


Shanghai Jiao Tong University
Shanghai, China
Shanghai Jiao Tong University is one of the oldest and most prestigious universities in China. Since its establishment in 1896, the fundamental mission of the university has been to nurture first-class talent, accomplish top scholarship and drive the nation’s development.
SJTU has 31 schools/departments, 47 research platforms, and 13 hospitals affiliated to its medical school. The University offers 67 undergraduate programs covering disciplines of economics, law, literature, science, engineering, agriculture, medicine, management and arts, 42 first-level disciplines authorized to confer doctorate degrees and 57 first-level disciplines authorized to confer master degrees. By December 2018, there are 16,129 undergraduates and 30,217 postgraduates, more than 7000 international students on campus including 2,982 in degree programs. There are over 3,100 full-time faculty members, including 44 academicians of two academies (the Chinese Academy of Sciences and the Chinese Academy of Engineering).
Internationalization has always played an important role in the development of SJTU. Currently SJTU has more than 150 institutional cooperation agreements with well-known universities around the world and has 60 double-degree programs in place. More than 45% of its undergraduate students have a study-abroad experience over the four years of studies at SJTU. SJTU aspires to build a world-class university with featured attributes of being “comprehensive, research-intensive and international”, to fulfill its core mission of serving the societal development and mankind through knowledge advancement, educating future generations of leaders and providing driving forces of innovation for economic growth and public good.
Website: en.sjtu.edu.cn
Facebook: facebook.com/sjtu1896/
Twitter: twitter.com/sjtu1896
Instagram: instagram.com/shanghai_jiao_tong_uni/
VSE Season 1, 2023-24: Courses offered by Shanghai Jiao Tong University
Application Deadline
Students must submit an application to the VSE Central Office before:
Aug 10, 2023 12:00 noon Hong Kong Time (UTC+8)
Academic Requirements
Before applying, please make sure you have fulfilled the course offering university's academic requirements listed below:
- A minimum GPA of 3.0 on a 4.0 scale;
- Must be a full-time, matriculated student in one of APRU member institutions;
For more details, please contact the VSE coordinator at Shanghai Jiao Tong University.
English Language Proficiency Requirements
Before applying, please make sure you have fulfilled the course offering university's English language proficiency requirements listed below:
IELTS 6.0 or TOEFL 90 for attending English Taught Courses.
No requirement for native English speakers.
For more details, please contact the VSE coordinator at Shanghai Jiao Tong University.
Course Information
Course information posted on this page are provided by the course offering university and may be changed or updated anytime without prior notice.
Click on the course titles to reveal full course details:
Number of Credits | 3 | ||
Offering Department | School of Aeronautics and Astronautics | ||
Course Teacher | Yile Hu | ||
Language of Instruction | English | ||
First Day of Class | Sep 22, 2023 | ||
Last Day of Class | Jan 5, 2024 | ||
Course Component | Lecture | ||
Mode of Teaching | Synchronous / Asynchronous | ||
Meeting Time | Week 2-17: Fri 1800-2020 | ||
Time Zone | UTC+08 | ||
Course Description | This course aims at providing fundamental and practical notions in finite element analysis. The course will present systematic approaches for the derivation of various finite elements. The students will also be introduced to numerical techniques for the solution of the discretized governing equations. Practical aspects such as mesh generation and choice related to numerical integration will also be presented. This course will mostly be based on structural analysis, focusing on both isotropic and composite materials. Students need to program their own FE code to accomplish homework and final project. | ||
Course Outline | |||
Course Prerequisites/Restrictions | Prerequisites: | ||
Points to Note for Students | Assessment: 1. Homework: 30% | ||
Fees to be Borne by Students | N/A |
Number of Credits | 1 | ||
Offering Department | Antai College of Economics and Management | ||
Course Teacher | Nan Li | ||
Language of Instruction | English | ||
First Day of Class | Sep 22, 2023 | ||
Last Day of Class | Oct 20, 2023 | ||
Course Component | Lecture, Tutorial | ||
Mode of Teaching | Synchronous / Asynchronous | ||
Meeting Time | Lecture on MOOC | Synchronous Tutorial: Week 2-6: Fri 1800-2020 | ||
Time Zone | UTC+08 | ||
Course Description | This course builds on basic financial theory and the principles courses in economics to address topics that are important for managing banks in China. Upon successful completion of the course, students are expected to understand recent development in the Chinese banking industry and how banking reforms change the banking industry landscape in China. More importantly, students are expected to understand the special role of financial institutions in the Chinese economy and how to manage the risks faced by the banks in China in a rapidly changing international environment. | ||
Course Outline | |||
