Party Secretary of Fudan. He is the author and translator of books like Path to Success.



CHENG, Tian-quan (1946 -), a native of Shanghai, graduated from the Department of International Politics of Fudan University in 1970. From 1980 to 1983 he studied in the graduate class of the Law Department of of the University and after graduation became a teacher at the department. He served successively as Associate Director and Director of the Publicity Division, and Deputy Party Secretary of the University. In 1995, he became Party Secretary of Fudan. He is the author and translator of books such as A History of Chinese Civil Law, Notes on Idioms of Six Classics, Penal Code of the Qing Dynasty. The books he edited include An Introduction to College Life and An Approach to Deng Xiaoping's Theory, both of which belong to The Moral Readers for College Students.

About Fudan Univ 2 / History of Fudan


History of Fudan
 
 
As one of the national topmost institutions of advanced learning and higher education, Fudan has achieved worldwide fame throughout its venerable past. The University was established by Ma Xiang-bo in 1905. "Fudan" found its lexical origin in the quotation "Heavenly light shines day after day" taken from "Annotations of Yu and Xia" (Yu Xia Zhuan) of Scholia of The Collection of Archaic Texts (Shang Shu Da Zhuan).

In 1917, Fudan Public School began to offer undergraduate programs and officially renamed itself "Fudan University". Li Deng-hui was the president from then on to 1937. After being expanded to a full-fledged university, the University had an increasing enrollment. It had three schools: Arts, Sciences and Business, a prep school, and a section of secondary education.

In 1929, Fudan University altered its educational system and opened four new departments: journalism, civil administration, law, and education. It consisted of seventeen departments, which comprised the four schools: Arts, Sciences, Law, and Business.

By 1937 Fudan had established four schools (Arts, Sciences, Law, and Business), which were made up of sixteen departments, a secondary school, an experimental secondary school, and two elementary schools for compulsory education. It became one of the most important institutions of academic research and higher education in southeast China.

The First Session of the 5th Congress of the Executive Yuan (Coucil) of the Repulic of China voted on 25th, November, 1941 to nationalize the Chongqiong Community of Private Fudan University. Wu Nan-xuan was appointed president of the University.

Fudan became one of the national elite universities after the founding of the People's Republic of China in 1949. At the request of Chen Wang-dao, the first post-liberation president of Fudan, Chairman Mao Tse-tung of the CPC handwrote the name of the University. Since the beginning of New China, Fudan has seized three golden opportunities for further development, thanks to the CPC and the People's Government.

The first one came in 1952 when colleges and universities all over the country underwent a thorough readjustment and reshuffling. Fudan lost its departments of applied disciplines for those of arts and sciences from other ten-plus universities in East China. This year saw the University's core disciplines greatly enhanced and its faculty re-energized with new arrivals: it was in this period that eminent professors like Su Bu-qing, Chen Jian-gong, Tan Jia-zhen and Lu He-fu came to join Fudan.

The first twenty years of the Reform and Opening-up Policy brought the second grand opportunity to Fudan, whose development received the Central Government's serious attention during the 7th, 8th and 9th National Construction Plans for the Next Five Years. The University became more intellectually comprehensive by covering a wider range of academic disciplines: the humanities, social sciences, natural sciences, technology, and management. It was to exert a more positive and profound influence on the world.

The latest is the official merger with Shanghai Medical University on 27th, April, 2000, from which a brave new Fudan was born. For the first time has the University had its own college for medical sciences. Better equipped and more robust, Fudan is one step further today toward its ambitious aim of becoming a leading university in the world.


http://www.fudan.edu.cn/englishnew/about/history.html

About Fudan Univ 1 / Brief Introduction

The Name of the University

Initially known as "Fudan Public School", Fudan University was founded in the year 1905. "Fudan", literally meaning "(heavenly light shines) day after day", indicates inexhaustible self-reliance and industriousness.

The University President: Prof. Wang Sheng-hong

The CPC Committee Secretary of the University: Prof. Qin Shao-de

Schools and Research Institutes:

Fudan consists of 29 schools and departments, with seventy undergraduate disciplines. The University confers bachelor's degrees in seventy academic disciplines, and master's degrees in two hundred and twenty five disciplines (with fifty of them established by the University itself), and doctoral degrees in twenty-four Level I and one hundred and fifty-three Level II academic disciplines (with twenty-nine of them established by the University itself). There are also twenty-five research stations that offer postdoctoral fellowships.

Students:

Fudan now has an enrollment of 26,792 full-time degree candidates. Another 20,670 are studying at the schools of Continuing Education and Online Education. Besides, the University's population of foreign students is 2,812 today.

Faculty:

Fudan boasts a qualified faculty of over 2,481 full-time teachers and researchers, including 1,400 full professors and associate professors, 35 academicians of the Chinese Academy of Sciences and the Chinese Academy of Engineering, 831 doctoral advisors, 50 chair professors and 25 lecture professors of the Cheungkong Scholars Program, 11 chief scientists of Project 973 and thirty-three "Young and Middle-Aged Experts Nationally Acknowledged for Their Outstanding Achievements". In the recent years, the University has been proactive in recruiting youthful strengths and optimizing the echelon of its faculty. Fudan has ten teaching hospitals, such as Zhong-shan (Dr. Sun Yat-san) Hospital and Hua-shan (Mount Lotus) Hospital, which offer quality medical service to the general public, conduct clinical education to student doctors and perform advanced scientific researches.

Goal:

The single and solitary goal of Fudan is to cultivate more and more all-round talents for modern China. Emulating the other successful institutions of tertiary and quaternary education at home and abroad, the University has been carrying out a series of daring experiments to integrate the various disciplines of learning and to utilize the abundant resources of a comprehensive university. After years of exploring and practicing, Fudan has now established its own curriculum and management system, both of which are unique and progressively improving.

High-tech Industry:

Fudan also actively incubates high-tech industries and encourages them to convert knowledge to power. Years of learning and discovering have yielded great benefits as well as profits. In return, the multi-pattern development of the high-tech industries helps the University with breathtaking efficiency to industrialize the research outcomes. Meanwhile, a group of University-sponsored enterprises is emerging, filled with passion and ambition. Fudan has thus created its signature style of doing business.


From - http://www.fudan.edu.cn/englishnew/about/intro.html