KWU Leads Consortium for 2024 Humanities and Social Sciences Talent Development Project
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- 2024-07-03
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Consortium of Kwangwoon University and Four Other Universities Selected for the 2024 Humanities and Social Sciences Convergence Talent Development Project
- Consortium comprising Kwangwoon
University, Kookmin University, Sun Moon University, Yeungnam University, and
Honam University forms the ‘Global·Symbiosis Consortium’ -
- Expected to receive approximately
3 billion KRW annually for the next three years (2024-2026) -
- Anticipated to strengthen student
choice and bring flexibility to academic systems -
Kwangwoon
University announced that the consortium led by Kwangwoon University has been
newly selected for the ‘Humanities and Social Sciences Convergence Talent
Development Project (HUSS: Humanities Utmost Sharing System)’ implemented by
the Ministry of Education and the National Research Foundation of Korea.
The
consortium, which includes Kwangwoon University, Kookmin University, Sun Moon
University, Yeungnam University, and Honam University, was selected through
document reviews after submitting the project plan in April this year and a
presentation evaluation in May. The consortium will receive approximately 3
billion KRW annually for the next three years (2024-2026) under the theme of
Global·Symbiosis.
The
Global·Symbiosis Convergence Education Consortium led by Kwangwoon University
aims to nurture global resource coordinators and industrial/urban
sustainability experts needed in the era of green, digital, and energy
transformations. To build a convergence education system that fosters
humanities knowledge, analysis, communication, global resources, and
sustainability competencies, Kwangwoon University’s departments of
International Trade, International Studies, Public Administration, Law, Media
Communication, Korean Language and Literature, English Industry, and
Information Convergence will participate.
The
project aims to establish a humanities and social sciences-centered convergence
education system to nurture convergence talents required for future society by
promoting convergence education operations and spreading outcomes based on
inter-university cooperation, dismantling the boundaries between departments
(majors) within and between universities.
Participating
universities will jointly develop and operate curricula and promote physical
and human resource exchanges through academic system reforms. Various
convergence courses offered by universities, job training (internships),
special lectures by field experts, and competitions linked to regular courses
are expected to allow students to expand their knowledge and experience and
freely explore career paths regardless of their majors.
Hye-Young
Lee, the Dean of Policy and Law at Kwangwoon University (Department of Public
Administration), who is leading the project, stated, “This project will be a
significant opportunity to enhance student choice and bring flexibility to
academic systems, coinciding with the implementation of the autonomous major
system next year. It is expected to significantly contribute to employment
through strengthened convergence education for humanities and social sciences
students.”
The photo shows the heads of the consortium universities’ project teams at the MOU ceremony held at Kwangwoon University on April 12.
(From left) Honam University’s project head, Chang-soo Song; Yeungnam University’s project head, Jae-hak Jung; Kwangwoon University’s project head, Hye-young Lee; Kookmin University’s project head, Byung-joon Kim; and Sun Moon University’s project head, Do-seop Jung.