Tokyo Institute of Technology
東京工業大学 | |
File:TIT-logo.png | |
Motto | chi, waza, kokorozashi, wa no riko-jin Pursuing Excellence |
---|---|
Motto in English | Here are almost almighty as scientists |
Type | Public (National) |
Established | 1881 |
President | Prof Ken-ichi Iga |
Academic staff | 1,324 |
Undergraduates | 4,940 |
Postgraduates | 5,096 |
Location | , , |
Campus | Urban Rural |
Colors | Royal Blue (DIC-641) |
Mascot | None |
Website | http://www.titech.ac.jp/ |
The Tokyo Institute of Technology (informally Tokyo Tech or Tokodai) is a public research university located in Greater Tokyo Area, Japan. Tokyo Tech is the largest institution for higher education in Japan dedicated to science and technology in Japan. Tokyo Tech enrolled 4,850 undergaraduates and 5006 graduate students for 2009-2010.[1] It employs around 1400 faculty members.
Tokyo Tech's main campus is located in the Ookayama on the boundary of Meguro and Ota, with its main entrance facing the Ōokayama Station. Other campuses are located in Nagatsuta and Tamachi. Tokyo Tech is organised into 6 schools, within which there are over 40 departments and resaerch centres.[2]
Operating the world-class supercomputer Tsubame 2.0 ,[3] and taking a breakthrough in high-temperature superconductivity, Tokyo Tech is a major centre for supercomputing technology and condensed matter research in the world.
Tokyo Tech is a member of LAOTSE, an international network of leading universities in Europe and Asia exchanging students and senior scholars. In 2011 it celebrated the 130th anniversary of its founding.[4]
History
Foundation and early years (1881-1922)
Tokyo Institute of Technology was founded by the government of Japan as the Tokyo Vocational School on May 26, 1881,[5] 14 years after the Meiji Restoration. To accomplish the quick catch-up to the West, the government expected this school to cultivate new modernized craftsmen and engineers. In 1890, it was renamed Tokyo Technical School. In 1901, it changed name to Tokyo Higher Technical School.
Great Kanto Earthquake and World War II (1923-1945)
In early days, the school was located in Kuramae, the eastern area of the Greater Tokyo Area, where many craftsmens' workshops had been since the old Shogun's era. The buildings in Kuramae campus were destructed by the Great Kanto Earthquake in 1923. In the following year, the Tokyo Higher Technical School moved from Kuramae to the present site in Ookayama, a south suburb of the Greater Tokyo Area. In 1929 the school became Tokyo Institute of Technology, gaining a status of national university, which allowed the university to award degrees. The university had the Research Laboratory of Building Materials in 1934, and its five years later the Research Laboratory of Resources Utilisation and the Research Laboratory of Precision Machinery were constructed. The Research Laboratory of Ceramic Industry was made in 1943, and one year before the World War Two finished the Research Laboratory of Fuel Science and the Research Laboratory of Electronics were made.
Post War Era (1946-present)
After World War II, the new educational system was promulgated in 1949 with the National School Establishment Law, and Tokyo Institute of Technology was reorganized. Many 3-years courses were turned into 4-years courses with the start of the Schoolf of Engineering in this year. The university started graduate programmes in engineering 1n 1953. In the following year, the above 5 research laboratories were integrated and reorganised into new 4 laboratories: the Research Laboratory of Building Materials, the Research Laboratory of Resources Utilization, the Precision and Intelligence Laboratory and the Research Laboratory of Ceramic Industry, and the School of Engineering was renames the School of Scinece and Engineering.
Throughout the post-war reconstruction of the 1950s, the high economic growth era of 1960s, and the aggressive economic animal's era marching to the Bubble Economy of the 1980s, it kept providing Japan its leading engineers, researchers, and business persons. Since April 2004, it has been semi-privatized into the National University Incorporation of Tokyo Institute of Technology under a new law[6] which applied to all national universities.
In its 130 years, Tokyo Tech has provided not only scientific researchers and engineers but also many social leaders, including Naoto Kan who is the present prime minister.
Campuses
Tokyo Tech has three campuses, the Ōokayama campus in Ōokayama Meguro as the main campus, Tamachi campus in Shibaura Minato and the Suzukakedai campus, located in Nagatsuta, Midori-ku in Yokohama.
