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Berlin's biggest university of applied sciences: 13,400 students

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Presentation on theme: "Berlin's biggest university of applied sciences: 13,400 students"— Presentation transcript:

1 Graduates, innovation and expertise for business, industry, society and culture

2 Berlin's biggest university of applied sciences: 13,400 students
Name, Date © Alexander Rentsch HTW Berlin Profile Berlin's biggest university of applied sciences: 13,400 students 70 programmes of study 280 professors 800 associate lecturers from business and industry

3 Berlin's biggest university of applied sciences: 13,400 students
Name, Date © Alexander Rentsch HTW Berlin Profile Berlin's biggest university of applied sciences: 13,400 students 70 programmes of study 280 professors 800 associate lecturers from business and industry

4 Two university locations with disabled access in South East Berlin:
Name, Date © Joseph Huber, Alexander Rentsch HTW Berlin Profile Two university locations with disabled access in South East Berlin: Treskowallee Campus in Karlshorst Wilhelminenhof Campus in Oberschöneweide

5 Name, Date HTW Berlin Profile The university has received many awards, most recently for the quality management of its study programmes.

6 Name, Date © Andrea Jaschinski Brief history 1991: East plus West Foundation of FHTW Berlin Integration of the Engineering College; FHTW takes over the buildings of the College of Economics in Berlin-Karlshorst

7 1994 FHTW Berlin formally declared a legally independent university
Name, Date © Alexander Rentsch Brief history 1994 FHTW Berlin formally declared a legally independent university

8 Name, Date © Brief history 2006 FHTW moves into the first building on the Wilhelminenhof Campus in Berlin-Oberschöneweide

9 Name, Date © Inés Weinmann Brief history 2009 Renaming as HTW Berlin, official opening of the Wilhelminenhof Campus

10 Name, Date Brief history 2014 HTW Berlin celebrates its 20th anniversary as a legally independent university

11 Wilhelminenhof Campus, Oberschöneweide
Name, Date © Alexander Rentsch Wilhelminenhof Campus, Oberschöneweide The »birthplace« of AEG, Oberschöneweide became a manufacturing hub with a rich industrial heritage spanning over 100 years. The fall of the Berlin Wall heralded the end for most companies. HTW Berlin brought new life to the area in 2006.

12 Wilhelminenhof Campus, Oberschöneweide
Name, Date © Andreas Kettenhofen/Max Schäfer Wilhelminenhof Campus, Oberschöneweide The listed buildings on the grounds directly by the Spree were extensively refurbished for the university and enhanced with architecturally interesting new buildings.

13 Wilhelminenhof Campus, Oberschöneweide
© Friederike Coenen Name, Date Wilhelminenhof Campus, Oberschöneweide Today, the Wilhelminenhof Campus is home to the engineers, computer scientists, designers and cultural scientists studying at HTW Berlin.

14 Wilhelminenhof Campus, Oberschöneweide
Name, Date © Alexander Rentsch Wilhelminenhof Campus, Oberschöneweide Also located on the Wilhelminenhof Campus/in the direct vicinity are an attractive library, the IT Centre and the canteen (Mensa).

15 Treskowallee Campus, Karlshorst
Name, Date © Andreas Kettenhofen/Max Schäfer Treskowallee Campus, Karlshorst The Treskowallee Campus houses the University Board, the administration department and the study programmes of the HTW Berlin Business School.

16 Treskowallee Campus, Karlshorst
Name, Date © Alexander Rentsch Treskowallee Campus, Karlshorst The buildings were originally built for the College of Economics (Hochschule für Ökonomie, HfÖ) of the GDR, for example the Audimax, one of the last grand halls of East Berlin from the 1950s. It is protected as a listed building.

17 Treskowallee Campus, Karlshorst
Name, Date © Alexander Rentsch Treskowallee Campus, Karlshorst Located on the campus/in close proximity are also sports halls and sports facilities, a canteen (Mensa), a library and the Entrepreneur Centre.

18 Name, Date Studying at HTW Berlin 13,400 students in 70 accredited Bachelor's and Master's degree programmes Subject areas: Engineering, Business, Computer Science, Culture and Design

19 Name, Date Studying at HTW Berlin Around 2,700 students graduate from accredited Bachelor's or Master's degree programmes every year Subject areas: Engineering, Business, Computer Science, Culture and Design

20 Name, Date © Friederike Coenen Studying at HTW Berlin Career-integrated and postgraduate study programmes are offered at the Berlin Institute for Continuing Academic Education (BIfAW)

21 Name, Date © Marc Kastner Studying at HTW Berlin Marketing and motor sports: interdisciplinary projects expand the students' horizons and social skills.

