Shanghai International Studies University | |
Native Name: | 上海外国语大学 |
Nickname: | SISU, or ShàngWài |
Image Upright: | .7 |
Established: | December, |
Type: | Public (National) |
Motto: | 格高志远、学贯中外;诠释世界、成就未来[1] |
Mottoeng: | Integrity, Vision, Academic Excellence; Interpret the World, Translate the Future |
Colors: | SISU Blue |
President: | Li Yansong (李岩松) |
Students: | 12,395 (2021) |
Undergrad: | 6,863 (2021) |
Postgrad: | 4,568 (2021) |
Faculty: | 1,305 |
Campus: | Urban 74.7 hectares (Songjiang and Hongkou) |
Website: | global.shisu.edu.cn |
Shanghai International Studies University (SISU) is a public university in Shanghai, China. It is affiliated with the Ministry of Education, and co-funded by the Ministry of Education and the Shanghai Municipal People's Government. The university is part of Project 211 and the Double First-Class Construction.
The university was established in December 1949.
After the founding of the People's Republic of China in 1949, the Chinese Communist Party Central Committee East China Bureau (Chinese: 中共中央华东局) and the government of the Shanghai Municipality decided to establish an institute for higher education in Russian studies to cultivate qualified diplomats and translators for international affairs. With the support of Mayor Chen Yi, the Shanghai Russian School (Chinese: 上海俄文学校) was officially established in December 1949. Jiang Chunfang, one of the most famous Russian translators in China and the first chief editor of the Encyclopedia of China, was appointed the school's first president.
In 1950, the department of English was established and the college was incorporated as the foreign language school affiliated to the East China People's Revolution University (Chinese: 华东人民革命大学). The department of oriental language and literature was founded in April, 1951 and languages as Burmese, Vietnamese, Indonesian had respectively been introduced to teaching.
Later in 1952, a nationwide restructuring of institutes of higher education began in China, and the department of oriental language and literature was incorporated into Peking University. The college was renamed as Shanghai Russian College that specialise in teaching Russian language. The university was used to be widely known as Shanghai Foreign Language Institute (Chinese: 上海外国语学院) since its expansion in 1956 and became a national key university approved by the State Council in 1963 with the department of Russian, English (re-established), French, German, Japanese, Arabic and Spanish.
In 1964, Vicki Garvin became the first African American college instructor to teach in China when she began work at SFLI.[2]
Approved by the Ministry of Education in 1994, it was officially renamed as Shanghai International Studies University (Chinese: 上海外国语大学). In the same year, it was listed as one of the first colleges and universities jointly supervised by the national Ministry of Education and the Municipality of Shanghai. In 1996, SISU passed the evaluation process of former Project 211 directed by the Ministry of Education, and then, SISU was included in the Double First Class University Plan designed by the Chinese central government.[3]
School of English Studies | English |
Translation and Interpreting | |
School of Asian and African Studies | Arabic |
Korean | |
Persian | |
Vietnamese | |
Indonesian | |
Thai | |
Hebrew | |
Turkish | |
Hindi | |
Kiswahili | |
School of European and Latin American Studies | Spanish |
Portuguese | |
Italian | |
Greek | |
Dutch | |
School of Japanese Studies | Japanese |
School of Russian and Eurasian Studies | Russian |
Central and Eastern European languages (Ukrainian, Hungarian, Polish, Czech) | |
Central Asian languages (Uzbek, Kazakh) | |
School of French and Francophone Studies | French |
School of Germanic Studies | German |
Swedish | |
School of Law | Law |
School of Economics and Finance | International Economics and Trade |
Finance | |
Accounting | |
School of Business and Management | Business Administration |
Public Relations | |
Information Management and Information System | |
MBA Center | |
School of Journalism and Communication | Journalism |
Broadcast Journalism | |
Advertising | |
Educational Technology | |
Online Journalism and New Media | |
School of Education | Teaching Chinese to Speakers of Other Languages |
English Education | |
Business English | |
School of Chinese Studies and Exchange | Chinese |
Graduate Institute of Interpretation and Translation (GIIT) | Translation and Interpretation |
Translation Studies |
Shanghai International studies university was ranked #651-700 globally in 2016 by the QS world university rankings, the 76th in the QS BRICS 2016 and the 142nd in the QS Asian University Rankings.[6] As of 2023, its linguistics is ranked 101–150 in the QS ranking by subject.[7] As of 2021, Shanghai International Studies University ranked no. 3 nationwide among universities specialized in language teaching and research in the widely recognized Best Chinese Universities Ranking.[8]
There are 33 Master's Programs:(30 research programs) Adult Education, Ancient Chinese Literature, Arabic Language and Literature, Asian-African Languages and Literatures, Chinese and Foreign Political Institution, Chinese Linguistics and Philology, Communication, Comparative Literature and World Literature, Corporate Management, Curriculum and Teaching Methodology, Diplomacy, Education in Ideology and Politics, Educational Technology, English Language and Literature, European Languages and Literatures, Finance, French Language and Literature, Foreign Linguistics and Applied Linguistics, German Language and Literature, International Politics, International Relations, International Trade, Japanese Language and Literature, Journalism, Linguistics and Applied Linguistics, Modern and Contemporary Chinese Literature, Russian Language and Literature, Spanish Language and Literature, Technology Economy and Management, Translation Studies; (3 taught programs) Translation and Interpreting (MTI), Business Administration (MBA), Teaching Chinese to Speakers of Other Languages (MTCSOL).
There are 12 Doctoral Programs: English Language and Literature, Russian Language and Literature, French Language and Literature, German Language and Literature, Japanese Language and Literature, Arabic Language and Literature, Asian and African Languages and Literatures, Translation Studies, International Relations, Foreign Linguistics and Applied Linguistics, International Politics, Diplomacy.
The Graduate Institute of Interpretation and Translation (GIIT) of SISU is awarded the highest ranking by AIIC, the International Association of Conference Interpreters, as the only Asian university among the 15 top professional conference interpreting schools in the world.[9]
The University has entered into partnerships with 286 universities and institutions in 55 countries and regions.[10]
SISU has two campuses, one in Hongkou District and one in Songjiang District.
The Hongkou campus is located in the center of Shanghai, covering 16.9 hectares.
The Songjiang campus is in Shanghai's Songjiang New District, covering an area of 53.3 hectares.