- Ōokayama Station campus
- Tamachi campus
- Suzukakedai campus
Organisation
Undergraduate schools
- School of Science
- School of Engineering
- School of Bioscience and Biotechnology
Graduate schools
- Graduate School of Science and Engineering
- Graduate School of Bioscience and Biotechnology
- Interdisciplinary Graduate School of Science and Engineering
- Graduate School of Information Science and Engineering
- Graduate School of Decision Science and Technology
- Graduate School of Innovation Management
Research laboratories
- Chemical Resources Laboratory
- Precision and Intelligence Laboratory
- Materials and Structures Laboratory
- Research Laboratory for Nuclear Reactors
- Quantum Nano Electronics Research Centre [5]
Politics and Social sciences
- Centre for Research in Advanced Financial Technology (Tokyo Institute of Technology)
- Precision and Intelligence Laboratory (Tokyo Institute of Technology)
- Solutions Research Laboratory
- Integrated Research Institute
- Global Edge Institute (Tokyo Institute of Technology)
- Productive Leader Incubation Platform
- Academy for Global Leadership
- Centre for Research and Development of Educational Technology (Tokyo Institute of Technology)
- Research Centre for Educational Facilities
- Creative Research Laboratory
- Research Centre for the Science of Institutional Management of Technology
- Collaboration Centre for Design and Manufacturing(CODAMA)
- Centre for Agent-Based Social Systems Sciences (Tokyo Institute of Technology)
- Foreign Language Research and Teaching Centre
- Centre for the Study of World Civilisations
- Asia-Africa Biology Research Centre
- Centre for CompView Research and Education
- Career Advancement Professional School
- Organization for Life Design and Engineering
- Centre for Liberal Arts
Engineering and Computing
- Materials and Structure Laboratory (Tokyo Institute of Technology)
- Fromtier Research Centre
- Imaging Science and Engineering Laboratory
- Global Scientific Information and Computing Centre
- Structural Engineering Research Centre
- Super-Mechano Systems R&D Centre
- Centre for Photonic Nano-Device Integrated Engineering
- Photovoltaics Research Center
- Inter-departmental organisation for Informatics
Chemistry and Life sciences
- Chemical Resources Laboratory
- Research Centre for Carbon Recycling and Energy
- Centre for Biologial Resources and Informatics
- International Research Centre of Macromolecular Science
- Bio-Frontier Research Centre
- Emerging Nanomaterial Research Centre
- Centre for Molecular Science and Technology
- The Osmotic Power Research Centre
Physics and Astronomy
- Volcanic Fluid Research Centre (Tokyo Institute of Technology)
- Research Laboratory for Nuclear Reactors (Tokyo Institute of Technology)
- Research Centre for Low Temperature Physics
- Quantum Nanoelectronics Research Centre
- Centre for Urban Earthquake Engineering
- Research Centre for Nanometer-Scale Quantum Physics
- Research Centre for the Evolving Earth and Planets
- Centre for Research into Innovative Nuclear Energy Systems
Other facilities
- Tokyo Tech Archive Initiative
- Health Service Centres
- TITECH Earth Database Centre
- Tokyo Tech Front
- International Student Centre
- Inter-departmental Organization for Environment and Energy
- ICE Cube Centre
See also
Academics
Libraries
The main library of Tokyo Tech is the Tokyo Institute of Technology Library in Ookayama. It is the home of Japan's largest science and technology library. The library was founded in 1882,[7] and it lost nearly 28,000 books during the Great Kanto Earthquake in 1923. Moved to Ookayama in 1936, it has been the national science and technology library of Japan.
1,200 students and staff visit the library each day. It has 674,000 books and 2,500 journals, including 1,600 foreign academic journals; the number of international research collections is the largest in Japan. It provides around 7,000 registered electric journals each year. The library is therefore recognised for the outstanding national and international importance and awarded 'Centre of foreign journals' by the government of Japan. The library was renewaled on July 2011.
International graduate programmes
Tokyo Tech runs intensive programmes for obtaining master degree or PhD. Called the Tokyo Tech's International Graduate Programme, the programmes are targeted at international students of high academic potential who are not Japanese speakers. Lectures and seminars are given in English mainly by Tokyo Tech's faculty members[8]. Programme starting dates are October or April. Public fundings for these courses are also available; those students who have academic excellence may apply for scholarships from the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology of Japan.
