Requirements for studying at the University of Tokyo Faculty of Medicine

Other Information:

The University of Tokyo Faculty of Medicine offers the following majors: Cell Biology and Anatomy, Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Physiology, Pharmacology, Pathology, Microbiology, Immunology, Radiology, Medical Biomedical Engineering, Basic Neurology, Cognitive and Linguistic Medicine, Clinical Neuropsychiatry, Preventive Medicine, and Principles of Medicine and Ethics, Forensic Medicine and Medical Information Economics, Organopathic Internal Medicine, Bio-defense Oncology, End-stage Medicine, Obstetrics and Gynecology, Pediatrics, Geriatrics, Organopathic Surgery, Sensory-Motor Functional Medicine, and Bio-organ Management Medicine.

The Faculty of Medicine at the University of Tokyo aims to contribute to the advancement of life sciences, medicine and healthcare and to develop human resources who will become international leaders. The Faculty develops new diagnostic and therapeutic methods, validates and disseminates popularized therapeutic methods, and conducts research on preventive medicine, healthcare policy, and medical devices and equipment, with practical applications in clinical and healthcare services.

Supplementary materials:

The University of Tokyo (Japanese: 東京大學; Japanese kana: とうきょうだいがく; English: The University of Tokyo), abbreviated as Tōkyō University (Japanese: 東大; Japanese kana: とうだい; English: UTokyo), is a comprehensive national university with its headquarters located in Bunkyō-ku, Tokyo, Japan. It is a comprehensive national university headquartered in Bunkyo-ku, Tokyo, Japan, and is a member of Japan's Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology (MEXT) "Super Internationalized Universities Program" Class A top university, and a member of the Japan Council for Academic Research (JCAAR) and Designated National Universities (DNU).

The University of Tokyo was born in 1877 as a result of the merger of the Tokyo Kasei School and the Tokyo Medical School during the Meiji Restoration, and initially consisted of four departments, namely, academics, science, literature, medicine, and a university preparatory school. It was the first national comprehensive university in Japan, and some of its departments can be traced back to the time of Emperor Reigen. In 1886, the university was renamed Imperial University, the first imperial university in Japan, and in 1897, it was renamed Tokyo Imperial University, and in September 1947, after World War II, it was officially named the University of Tokyo. "The University of Tokyo.

The University of Tokyo does not have an official "university crest," but the yellow and green design on the right is a long-standing "logo" of the University, which was drawn by Professor Shoichi Hoshino at a meeting of the Board of Trustees in June 1972, and which has been used as a symbol of the University of Tokyo for a long time.

The design consists of two interlocking yellow and green ginkgo leaves, the most widely planted tree on the University of Tokyo's campus, which stand along the street and cover the campus with yellow leaves in autumn, so the golden ginkgo leaf signifies the most beautiful side of the University; while the color of the other ginkgo leaf is derived from the University's traditional representative color, light green.



Light Green.

Like the university logo, even though the University of Tokyo is a university with a history of more than 100 years, it has not been able to choose a universally recognized "university song," and in June 2004, a committee was set up to develop the university song, and two songs were chosen: "Tadanichitsu" and "Daikongto," which are used for different occasions. In June 2004, the University of Tokyo formed a committee to develop a school song.