University of Stuttgart school profile

The University of Stuttgart is located in Stuttgart, the capital of Baden-Wü rttemberg in southwest Germany. There are many internationally renowned enterprises such as Daimler (a famous manufacturer of Mercedes-Benz), Bosch, Porsche, Lufthansa, Boss, IBM, Sony, and as many as 1500 small and medium-sized enterprises. The University of Stuttgart is one of the richest universities in Germany. According to the statistics of the German Federal Statistical Office (German: statistisches Bundesamt) in 2015, each professor of Stuttgart University received an average of 744,000 euros in third-party research sponsorship in 20 13, ranking first in Germany. The total annual expenditure of the university is 300 million euros, and the total funding is 700 million euros, including 73 1% salary expenditure (professors, lecturers, administrators, student assistants, etc.). ), 20.7% of commodity expenditure, 4.7% of investment and 1.4% of subsidies (scholarships, etc.). ) The University of Stuttgart is also a member of TU9 (the most important alliance of nine German universities of technology). The University of Stuttgart enjoys a high reputation in Germany for its civil engineering, vehicle engineering, mechanical engineering, industrial engineering and electrical engineering. The academic tradition of Stuttgart University can be traced back to its most famous student: gottlieb daimler, the inventor of the automobile.

School history

The University of Stuttgart was formerly known as "Vereinigt e real-und Gewerbeschule" founded in 1829, and its establishment marked the beginning of the industrial era in Baden-Wü rttemberg. School curriculum is not only the content of manual technology, but also a comprehensive and theoretical education system. This teaching philosophy has continued to this day. 1862, the school was reorganized and four high-tech colleges of architecture, engineering, machinery and chemical engineering merged, forming the basic framework of today's Stuttgart University. In the following decades, the school continued to grow and develop, expanding the school building, opening new majors, and hiring famous scientists, writers and artists as professors, which improved the social and academic status of the school. With the strengthening of the importance of engineering discipline and the corresponding academic teaching, it was renamed as Advanced Institute of Technology (th) on 1876. And obtained the right to award the doctorate in engineering on 1900. 1967 was renamed as stuttgart university, and the setting of professional direction also developed.

In the late 1950s, the University of Stuttgart began to establish a campus for natural and engineering disciplines in Vaihingen, Stuttgart. The original downtown campus has humanities, social sciences and architecture majors. In addition to these two "main campuses", the university has many branches in Stuttgart, such as the Institute of Mining and Crystal Chemistry in Atzenberg.

The University of Stuttgart is an institution of higher learning located in Stuttgart, a new industrial zone in Germany. Strictly speaking, according to the main teaching direction, it is a specialized university of science and technology. Among the 65,438+00 comprehensive departments in this university, 7 departments cover all basic professional courses offered by typical universities of science and technology, while the other 3 departments are prepared by this university to meet the needs of more students with skills in other scientific and technological fields, such as geographic mapping, biological sciences, psychology and economics. Stuttgart University has a long history. Judging from today's scale, the earliest predecessor of the school was a practical vocational middle school founded by 1829. In 2004, the school held a grand celebration ceremony of 175. With the strengthening of the importance of engineering disciplines and the corresponding academic teaching, the school was officially renamed the College of Advanced Science and Technology on 1876. Later, in 1900, it was approved by the Ministry of Education and awarded a doctorate in engineering. It marks that Stuttgart University has officially become a large-scale comprehensive university of science and technology in Germany.

Stuttgart has the most intensive scientific, theoretical and research institutions in Germany. About 1 1% of Germany's scientific research results come from here, and the annual profit from it reaches 4.3 billion euros. * * * There are six Flawn Hof institutes (also translated as Flawn Hof Institute), two Max Planck institutes (also translated as Max Planck Institute), two universities and a media college (Stuttgart University, Hornheim University, Stuttgart Media College), and other scientific research institutions are located here.