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Feb 15, 2022 (Gmt+09:00)
The Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology (KAIST) on Tuesday announced the blueprint to strengthen its foothold in the United States and spur entrepreneurship on campus.
KAIST Holdings is pursuing the launch of regional offices in the US – namely the New York campus on the East Coast and the Silicon Valley campus on the West Coast.
In time for his one year anniversary at KAIST, the university president Lee Kwang-hyung spoke about his progress so far and plans for the future at an online press conference on Tuesday.
During the briefing, Lee said the goal is to make 10 of the startups financed by the university to get listed on Kosdaq and two on Nasdaq.
“By 2031, we hope to reach an accumulated corporate value of 10 trillion won ($8.4 billion) and a royalty fee of 100 billion won," the 67-year-old said.
MEDICAL RESEARCH
Also on his to-do list during his term is establishing a medical school with emphasis on research.
“South Korea is missing out on the biomedical healthcare market worth $1.7 trillion,” he said. “If we don't raise medical scientists whose focus is on research, the country will not change for the next decade.”
The university is planning to launch a dual masters and PhD in science and technology program.
The first four years will be allocated for medical studies and the last four to engineering. At the end of eight years, the graduate would have completed schooling for both medicine and engineering.
There is a condition, however, that the graduate cannot be a clinician for 10 years.
“Ninety nine percent of medical school graduates become clinicians,” said Lee. “So we will work with The Ministry of Science and ICT to make research a viable career option for medical doctors as is the case in the States.”
The KAIST Graduate School of Medical Science and Engineering is expected to extend its current offerings to create the convergence program by 2026.
Computer scientist by training, Lee also launched the Post AI research center that discovers innovative projects in the artificial intelligence sector.
“If there is a difference between KAIST and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT,) it is the size of students’ dreams,” the scientist said.
Lee vowed to imbue confidence into his students by providing evidence of continued growth at one of South Korea's most distinguished universities.
Write to See-Eun Lee at see@hankyung.com
Jee Abbey Lee edited this article.
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