Rankings
T. Reuters National[9] | Research | 8 | |
---|---|---|---|
WE National[10] | Employment | 2 | |
NBP Greater Tokyo[11][12] | Reputation | 6 | |
Shimano National[13] | Selectivity | SA | |
QS Asia (Asia version)[14] | General | 11 | |
ARWU Asia[15] | Research | 10-18 | |
THE World[16] | General | 112 | |
QS World[17] | General | 60 | |
ARWU World[15] | Research | 101-150 | |
ENSMP World[18] | Alumni | 92 |
Natural Sciences & Technology | |||
---|---|---|---|
Engineering | |||
MATERIALS SCIENCE | |||
T.Reuters National[19] | Research | 5 | |
T.Reuters World[19] | Research | 24 | |
PHYSICS | |||
T.Reuters National[19] | Research | 5 | |
T.Reuters World[19] | Research | 31 | |
CHEMISTRY | |||
T.Reuters National[19] | Research | 5 | |
T.Reuters World[19] | Research | 22 | |
MATHEMATICS | |||
ARWU National[20] | Research | 3 | |
ARWU World[20] | Research | 77-100 | |
* T. Reuters World rankings include non-educational institutions |
Tokyo Tech is one of the most prestigious universities in Japan. It can be seen in the several rankings such as shown below.
General Rankings
The university has been ranked 8th in 2008 and 13th in 2009-2010 in the ranking "Truly Strong Universities" by Toyo Keizai.[25] In another ranking, Japanese prep school Kawaijuku ranked Tokyo Tech as the 4th best university in Japan.[26]
According to ARWU, Tokyo Tech was ranked 6th overall in Japan and internationally ranked 37th in the field of Engineering and Technology, and 51-75th in Natural science in 2009.[27][28] The university was ranked 31st worldwide according to Global University ranking[29] and 60th in 2010 according to QS World University Rankings,[30] who placed it 23rd in Engineering & IT and 64th in Natural Sciences.
It was also ranked 31st worldwide according to the Global University Ranking in 2009.[31]
Research Performance
Tokyo Tech is one of the top research institutions in natural sciences and technology in Japan. According to Thomson Reuters, Tokyo Tech is the 8th best research university in Japan.[9] Its research excellence is especially distinctive in Materials Science (5th in Japan, 24th in the world),Physics (5th in Japan, 31st in the world), and Chemistry (5th in Japan, 22nd in the world).[32]
Weekly Diamond also reported that Tokyo Tech has the highest research standard in Japan in terms of research fundings per researchers in COE Program.[33] In the same article, it's also ranked 8th in terms of the quality of education by GP funds per student.
In addition, Nikkei Shimbun on 2004/2/16 surveyed about the research standards in Engineering studies based on Thomson Reuters, Grants in Aid for Scientific Research and questionnaires to heads of 93 leading Japanese Research Centers, and Tokyo Tech was placed 7th (research planning ability 7th/informative ability of research outcome 5th/ability of business-academia collaboration 4th) in this ranking.[34]
The Tsubame, which is a large scale supercomputer in Tokyo Tech, was ranked one of the world best-performed computer. this supercomputer is used for simulation related to the complex systems such as the dynamics of planets or financial systems.
As Tokyo Tech has been emphasizing on 'practical' research, Tokyo Tech got the 2nd place at the number of patents accepted (284) during 2009 among Japanese Universities.[35]
Alumni Rankings
Alumni of Tokyo Tech enjoy their good success in Japanese industries. According to the Weekly Economist's 2010 rankings and the PRESIDENT's article on 2006/10/16, graduates from Tokyo Tech have the 2nd best employment rate in 400 major companies, and the average graduate salary is the 9th best in Japan.[36][37] École des Mines de Paris ranks Tokyo Tech as 92nd in the world in 2011 in terms of the number of alumni listed among CEOs in the 500 largest worldwide companies.[38]
Popularity and Selectivity
Tokyo Tech is one of the most selective universites in Japan. Its entrance difficulty is usually considered as one of the top in Japan.[39][40]
Nikkei BP has been publishing the ranking system "Brand rankings of Japanese universities" every year, composed by the various indications related to the power of brand, and Tokyo Tech has been ranked 6th (and 3rd among national universities) in Greater Tokyo Area in 2009-2010.[11]
See also
Alumni and Faculty
References
- ^ the numbers of graduate students Tokyo Tech facts and stats
- ^ the number of undergraduates and departments of Tokyo Tech facts and ststs
- ^ Japan reclaims no.1 spot on TOP500 list of world's fastest supercomputers International Business Times
- ^ [1]
- ^ [2] The history of the Tokyo Institute of Technology
- ^ [3]
- ^ [4] About us, Tokyo Institute of Technology Library
- ^ Prospectus for International Students
- ^ a b "Thomson Reuters 20 Top research institutions in Japan". Thomson Reuters. 2011. Retrieved July 22, 2022. (this ranking includes 5 non-educational institutions)
- ^ "Employment rate in 400 major companies rankings" (in Japanese). Weekly Economist. 2011. Retrieved April 29, 2011.
