[Okayama University] Okayama University J-PEAKS Symposium Held: The Forefront of University Reform under the Japan Program for Enhancing Research Universities (J-PEAKS)
NQ Score
43/100
N1 Content Completeness
8
Key facts
- [Okayama University] Okayama University J-PEAKS Symposium Held: The Forefront of University Reform under the Japan Program for Enhancing Research Universities (J-PEAKS)
- On January 27, 2026, Okayama University hosted a hybrid symposium on the Ministry of Education's "J-PEAKS" initiative, attracting over 300 participants. Speakers, including President Yasutomo Nasu and Takahiro Ueyama from the Cabinet Office, discussed university management reform and the formation of a research university consortium. President Nasu emphasized a shift from "competition" to "co-creation" among domestic universities and expressed a strong commitment to reform. The symposium aims to strengthen collaboration among J-PEAKS-selected universities and enhance research capabilities to drive social change.
- Source: PR TIMES
- Date: Mon Jun 01 2026 04:06:02 GMT+0900 (Japan Standard Time)
Direct answer
On January 27, 2026, Okayama University hosted a hybrid symposium on the Ministry of Education's "J-PEAKS" initiative, attracting over 300 participants. Speakers, including President Yasutomo Nasu and Takahiro Ueyama from the Cabinet Office, discussed university management reform and the formation of a research university consortium. President Nasu emphasized a shift from "competition" to "co-creation" among domestic universities and expressed a strong commitment to reform. The symposium aims to strengthen collaboration among J-PEAKS-selected universities and enhance research capabilities to drive social change.
- Citation
- [Okayama University] Okayama University J-PEAKS Symposium Held: The Forefront of University Reform under the Japan Program for Enhancing Research Universities (J-PEAKS) (Mon Jun 01 2026 04:06:02 GMT+0900 (Japan Standard Time)), PR TIMES
- Source
- PR TIMES
- Date
- Mon Jun 01 2026 04:06:02 GMT+0900 (Japan Standard Time)
AI Summary (NQ-processed)
On January 27, 2026, Okayama University hosted a hybrid symposium on the Ministry of Education's "J-PEAKS" initiative, attracting over 300 participants. Speakers, including President Yasutomo Nasu and Takahiro Ueyama from the Cabinet Office, discussed university management reform and the formation of a research university consortium. President Nasu emphasized a shift from "competition" to "co-creation" among domestic universities and expressed a strong commitment to reform. The symposium aims to strengthen collaboration among J-PEAKS-selected universities and enhance research capabilities to drive social change.
AI Analysis
Frequently Asked Questions
- Q: What does J-PEAKS stand for?
- A: It stands for the 'Japan Program for Enhancing Research Universities with Regional Core and Distinctive Characteristics,' an initiative promoted by the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology (MEXT).
- Q: What was the main purpose of this symposium?
- A: The main purpose was for Okayama University, selected for J-PEAKS, and related universities and institutions to share the results and challenges of their initiatives, strengthen collaboration, and further deepen their efforts through discussion.
- Q: What policy did President Nasu of Okayama University share?
- A: He shared a policy to shift from exhausting 'competition' among domestic universities to 'co-creation' through mutual challenges. He expressed his intention to be a 'first penguin' in taking on new initiatives and reforms and to disseminate the results to other institutions.
- Q: What points were made in the keynote speech?
- A: Mr. Takahiro Ueyama from the Cabinet Office pointed out that the conventional university model is reaching its limits and that we are entering an era where each university must re-examine its unique model and social role, leading to differentiation.
- Q: Who participated in the symposium?
- A: In addition to faculty, staff, and students from Okayama University, over 300 people participated both in-person and online, including representatives from J-PEAKS-related universities (such as Kyushu Institute of Technology, Chiba University, and Nagaoka University of Technology), institutions, and the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science (JSPS).