ShanghaiTech University


ShanghaiTech University is a research university in Shanghai, China. Its campus is located in the Zhangjiang Hi-Tech Park in Pudong with an academic focus on STEM research. It has five schools and three research institutes and is backed by the Shanghai Municipal Government and Chinese Academy of Sciences. In 2018, it had 1433 undergraduates, 1788 Master's and PhD students, and 485 faculty members.
ShanghaiTech is in cooperation with several overseas universities such as University of California, Berkeley, University of Chicago, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Drexel University, University of Padua and USC School of Cinematic Arts.

Timeline

The school was founded by the Shanghai municipal government and Chinese Academy of Sciences. In September 2013, ShanghaiTech University appointed Jiang Mianheng as president. Before his death in December 2018, Zhang Shoucheng was a professor at ShanghaiTech University and "tasked with establishing a new research institute there." On January 23, 2018, China News Service reported he was setting up the school's Frontier Science and Technology Research Institute.

Schools and Institutes

The university has five schools in operation:
ShanghaiTech has two research institutes:
The school offers bachelor, master and PhD degrees in physics, astronomy, chemistry, material science and technology and energy and environment science.
The research of SPST is concentrating on:
The school offers two bachelor degrees: Computer Science and 'Electrical and Information Engineering' and Master and PhD degrees in four directions: Computing Theory and Software, Computer Systems and Applications, Information Theory and Systems, Electronic Devices and Integrated Systems.
The research of the school is concentrated in seven research centers:
SLST conducts teaching and research in all fundamental areas of life science. Its research is focused on, but not limited to, genomics and proteomics, epigenetics, RNA biology, systems biology, stem cell biology and regenerative medicine, super-resolution microscopy, chemical biology and drug discovery, and translational medicine.

School of Entrepreneurship and Management (SEM)

SEM does not offer degrees but instead teaches all students of ShanghaiTech University in creativity and creative confidence, critical-thinking and about skills which leads to learning how to innovate. Among other courses are thought on Economics and Design Thinking.

School of Creative Arts (SCA)

SCA offers no degrees but it offers non-diploma course with University of South California and is planning to offer students with art courses and lectures. The dean of SCA is Li Ruigang, the former president of the Shanghai Media Group and the chairman of China Media Capital. The vice dean is John McIntosh, former chair of Computer Art in SVA, New York.

Shanghai Institute for Advanced Immunochemical Studies (SIAIS)

SIAIS is performing antibody and immunochemistry research, dedicated to the understanding of the basic structure and design of biological molecules. It has eight key laboratories in the fields of antibody design, ADC chemistry, phenotypic screening, structure biochemistry, cell biology, stem cell biology, antibody engineering and antibody structure, covering all the capabilities that one needs to go from discovery of an important antibody through all the steps necessary to turn it into a drug. Besides, seven large technical platforms including cell sorting, imaging, protein and gene, HTS, informatics, analytical and animal sciences are also being developed.
Nobel laureate James Rothman is a Professor-in-Residence of SIAIS.

iHuman Institute

iHuman focused exclusively on the basic and applied science of human cell signaling, with research groups in the fields of Chemical and Cell Biology, Chemistry, Antibody Development, Computational Chemistry, Imaging, Structural Biology, System Biology, and Translational Biology. Basic science is at the core of the iHuman Institute, with direct application to drug discovery. Raymond C. Stevens is the director of the iHuman Institute and Nobel laureate Kurt Wüthrich is leading the iHuman research group on Molecular Structural Biology.

Campus

The ShanghaiTech campus is located in the Zhangjiang Hi-Tech Park, amongst many national and international R&D-based companies. The university is in very close proximity to the Shanghai Synchrotron Radiation Facility, the and the . The campus was designed by Moore Ruble Yudell Architects and won the Merit Award for Urban Design Award 2012 of the American Institute of Architects, California Council. With 0.6 square kilometer and a construction area of 701,500 square meters the campus represents investments of the Shanghai Municipal Government of 4.169 billion CNY.

Academics

The low student-to-faculty ratio of at most 12 to 1 is hoped to ensure teaching quality. When the school opened, it had plans to enroll 2,000 undergraduate students and 4,000 graduate students immediately. In the future ShanghaiTech aims to host 1000 faculty, including 500 adjunct professors from institutes of the Chinese Academy of Sciences and other universities. The university will then educate 2000 undergraduate and 4000 graduate students.
ShanghaiTech hosts four nobel laureates. Roger D. Kornberg and Kurt Wüthrich have both been professors, as has James E. Rothman, 2013 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine.

Undergraduate program

The four year undergraduate program at ShanghaiTech University has 3 semesters per school year. The summer semester is mainly for course projects, with music and painting courses available.

Research

By 2017, the school had 145 research teams.
A research team at the school found "cerium can capture sunlight and cause a light-catalyzed reaction." The team then "developed a catalyst combination of cerium and alcohol, which can convert methane into fuel at room temperature, with no need of heat or condensation."
The school is involved with studying artificial intelligence. In September 2018, researchers at the school published an article saying they had successfully replaced genetic material in a human embryo that caused Marfan syndrome.
A team at the school also "exploited the natural secretion of amyloid fibres from the bacterium bacillus subtilis for 3D printing to produce customized nanoscale biomaterials."

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