TU9
TU9 German Universities of Technology e. V. is the alliance of nine leading Technical Universities in Germany. The current president of TU9 is Wolfram Ressel, rector of the University of Stuttgart.[1]
Overview
TU9 was established in 2003 as an informal consortium of those Institutes of Technology in Germany which were established before 1900. The founding president of TU9 is Horst Hippler, also president of the University of Karlsruhe. The registered association ("e. V.") TU9 German Institutes of Technology e. V. was solemnly founded on January 26, 2006 at TU Braunschweig. Its head office is in Berlin. The following presidents (or their representatives) attended foundation and signed the certificate of incorporation:
- Konstantin Meskouris, prorector of RWTH Aachen
- Jörg Steinbach, president of TU Berlin
- Jürgen Hesselbach, president of TU Braunschweig
- Johann-Dietrich Wörner, president of TU Darmstadt
- Hermann Kokenge, rector of TU Dresden
- Erich Barke, president of Leibniz University Hannover
- Horst Hippler, rector of Karlsruhe Institute of Technology
- Wolfgang A. Herrmann, president of the Technical University of Munich
- Dieter Fritsch, rector of University of Stuttgart
The mission of this organization is to act as contact for society, economy and politics, particularly for the university education of engineers. The members of TU9 mutually accredit their bachelor's and master's degrees and, therefore, support the progression of the Bologna process and quality assurance concerning university education of engineers.
Policy on higher education
Associated especially through their core subjects, the engineering sciences, the members of TU9 pay attention particularly to the public perception of topics with high relevance to these sciences. This includes analysis of statistics about third-party funds[2] and the description of the importance of the TU9 universities concerning graduates.[3]
Position in Germany
According to the research report 2018 of the German Research Foundation (DFG), TU9 universities are among the universities with the highest third-party funding in Germany. They received more than one-fifth (21%) of all DFG grants across all scientific disciplines.[4] The TU Dresden received the highest number of DFG grants in electrical engineering, the TU Darmstadt in computer science and the RWTH Aachen in mechanical engineering.[4] In a competitive selection process, the DFG selects the best research projects from researchers at universities and research institutes and finances them. The ranking is thus regarded as an indicator of the quality of research.[5] In the profile area of engineering, almost 50% of the DFG funding volume goes to TU9 universities.[4] Almost a quarter of all recipients of a European Research Council grant, the highest endowed science prize of the European Union, preferred one of the TU9 universities.[4] RWTH Aachen and TU Darmstadt are among the universities with the highest number of top managers in the Germany economy. They belong to the top 3 universities.[6] Five of the eleven German Universities of Excellence are TU9 universities (RWTH Aachen, TU Berlin, TU Dresden, KIT, and TU Munich).[7]
Members
See also
- U15 – association of fifteen largest universities in Germany (not including technical universities)
- Golden Triangle (English universities) – a group of leading English universities
- Russell Group – a group of research-based universities in the United Kingdom
- C9 League – The Chinese Ministry of Education's formal grouping of elite universities in China
References
- Schramm, Carolin (6 May 2018). "TU9 - Presse". www.tu9.de (in German). Retrieved 24 March 2019.
- TU9 leading in third-party funds (PDF, German)
- TU9 leading in engineering graduates and doctorate degrees (PDF, German)
- Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft, ed. (18 July 2018), "Förderatlas 2018", Forschungsberichte (in German) (1 ed.), Weinheim: Wiley-VCH, ISBN 978-3-527-34520-5
- "Aufgaben der Deutschen Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG)". www.dfg.de (in German). Retrieved 14 October 2019.
- Klaus Hansen. (2019). 8. DAX-Vorstands-Report
- Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft. "Universities of Excellence". Retrieved 7 August 2020.