Kuo-En Chang

Kuo-En Chang (Chinese: 張國恩; pinyin: Zhāng Guóēn, born 1958) is currently the president of the National Taiwan Normal University (NTNU, 國立臺灣師範大學).

Born in 1958, Chang grew up in a fishing village of Keelung, Taiwan.[1] After junior high school, he gave up "the chance to study at the Affiliated Senior High School of National Taiwan Normal University (國立臺灣師範大學附屬高級中學|師大附中) and chose to join the Department of Electrical Engineering at National Taiwan Institute of Technology (now the National Taiwan University of Science and Technology, 國立臺灣科技大學) for professional training." [2] After the national compulsory military service, Chang spent a year on professional practice. He not only worked on lathes but also utility poles. Afterwards, Chang resumed his studies in the Department of Electronic Engineering.[3]

Chang then switched to the fields of computation in the Department of Electrical Engineering at National Taiwan University (國立臺灣大學), where he received a M.S.C. in 1986 and a Ph.D. in 1990. After graduation, Chang joined the NTNU, where he integrated computation with education and launched virtual learning, digital learning, and mobile learning.[4] His endeavor in Elearning has also won him a patent in "The Software Structure for Interactive Learning on the Internet" (網際網路互動式教學軟體架構) in Taiwan.[5]

At NTNU, Chang had been the director of Computer Center (Aug. 1990-July 1993), the director of the NTNU Library (Aug. 2004-July 2007), and the vice president (Aug. 2007-Feb. 2010). His excellence in academic research has won him numerous awards from the National Science Council (now the Ministry of Science and Technology) and the Ministry of Education. He has been the principal of NTNU since 22 February 2010.

Education

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