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The university was reopened in 1954 as National Chengchi University in Taipei by the Executive Yuan, in order to meet the needs of civil service and the growing demands of higher education in Taiwan. Initially only graduate students were admitted, later in 1955, the school started to offer places to undergraduate students.
The College of Commerce (CNCCU; Chinese: 商學院; pinyin: Shāng Xuéyuàn) at National Chengchi University (NCCU) was established in 1958 and CNCCU was the first collegiate business school founded in Taiwan after 1945. [10] CNCCU also initiated MBA, IMBA and DBA degrees in Taiwan.
Major Chinese language schools: International Chinese Language Institute for foreigners (TMI), at Taiwan Manadarin Institute International Chinese Language Program (ICLP), formerly Stanford Center and Inter-University Center (IUP), at National Taiwan University
Speaking at National Chengchi University in end of March 2014 after the Sunflower Student Movement, Lin said that Taiwan has signed closer economic cooperation with New Zealand and Singapore, and plan to do more with India and Indonesia at the end of the year.
NCCU CFLL is the first public college of foreign languages and literature established and also regarded nationally as one of the best CFLL in Taiwan. Now, there are 7 departments, 5 graduate institutes, 3 research centers in the college and it provides programs in over 26 languages.
The International MBA program (simplified Chinese: 国际经营管理硕士; traditional Chinese: 國際經營管理碩士; pinyin: Guójì Jīngyín Guǎnlǐ Shuòshì; abbreviated IMBA) at the National Chengchi University College of Commerce was established in 2001. It has an MBA program with an accredited English MBA program in Taiwan.
The Ministry of Education in Taiwan established the "Office of Global Mandarin Education" in 2016 [26] to integrate relevant educational resources, expand the attraction of overseas students to Taiwan to learn Mandarin, and build an international education brand in order to promote Mandarin language policy. [27]
University entrance is the traditional route taken by Taiwanese students to enter the gateway of higher education as it is by far the most prestigious form of higher education in Taiwan. Since 2008, the percentage of high school graduates entering university has exceeded 95 percent.