22 Name, Date © Jennifer Weber Studying at HTW Berlin The Career Service builds bridges with future employers and maintains contact with alumni.

23 Name, Date © Gregor Strutz/Axel Völcker Studying at HTW Berlin The Start-up Competence Centre advises and supports students on their path to setting up their own business.

24 Name, Date © Alexander Rentsch Studying at HTW Berlin The Family Support Centre ensures that studying with children is also possible.

25 Innovative teaching concepts
Name, Date © Friederike Coenen Innovative teaching concepts A student learning centres as well as refresher courses in mathematics and English help new students with starting their studies in their first semesters.

26 Innovative teaching concepts
Name, Date © Alexander Rentsch Innovative teaching concepts Student tutors receive training at HTW Berlin.

27 Innovative teaching concepts
Name, Date © Friederike Coenen Innovative teaching concepts Alumni help students in their final semesters with career guidance (alumni mentoring programme).

28 Innovative teaching concepts
Name, Date © Gregor Strutz/Axel Völcker Innovative teaching concepts Professors receive support with teaching, for example in the form of didactic instruction/guidance, further training and technical help with using modern media.

29 Innovative teaching concepts
Name, Date © Jennifer Weber Innovative teaching concepts HTW Berlin actively strives to professionalise the recruitment, selection, support and training of associate lecturers.

30 At HTW there are three key research areas: The Healthcare Sector
Name, Date © Friederike Coenen Research at HTW Berlin At HTW there are three key research areas: The Healthcare Sector Cultural and Creative Industries/The Digital Sector Renewable Energies/Energy Efficiency

31 Name, Date © Rainer Meißle Research at HTW Berlin Innovative solutions, products, processes and services for numerous fields of application, ranging from the construction industry to regional development

32 Name, Date © Victoria Tomaschko Research at HTW Berlin HTW Berlin is one of the four members of Berlin's Institute for Applied Research (Institut für angewandte Forschung, IFAF)

33 HTW Berlin Affiliations & partnerships
Name, Date © Alexander Rentsch HTW Berlin Affiliations & partnerships Fruitful cooperation partnerships with companies, banks, universities, research institutes, chambers of commerce, associations and cultural institutions at the regional, national and international level.

34 HTW Berlin Affiliations & partnerships
Name, Date HTW Berlin Affiliations & partnerships HTW Berlin is an active member of the German Alliance of Applied Sciences (HAWtech), a consortium of six leading universities of applied sciences with a technical focus.

35 HTW Berlin Affiliations & partnerships
Name, Date © Philipp Meuse © DOM publishers HTW Berlin Affiliations & partnerships HTW Berlin is also actively engaged in the two districts of Berlin where its campuses are located.

36 HTW Berlin International
Name, Date © Gregor Strutz/Axel Völcker HTW Berlin International HTW Berlin has 120 European partner universities and cooperates with 20 other universities worldwide.

37 HTW Berlin International
Name, Date © Friederike Coenen HTW Berlin International Every seventh student at HTW Berlin is from abroad; top of the list is Cameroon, followed by Indonesia, Vietnam, Russia and Bulgaria.

38 HTW Berlin International
Name, Date © Gregor Strutz/Axel Völcker HTW Berlin International Every year, HTW Berlin receives 250 exchange students, the majority from France, Spain, the Netherlands, Ireland and China. We offer these students an orientation programme, an intensive German course before the semester begins, a buddy programme to help them adjust to the culture and many events during the semester.

39 HTW Berlin International
Name, Date © Friederike Coenen HTW Berlin International HTW Berlin offers study programmes taught entirely in English and dual-degree programmes.

40 HTW Berlin International
Name, Date © Friederike Coenen HTW Berlin International Foreign languages are very important and compulsory for all HTW students. At our own Foreign Languages Centre courses are offered in eight different languages.

41 HTW Berlin International
Name, Date © Friederike Coenen HTW Berlin International HTW Berlin promotes the mobility of its students, lecturers and staff. Financial support is also available for internships abroad.

42 Name, Date


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