- ^ a b "Nikkei BP Brand rankings of Japanese universities" (in Japanese). Nikkei Business Publications. 2010. Retrieved April 29, 2011.
- ^ "Nikkei BP Brand rankings of Japanese universities" (in Japanese). Nikkei Business Publications. 2009. Retrieved April 29, 2011.
- ^ "GBUDU University Rankings" (in Japanese). YELL books. 2009. Retrieved April 29, 2011.
- ^ "QS World University Rankings: Asia 2025". QS Quacquarelli Symonds Limited. 2025. Retrieved November 6, 2024.
- ^ a b "Academic Ranking of World Universities". Institute of Higher Education, Shanghai Jiao Tong University. 2024. Retrieved August 15, 2024.
- ^ "THE World University Rankings". Times Higher Education. 2025. Retrieved October 9, 2024.
- ^ "QS World University Rankings". QS Quacquarelli Symonds Limited. 2025. Retrieved June 4, 2024.
- ^ "ENSMP World University Rankings" (PDF). École nationale supérieure des mines de Paris. 2011. Retrieved April 29, 2011.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l "Thomson Reuters 10 Top research institutions by subject in Japan" (in Japanese). Thomson Reuters. 2010. Retrieved May 11, 2011.
- ^ a b "ARWU in Mathematics". Shanghai Jiaotong University. 2011. Retrieved May 11, 2011.
- ^ Asahi Shimbun University rankings 2010 "Publification rankings in Law (Page 4)" (PDF) (in Japanese). Asahi Shimbun. 2010. Retrieved May 11, 2011.
- ^ "Kawaijuku japanese universities rankings in Engineering field" (in Japanese). Kawaijuku. 2012. Retrieved July 20, 2012.
- ^ "QS topuniversities world rankings in Engineering field". Topuniversities. 2012. Retrieved July 20, 2012.
- ^ a b "ARWU in Computer Science". Shanghai Jiaotong University. 2010. Retrieved May 11, 2011.
- ^ Cite error: The named reference
Rankings_TSU_N
was invoked but never defined (see the help page). - ^ Cite error: The named reference
Rankings_Kawai_N
was invoked but never defined (see the help page). - ^ http://www.arwu.org/FieldENG2010.jsp
- ^ http://www.arwu.org/FieldSCI2010.jsp
- ^ http://www.globaluniversitiesranking.org/images/banners/top-100(eng).pdf
- ^ "QS World University Rankings 2010 Results".
- ^ http://www.globaluniversitiesranking.org/images/banners/top-100(eng).pdf
- ^ "Thomson Reuters 20 Top research institutions in Japan" (in Japanese). Thomson Reuters. (this raking includes non-educational institutions)
- ^ "週刊ダイヤモンド" ダイヤモンド社 2010/2/27 http://web.sapmed.ac.jp/kikaku/infomation/0227daiyamondokiji.pdf
- ^ http://homepage3.nifty.com/katu-kobayashi/doppo/kougaku_kennkyu.htm
- ^ Template:Ja2009年国内大学別特許公開件数, Japanese patent office, accessed May 3rd 2011
- ^ "Employment rate in 400 major companies rankings" (in Japanese). Weekly Economist. 2011. Retrieved Apr 29, 2011.
- ^ http://hensachi-ranking.seesaa.net/article/26733115.html#more
- ^ http://www.mines-paristech.fr/Actualites/PR/Ranking2011EN-Fortune2010.pdf
- ^ e.g. Yoyogi seminar published Hensachi (the indication showing the entrance difficulties by prep schools) rankings http://www.yozemi.ac.jp/rank/gakubu/index.html
- ^ Japanese journalist Kiyoshi Shimano ranks its entrance difficulty as SA (most selective/out of 10 scales) in Japan. "危ない大学・消える大学 2012年版" (in Japanese). YELL books. 2011.
External links
Gallery
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Suzukakedai campus at night
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Suzukakedai campus at nigh
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Suzukakedai campus at night
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The Centennial Hall in Ōokayama campus