The Ministry of Education has recently announced the results of the third batch of national first-class undergraduate course. The "British and American Literature" course, submitted by the School of Foreign Languages of our university, has been successfully selected and recognized as a national first-class online-and-offline hybrid undergraduate course.

Following a rigorous and highly competitive selection process—including nominations by provincial education authorities and higher education institutions, followed by multiple rounds of expert review through both online evaluation and conference review organized by the Ministry of Education—the "British and American Literature" course stood out with distinction. This achievement fully demonstrates the comprehensive strengths of the course team in teaching innovation, classroom quality, and educational outcomes, earning wide recognition from experts and the public.

From "Teaching-led Learning" to "Learning-driven Teaching"

This honor not only represents a major outcome of our university’s ongoing efforts to advance course development and deepen teaching reform, but also marks a new breakthrough in our institution’s pursuit of national-level course excellence. Our university will take this opportunity to leverage the exemplary role of national first-class courses, encourage faculty to actively engage in teaching reform, optimize curriculum systems and teaching content, further promote the transformation of classroom teaching methods, and strive to develop more high-quality courses, thereby enhancing the quality of undergraduate education and the level of talent cultivation at our university.

Source: Department of Academic Affairs