Most Popular
-
1
Assembly to vote on opposition leader’s arrest warrant after Yoon approval
-
2
Mass stabbing fears set off stampede in Seoul subway
-
3
Yoon, UN chief reaffirm cooperation on NK denuclearization, human rights
-
4
Opposition leader could face arrest as his fate hangs in balance
-
5
Lamborghini driver suspect sent to prosecutors over parking dispute in Gangnam
-
6
Over 2,000 subway passengers injured in Seoul over 5 years
-
7
No more hurdles for Korea's nuclear reactor exports?
-
8
[Top Envoy] ‘Don’t look back anymore’: former envoy on S. Korea-Japan thaw
-
9
[Kim Seong-kon] Leaving LA, center of Korean diaspora community
-
10
Foreign virtual assets worth W131tr unveiled
South Korea’s military academy has appointed a female civilian as a professor for the first time in its history, an academy official said Saturday.
The development comes as the male-dominated military is seeking to give more opportunities to women.
Jung Sung-im, a former research fellow of Ewha Womans University, became the first woman and civilian professor to have a full-time teaching position at the Korea Military Academy, the official said.
The development comes as the male-dominated military is seeking to give more opportunities to women.
Jung Sung-im, a former research fellow of Ewha Womans University, became the first woman and civilian professor to have a full-time teaching position at the Korea Military Academy, the official said.

Jung said she had taught cadets at the academy as a lecturer for the past nine years before being named a full-time professor on Friday.
Jung will teach politics and national security as a civilian worker in the military, beginning in the second semester, the official said.
So far, only army officers have taught cadets as full-time employees at the academy.
In a related development, all female college students are eligible to join the military’s Reserve Officers’ Training Corps program, beginning this year.
There are some 6,400 female commissioned officers and non-commissioned officers in the country’s 655,000-strong military.
Women are not required to complete military service.
(Yonhap News)