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Institutes of Technology and Colleges of Engineering in Japan, national and private, past and present. See the main Institute of Technology#Japan page and also Technical education in Japan . Subcategories
The Shibaura Institute of Technology enjoys a moderately high reputation nationally, ranking 26th in the 2017 edition of Truly Strong Universities, [4] 28th in Times Higher Education Japan University rankings for 2022 [5] [6] (out of 775 institutions [7]), and joint 6th among private universities in terms of entry difficulty (in STEM). [8]
The number is approximately 10% of the 4-year university graduates in engineering. [ 3 ] [ 4 ] Typically, one college has roughly 500–800 students, distributed in several departments. The 55 national public colleges are united under one governing body, the National Institute of Technology.
1963.04 Toyota National College of Technology was established (Department of Mechanical Engineering, Department of Electrical Engineering, and Department of Architecture). 1968.04 Department of Civil Engineering was added. A boarding system was adopted for students in lower grades. 1979.03 Data Station was opened.
Toyohashi University of Technology was founded on October 1, 1976, [2] after the government’s decision to establish the Graduate School of Science and Technology in Toyohashi city in 1974. This is based on the request from Japanese National Technical Colleges, to the Minister of Education in 1972.
Department of Industrial Engineering and materials management courses, aeronautical engineering, mechanical engineering has been installed at the university. In 1944, the headquarters of the university was moved to Sophia University in Kōjimachi from Tamagawa Gakuen.
Tokyo Tech has also ranked 3rd among the best Japanese universities according to QS World University Rankings 2021. [32] Tokyo Tech has also been ranked 2nd (national) in 2011 in the field of Engineering "Entrance score ranking of Japanese universities-Department of Engineering" by Score-navi. [33]
The Toyota Technological Institute (豊田工業大学, Toyota Kōgyō Daigaku) (commonly referred to as TTI) is a university located in Nagoya, Japan. Founded in 1981 by a large endowment from Toyota Motor Corporation, it originally only accepted students with some industrial work experience.