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The University of Seoul was founded as Kyung Sung Public Agricultural College in 1918 and renamed as University of Seoul in 1987. In 2012, the mayor of Seoul, Park Won-soon, implemented a campaign promise, "Half-priced tuition" as soon as he started his term. The half-priced tuition was initiated in UOS first so that it would drive other ...
Myongji University: 1948 Private 24,648 Seodaemun-gu Yongin-si (Natural Science Campus) Sahmyook University: 1906 Private 5,922 Nowon-gu Sangmyung University: 1937 Private 11,873 Jongno-gu Cheonan-si (Cheonan Campus) Sejong University: 1940 Private 20,391 Gwangjin-gu Seokyeong University: 1947 Private 8,401 Seongbuk-gu Seoul Women's University ...
University. University of Seoul - Seoul; The University of Seoul is the only municipal university in South Korea. College. Chungnam Provincial College - Cheongyang County, South Chungcheong; Chungbuk Provincial College - Okcheon County, North Chungcheong; Gangwon Provincial University - Gangneung, Gangwon
Dankook University – Seoul and Cheonan City, South Chungcheong; Dong-A College – Yeongam County, South Jeolla; Dong-A University – Busan; Dong-Ah Broadcasting College – Anseong, Gyeonggi; Donga College of Health; Dongduk Women's University – Seoul; Dong-eui University – Busan; Dongguk University – Seoul and Gyeongju City, North ...
Pages about universities and colleges at 2016 in the city of Seoul, South Korea. Subcategories This category has the following 31 subcategories, out of 31 total.
This is a list of research universities in the South Korea classified as Research university or University(Institute) of science and technology in the Ministry of Education (South Korea). Research universities were designated until 1991, universities of science and technology were established until 2007.
Korea National Open University (KNOU, Korean: 한국방송통신대학교) is a national university of South Korea.The school provides higher education including undergraduate, graduate and non-degree programs as well as distance-learning courses in Korean for more than 180,000 students.
Since the implementation of the 2007 Act calling for reform in legal education, law schools in Korea became graduate schools (similar to the US system) and require a bachelor's degree, a satisfactory undergraduate grade point average, foreign language proficiency, and a satisfactory score on the Legal Education Eligibility Test (LEET) to be considered for admission (the LEET is modelled after ...