The universities in Macau are not divided into batches, but the score is above the second line.
Macao University of Science and Technology, or MUST for short, was founded in 2000 and is the largest local comprehensive university in Macao. MUST has the right to confer degrees at the doctoral, master's and bachelor's levels, and is approved by the Ministry of Education of China to enroll students in the mainland. It has 10 teaching units, and the language of instruction is mainly English, with some courses taught in Chinese, Portuguese or Spanish.
There are more than 10,000 students enrolled in 2019, including 3,377 doctoral and master's degree students and 7,915 undergraduates. The University has two State Key Laboratories: the State Key Laboratory of Chinese Medicine Quality Research and the State Key Laboratory of Lunar and Planetary Science; the Laboratory of Biophysics and Traditional Chinese Medicine, the first Nobel Prize-winning laboratory in Macao; and four partner bases and joint laboratories of the Ministry of Education of the People's Republic of China for key research in humanities and social sciences.
According to the information on the university's official website in August 2017, there are hundreds of chair professors, professors, special professors, associate professors, assistant professors, etc., and most of the teaching and research staff members have doctoral degrees, as well as working or studying experience in world-renowned universities or research institutions. In addition to the established faculty, the University also employs a number of renowned teachers.
Expanded Information:
Macao University of Science and Technology (MUST) scientific research achievements:
In 2013, the project "New Progress in Gamma Spectrometer Detection Research for Chang'e-2", which was participated in by the Institute of Space Science of the Macau University of Science and Technology (MUST), was awarded as one of the top ten astronomical science and technology in China for the year 2012 Progress. In the project, MSU's Institute of Space Science (ISS) undertook the data analysis and research work of the gamma spectrometer.
Researchers at the Institute of Space Science found that new detection results from Chang'e-2's gamma spectrometer show that the material around the Guanhai Basin is rich in radioactive elements, but with low abundance. The findings were published in Nature's Scientific Reports in April 2013, with researchers from the Macau University of Science and Technology (MUST) as the first authors.
In 2014, the Institute of Space Science of the Macau University of Science and Technology (MSUT), together with scientists from Peking University, the National Central University of Taiwan and the China Academy of Space Technology (CAST), analyzed the optical images of Toutatis obtained by the Chang'e-2 lunar exploration satellite and published the results of their research in the American Geophysical Union's publication Geophysical Letters.
Baidu Encyclopedia-Macao
Baidu Encyclopedia-Macao University of Science and Technology
People's Daily Online-Macao University of Science and Technology