Course Prerequisites/Restrictions | for Year 3/4 undergraduates. | ||
Points to Note for Students | Assessment: | ||
Fees to be Borne by Students | N/A |
Number of Credits | 3 | ||
Offering Department | Antai College of Economics and Management | ||
Course Teacher | Nan Li | ||
Language of Instruction | English | ||
First Day of Class | Sep 15, 2023 | ||
Last Day of Class | Dec 29, 2023 | ||
Course Component | Lecture | ||
Mode of Teaching | Synchronous | ||
Meeting Time | Week 1-16: Fri 1400-1645 | ||
Time Zone | UTC+08 | ||
Course Description | This course focuses on the advanced methods and tools to analyze time series in finance and macroeconomics. The first part of the course introduces the foundation and building blocks for time series analysis, such as stationarity, nonstationarity, cointegration, impulse responses and shock identification etc. The students are expected to understand ARMA, VAR, and other models as well as methods such as Spectral Analysis, GMM and Kalman Filter that are important tools in the time series analysis of macroeconomics and financial economics. More importantly, students are expected to be able to apply the methods and tools learned to set up appropriate empirical models to analyze the problem in macroeconomics and financial economics, and to estimate and test these models. In the second part of the course, various macro-asset pricing models are introduced and the students are expected to understand the empirical tests of implication of these asset pricing model, both time-series and cross-section tests. | ||
Course Outline | |||
Course Prerequisites/Restrictions | Year 4 undergraduates in finance, economics, and management with strong background in math, finance, and economics. Prerequisite: finance, macroeconomics, microeconomics, econometrics | ||
Points to Note for Students | Assessment: | ||
Fees to be Borne by Students | N/A |
Number of Credits | 3 | ||
Offering Department | School of Electronic Information and Electrical Engineering | ||
Course Teacher | Rui Zhang | ||
Language of Instruction | English | ||
First Day of Class | Sep 12, 2023 | ||
Last Day of Class | Dec 26, 2023 | ||
Course Component | Lecture | ||
Mode of Teaching | Synchronous / Asynchronous | ||
Meeting Time | Week 1-16: Tue 1255-1540 | ||
Time Zone | UTC+08 | ||
Course Description | This course is offered for senior undergraduates. It introduces fundamental principles and practical techniques of digital image processing. The content of the course comprises of 3 parts. Part one: fundamental principles, includes the theories of 2- D signal processing and visual psychology, results of information theory and image transforms. Part two: human visual system based practical techniques, includes the principles and the methods of image enhancement, image restoration, image reconstruction and image compression. Part three: content recognition and understanding based practical techniques, introduces image segmentation and image description in the view of digital image processing. This course completely reflects the new progress of digital image processing, not only gives the research hotspots, but also gives practical methods and techniques of this field. | ||
Course Outline | |||
Course Prerequisites/Restrictions | This course is offered for senior undergraduates. | ||
Points to Note for Students | Assessment: 1. Practice exercise: 20% | ||
Fees to be Borne by Students | N/A |
Number of Credits | 2 | ||
Offering Department | KoGuan School of Law | ||
Course Teacher | JiaXiang Hu | ||
Language of Instruction | English | ||
First Day of Class | Sep 19, 2023 | ||
Last Day of Class | Nov 28, 2023 | ||
Course Component | Lecture | ||
Mode of Teaching | Synchronous | ||
Meeting Time | Week 2-12: Tue 1800-2020 | ||
Time Zone | UTC+08 | ||
Course Description | This course provides a focused treatment and analysis of the major legal, policy and business aspects of foreign trade in China. With respect to China’s regulation of foreign trade, areas covered include: trade in goods, trade in services, protection of intellectual property rights in trading, China’s participation in the WTO and China’s commitments under the multilateral trading system, WTO dispute settlement mechanism and the relevant disputes concerning China. Specifically, China’s regulations on foreign trade include tariff regulation and non-tariff regulation, trade remedies including antidumping measures, countervailing measures, safeguard measures. | ||
Course Outline | |||
Course Prerequisites/Restrictions | Pre-requisites: Public International law. | ||
Points to Note for Students | Assessment: 1. Class Performance: 20% | ||
Fees to be Borne by Students | N/A |
Number of Credits | 4 | ||
Offering Department | School of Physics and Astronomy | ||
Course Teacher | Xian-Min Jin, Hao Tang | ||
Language of Instruction | English | ||
First Day of Class | Sep 13, 2023 | ||
Last Day of Class | Dec 27, 2023 | ||
Course Component | Lecture | ||
Mode of Teaching | Synchronous | ||
Meeting Time | Week 1-16: Wed 1800-2130 | ||
Time Zone | UTC+08 | ||
Course Description | This course would cover the fundamental principles, algorithm designs and frontier progresses on quantum information and quantum computing, with an emphasis on the practical skills and visions for application-oriented quantum information technologies.
