5 Reasons to Study at TUM (Technical University of Munich)
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- Опубликовано: 18 ноя 2024
- Hi all, I hope this information helps you! Here is a break-down of the video:
5 reasons to study at the Technical University of Munich
1. Prestige: Great rankings for TUM are there for a reason.
2. Learning opportunities: Great professors and interesting subjects. Guest lectures and speaker series and many more things to learn! For example, I had the opportunity to learn rocket science and systems engineering from an actual astronaut. How cool is that?
3. Industry collaborations: E.g. a lot of collaborations with BMW at the Mechanical Engineering Faculty. I had the opportunity to write one thesis at Siemens and another one Siemens Energy.
4. Entrepreneurship: Unternehmer TUM, MakerSpace, Xplore and many more programs.
5. Real life aspect: TUM is ranked very high in employability rankings.
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Always enjoy your videos. Interesting topics.
@@markdodel1706 thank you very much Mark :)
Thank you for this video. I am living in turkey. Please, i want to new video about mechanical engineering in TUM.
Alright, adding that to the list 😉
You make me wanna move there ;)
Hi, firstly thanks for sharing such valuable informations. I want to ask you, what do you think about Wirtschaftsinformatik in TUM. I will begin my studies in Informatik at the Universität Stuttgart, and I am thinking about switching to TUM next year. But I am not sure whether I should apply for Informatik or Wirtschaftsinformatik. What are your thoughts?
Hello Mert,
thank you very much! :) It really depends on what you want to do in the future. For example, if you like coding and would like to do more informatics related topics, informatics would be a better way to go, then you can explore more on the Wirtschaft aspect later on. So, if you want to be a software developer, informatics makes more sense. Then you can do other things and not only economics related topics, as well. However, if you already know that you like the technical part of things but want to combine that economics, Wirtschaftinformatik sounds like a better option. For example, many of my colleagues in consulting have studied Wirtschaftsinfo and it is actually a better choice for that type of generalist environment. Keep in mind that it is a personal decision for yourself and it should be a choice about what you want to do in the future and where you can see yourself. Both of them are good degrees to study at TUM ;)
Hope this helps! ☺🙏
I'm enrolled for a master's degree in environmental engineering at TUM and I'm currently waiting for my visa to be issued and to join the university. Do you have some information concerning chances of employability as an environmental engineer from TUM?
First of all, congrats!! :) Hope you get your visa very smoothly. Germany is a good place to look for a job for engineers in general becase they are looking for a lot of people in the workforce. For the employability after studies, it is usually helpful to get a part-time job in a company during the studies to get some connections to the industry and it increases your chance to get hired by companies. That's how a lot of people I know found jobs, myself included ;)
Hope this helps! :)
@@Hannah_Ozz thank u for ur response, I hope it won't be complicated especially with the German language as I'm working on it slowly but surely.
@@zakariaassa7355 good luck with that! I also had to learn German 😅 it is hard at the beginning but gets easier over time 😉 If you are interested, we are developing a new AI-powered language learning app focused on speaking, German is going to be one of the first languages, you can check it out and sign up for the waitlist here 😉 hiparly.com/
@@Hannah_Ozz thank u again for ur response, I will sign up for sure
Hey
I am from India and I am hoping to do my bachelor's in Germany. I will be completing german till C2 level but I wanted to know if it would be hard to study in german taught programs...
I don't think that it is never easy studying in a foreign language, German is also not my mother tongue, so I know that the struggle is real but I can tell from my own experience that you'll get used to it after 1-2 years, the beginning can be a bit difficult but as long as you keep learning and don't give up, you should be fine 😉 At least, that's how I did it. Wish you all the best with your studies! 😊🙏
@@Hannah_Ozz thank you so much!!!!
what do you think about Automotive engineering at TUM?
Do you mean in Masters? I think Munich is a good place to go into the automotive direction because there are a lot of connections to the industry, like with BMW etc. The whole city is somehow connected to automotive ahaha