Teikyo University (帝京大学 teikyō daigaku?) is a private university headquartered in the Itabashi ward of Tokyo, Japan. It was established in 1931 as Teikyo Commercial High School (帝京商業高等学校). It became Teikyo University in 1966. It is part of Teikyo Group, a multinational educational foundation that also operates language and cultural exchange facilities at pre-university levels in various countries.
The university consists of eight undergraduate facilities, one junior college, and six graduate schools. Five main campuses in Japan are supplemented by several overseas campuses that provide study-abroad opportunities for Japanese students, as well as Japanese-oriented learning for residents of the campuses' home countries. Total enrollment is about 20,000 students. Although the headquarters is the Itabashi campus, the majority of students (approximately 17,000) are enrolled at the Hachiōji campus in West Tokyo.
Campuses and areas of study
Campuses in Japan
Itabashi Headquarters campus (Itabashi, Tokyo)
Hachiōji campus (Hachiōji-shi, Tokyo), including a junior college and graduate school
Sagamiko campus (Sagamiko-machi, Tsukui-gun, Kanagawa-ken)
Utsunomiya campus (Utsunomiya-shi, Tochigi)
Fukuoka campus (Omuta-shi, Fukuoka)
Campuses in other countries
Teikyo University of Japan in Durham, associated with Durham University, UK
Teikyo University Berlin Campus in Berlin, Germany
Teikyo Loretto Heights University (Colorado Heights University) in Denver, Colorado, USA (1989–present)
Salem Teikyo University (now Salem International University) in Salem, West Virginia, USA (1990 – 2002)
Teikyo-Westmar University (now closed) in Le Mars, Iowa, USA (1990 – 1995)
Teikyo-Marycrest University, then Marycrest International University (now closed) in Davenport, Iowa, USA (1990 – 2002)
Teikyo Post University (now Post University) in Waterbury, Connecticut, USA (1990–2004)
Teikyo University Holland in Maastricht, Netherlands (1991–2007)
Also, the Harvard University School of Public Health and the Teikyo University School of Medicine have an ongoing collaboration called the Teikyo-Harvard Program, established in 1993.
Undergraduate programs
Medical technical
Medicine
Pharmacology
Law
Letters
Japanese Culture
Pedagogy
History
Sociology
Psychology
Science and engineering
International culture
Economics
Economics
Business administration
Tourism
Graduate programs
Law
Economics
Literature
Medicine
Pharmacy
Science and engineering