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Course Outline | |||
Course Prerequisites/Restrictions | Second or Third year undergraduate with a background on physics, mathematics, computer sciences or other engineering subjects. Preliminary knowledge on quantum mechanics is not a must. | ||
Points to Note for Students | Assessment: 1.Class performance: 30% | ||
Fees to be Borne by Students | N/A |
Number of Credits | 3 | ||
Offering Department | School of Materials Science & Engineering | ||
Course Teacher | Qiang Guo | ||
Language of Instruction | English | ||
First Day of Class | Sep 11, 2023 | ||
Last Day of Class | Nov 30, 2023 | ||
Course Component | Lecture | ||
Mode of Teaching | Synchronous | ||
Meeting Time | Week 1-12: Mon 1000-1140, Thu 1400-1540 | ||
Time Zone | UTC+08 | ||
Course Description | Materials are the physical foundations for the development of science and technology. The human civilizations are historically designated by the evolution of materials, such as the Stone Age, the Bronze Age and the Iron Age. Nowadays, materials science and technology support most of the industrial sectors, including aerospace, telecommunications, transportation, architecture, infrastructure and so on. Fundamentals of Materials Science is a core module for undergraduates majored in materials science and engineering. An integrated approach of combining metallic, ceramic and polymeric materials will be adopted in this course, for the attendants to attain a deep understanding on the correlation of composition, microstructure, processing and properties in materials science. The first part of this course will cover atomic bonding, structure of solids, defects, and mechanical properties of materials. | ||
Course Outline | |||
Course Prerequisites/Restrictions | For materials science & metallurgy students. Prerequisites include calculus, college physics, and thermodynamics. | ||
Points to Note for Students | Assessment: 1. Class participation and quizes: 10% | ||
Fees to be Borne by Students | N/A |
Number of Credits | 4 | ||
Offering Department | School of Materials Science and Engineering | ||
Course Teacher | Tao Hang | ||
Language of Instruction | English | ||
First Day of Class | Sep 12, 2023 | ||
Last Day of Class | Dec 28, 2023 | ||
Course Component | Lecture | ||
Mode of Teaching | Synchronous | ||
Meeting Time | Week 1-16: Tue 1400-1540, Thu 0800-0940 | ||
Time Zone | UTC+08 | ||
Course Description | Basic principles of modern physics and quantum mechanics as pertain to solid state physics and the physical behavior of materials on the atomic scale. Applications to solid state materials will be emphasized on those topics including thermal capacity, electric conductivity, and semiconductors. | ||
Course Outline | |||
Course Prerequisites/Restrictions | Prerequisites: Calculus, General Physics, Fundamentals of Materials Science. | ||
Points to Note for Students | Assessment: 1. Lectures: 10% | ||
Fees to be Borne by Students | N/A |
Number of Credits | 2 | ||
Offering Department | Department of Physical Education | ||
Course Teacher | Huiru Wang, Feng Wang, Gang Xu, Tao Huang, Xiaoling Yuan, Yong Zhao | ||
Language of Instruction | English | ||
First Day of Class | Sep 14, 2023 | ||
Last Day of Class | Dec 28, 2023 | ||
Course Component | Lecture, Tutorial | ||
Mode of Teaching | Synchronous / Asynchronous | ||
Meeting Time | Lecture on MOOC | Synchronous Tutorial: Week 1-16: Thu 1000-1045, 1400-1540 | ||
Time Zone | UTC+08 | ||
Course Description | Exercise is medicine. Regular and moderate exercise can effectively strengthen immune system so as to reduce the risk of virus infection and also improve or assist in the treatment of dysthymic disorders like anxiety and depression. This course provides suggestions for the general public about how to actively respond to the outbreak of novel coronavirus. It also explains: how the immune system reacts when viruses invade into the body; why exercises can enhance immunity and what is the mechanism; what the difference is between western sports and traditional eastern exercises. Besides, the course includes training lessons on Baduanjin, Zhanzhuang, Daoyin, Yoga and other exercises conducive to immunity improvement. | ||
Course Outline | |||
Course Prerequisites/Restrictions | A general understanding of traditional Chinese medicine and Indian Ayurveda. | ||
Points to Note for Students | Assessment: 1. Theoretical part: 40% (Participation: 20% + Quizzes: 60% + Final Exam: 20%) | ||
Fees to be Borne by Students | N/A |
Number of Credits | 4 | ||
Offering Department | UM-SJTU Joint Institute | ||
Course Teacher | Yanfeng Shen | ||
Language of Instruction | English | ||
First Day of Class | Sep 12, 2023 | ||
Last Day of Class | Dec 14, 2023 | ||
Course Component | Lecture | ||
Mode of Teaching | Synchronous | ||
Meeting Time | Week 1-14: Tue 1400-1540, Thu 1400-1540; Week 1-6: Fri 1400-1540 | ||
Time Zone | UTC+08 | ||
Course Description | Develop an understanding of the physical behavior of materials under load. The course emphasizes equilibrium, compatibility of deformation, and material behavior. Weekly lectures are given on theory and applications in statics, mechanics and structural engineering. Applications include axial loads, thermal stresses, bending, shear, and torsion, combined loadings, stress and strain transformations. | ||
Course Outline | |||
Course Prerequisites/Restrictions | N/A | ||
Points to Note for Students | Assessment: 1. Homework: 20% | ||
Fees to be Borne by Students | N/A |
Before Making an Application
Make sure you have thoroughly read the information on this page and the Academics page before making an application. If you have a question, email us at [email protected] or contact the VSE Coordinators at your home university or course offering university.