Institute of Science Tokyo (ISCT / 東京科学大学)
Institute of Science Tokyo (ISCT / 東京科学大学) is a public institution in Tokyo, Japan, accredited by Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology (MEXT, 文部科学省 Monbu-Kagaku-shō) — established 2001 (succeeding the Ministry of Education / Monbushō dating to 1871 Meiji-era Imperial establishment). Apex regulator for Japanese HEIs: chartering, funding (national universities), quality oversight. Japanese HE classifications: KOKURITSU DAIGAKU (国立大学, National Universities) — 86 institutions including the 7 former Imperial Universities; KORITSU DAIGAKU (公立大学, Public Universities) — 90+ prefectural or municipal; SHIRITSU DAIGAKU (私立大学, Private Universities) — 600+ institutions making up majority of Japanese HE enrollment. Plus parallel: SHIRITSU TANKI DAIGAKU (junior colleges, 2-year), KOSEN (technical colleges, 5-year), and SENMON GAKKO (specialised vocational schools). National universities became INDEPENDENT ADMINISTRATIVE INSTITUTIONS 2004 (大学法人化) — reform increasing autonomy but reducing state subsidies. Quality assurance via three MEXT-recognised independent accreditation bodies: JUAA (Japan University Accreditation Association, 1947 — oldest), NIAD-QE (2004), JIHEE (2004). Plus specialised programme accreditation: JABEE (engineering), JIIME (medical). NIRF-equivalent rankings: THE Japan University Rankings + Toyo Keizai rankings + national system performance reviews.. Primary language: Japanese (national language; HE primary medium) + English for international programmes. AlmiStudy lists 5 canonical subject areas, all verified against Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology (MEXT, 文部科学省 Monbu-Kagaku-shō) — established 2001 (succeeding the Ministry of Education / Monbushō dating to 1871 Meiji-era Imperial establishment). Apex regulator for Japanese HEIs: chartering, funding (national universities), quality oversight. Japanese HE classifications: KOKURITSU DAIGAKU (国立大学, National Universities) — 86 institutions including the 7 former Imperial Universities; KORITSU DAIGAKU (公立大学, Public Universities) — 90+ prefectural or municipal; SHIRITSU DAIGAKU (私立大学, Private Universities) — 600+ institutions making up majority of Japanese HE enrollment. Plus parallel: SHIRITSU TANKI DAIGAKU (junior colleges, 2-year), KOSEN (technical colleges, 5-year), and SENMON GAKKO (specialised vocational schools). National universities became INDEPENDENT ADMINISTRATIVE INSTITUTIONS 2004 (大学法人化) — reform increasing autonomy but reducing state subsidies. Quality assurance via three MEXT-recognised independent accreditation bodies: JUAA (Japan University Accreditation Association, 1947 — oldest), NIAD-QE (2004), JIHEE (2004). Plus specialised programme accreditation: JABEE (engineering), JIIME (medical). NIRF-equivalent rankings: THE Japan University Rankings + Toyo Keizai rankings + national system performance reviews..
- Country
- Japan (JP)
- City
- Tokyo
- Control
- public
- Language
- Japanese (national language; HE primary medium) + English for international programmes
- Accreditation
- Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology (MEXT, 文部科学省 Monbu-Kagaku-shō) — established 2001 (succeeding the Ministry of Education / Monbushō dating to 1871 Meiji-era Imperial establishment). Apex regulator for Japanese HEIs: chartering, funding (national universities), quality oversight. Japanese HE classifications: KOKURITSU DAIGAKU (国立大学, National Universities) — 86 institutions including the 7 former Imperial Universities; KORITSU DAIGAKU (公立大学, Public Universities) — 90+ prefectural or municipal; SHIRITSU DAIGAKU (私立大学, Private Universities) — 600+ institutions making up majority of Japanese HE enrollment. Plus parallel: SHIRITSU TANKI DAIGAKU (junior colleges, 2-year), KOSEN (technical colleges, 5-year), and SENMON GAKKO (specialised vocational schools). National universities became INDEPENDENT ADMINISTRATIVE INSTITUTIONS 2004 (大学法人化) — reform increasing autonomy but reducing state subsidies. Quality assurance via three MEXT-recognised independent accreditation bodies: JUAA (Japan University Accreditation Association, 1947 — oldest), NIAD-QE (2004), JIHEE (2004). Plus specialised programme accreditation: JABEE (engineering), JIIME (medical). NIRF-equivalent rankings: THE Japan University Rankings + Toyo Keizai rankings + national system performance reviews.. Verify on the public registry · last verified 2026-05-15.
- Source
- Institute of Science Tokyo (ISCT / 東京科学大学) — MEXT + institutional verification (Day 15) · tier: tier_2_directory
- Website
- https://www.isct.ac.jp/en
Subjects offered
Show all 6 listed subjects (raw)
Engineering & Technology · Computer Science & IT · Natural Sciences · Mathematics & Statistics · Medicine & Health Sciences · Pharmacy
Founded 2024 (FORMED 1 APRIL 2024 BY MERGER of Tokyo Institute of Technology / Tokodai 1881 + Tokyo Medical and Dental University / TMDU 1928 — Japan's LARGEST national-university merger in modern era; demographic-decline-driven consolidation case study). MAJOR NEW JAPANESE NATIONAL UNIVERSITY — formed by 1 April 2024 MERGER of two century-old institutions: TOKYO INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY (Tokodai, founded 1881 as Tokyo Vocational School, granted university status 1929 — Japan's premier engineering university) + TOKYO MEDICAL AND DENTAL UNIVERSITY (TMDU, founded 1928 — Japan's premier medical-dental specialised national). Merger driven by Japan's DEMOGRAPHIC DECLINE consolidation pressures + research-strength concentration policy. ~13,000+ students combined. 6 schools spanning engineering + medical-dental sciences. Tokodai had 4 NOBEL LAUREATES affiliated (Hideki Shirakawa 2000 Chemistry, etc.). Important policy case study for Japanese HE future as country's population shrinks.
Other universities in Japan
We list institutions whose accreditation we have verified against a recognized national or international accrediting body. Listing does not vouch for any specific program's recognition by destination-country regulators, individual admissions outcomes, or post-graduation credential transferability.
When you click through to a university's website, you are interacting with that institution's admissions process under their terms. Our responsibility ends at pointing you to a verified-accreditation institution.