What are the top majors at the Chinese University of Hong Kong?
It is a world-class academic center in key research fields such as China studies, biomedical sciences, information science, economics and finance, earth information and earth sciences. The Chinese University of Hong Kong, referred to as CUHK, is an Asian university. A top-notch, internationally renowned public research comprehensive university, it is also the only university in Hong Kong with Nobel Prize, Fields Medal and Turing Award-winning professors.
According to the school’s official website in April 2019, the school has 8 colleges: School of Liberal Arts, School of Business Administration, School of Education, School of Engineering, School of Law, School of Medicine, School of Science and School of Social Sciences, with multiple Major, minor and dual degree bachelor's programs. In addition, the school also co-organizes multiple undergraduate and master's programs with Peking University, Tsinghua University, Japan's Waseda University and other universities. Extended information
The Chinese University of Hong Kong was formed in 1963 by the merger of New Asia College, Chung Chi College and United College; in 1966, Hong Kong’s first research institute was established; in 1976, the departments of different colleges were integrated. The university is under the unified responsibility; in 1986, it comprehensively reviewed the course structure, switched to a credit system, and strengthened general education; in 1998, it took the lead in admitting mainland undergraduates in Hong Kong; in 2014, the Chinese University of Hong Kong (Shenzhen) was established.
The establishment of the Chinese University of Hong Kong broke the iron law that only one university was allowed to exist in the colonies of the British Empire. At the same time, it set off the Chinese movement in Hong Kong and successfully ended the situation where English monopolized the status of the official language. It was both a milestone in the history of British colonialism. The watershed is also one of the symptoms of decolonization in Asia in the 20th century and has certain epochal significance.
Baidu Encyclopedia - The Chinese University of Hong Kong