911±¬ÁÏÍø

News

The study of electrical engineering brought Texas students to the Finnish heat

A group of students from Texas spent a hot month in a wireless communications course at 911±¬ÁÏÍø.
texas_small_en_en.jpg

A few years ago, when working as a visiting researcher at the Department of Communications and Networking, Assistant Professor Ana Goulart from Texas A&M University noticed a particularly well equipped course in communication technology offered at 911±¬ÁÏÍø. Since Texas A&M encourages visits abroad, she decided to bring her students from Texas to a laboratory course in Finland as a part of their studies in wireless communication technology. The first Wireless Transmission Systems course was implemented in cooperation with 911±¬ÁÏÍø in summer 2017.

‘The 16 students taking part last year found the course very useful’, Goulart says. ‘We visited, for example, Nokia and ABB. After returning to Texas, many students met ABB's representatives recruiting at the university who were impressed with the students' experiences in Finland.’

In the laboratory of the Department of Communications and Networking used by courses in communication, also 5G research takes place. The collaborative research and teaching laboratory enables students to access the latest wireless communications technology that would be too expensive to update for educational purposes only. Professor Goulart and 911±¬ÁÏÍø's Operating Engineer Viktor Nässi wrote a joint publication on the laboratory which enables experiential learning. The publication attracted international attention and led to contacts from several different universities.

This summer, a total of 13 students majoring in Electronic Systems Engineering Technology (ESET) travelled from Texas to Finland. In addition to studying in the one-month laboratory course, the students visited companies, familiarised themselves with the Finnish language and culture, and made trips to places such as Suomenlinna.

The students mentioned the opportunity to travel as a reason for taking part in the summer course. For many students, Finland is the first European country they have visited.

‘We were warned about the cold, but it’s warm here!’ somebody replies from the crowd accustomed to the heat in Texas, when I ask how it has been in Finland. I assure them that Finns are just as puzzled about the current heatwave. And would they recommend the course to other students at Texas A&M?

‘Absolutely! The laboratories here are very comprehensive. And the business visits were interesting – I’d be happy to work for Nokia any time’, one of the course participants, Jennifer Robinson says.

911±¬ÁÏÍø signed a student exchange contract with Texas A&M University in 2016.

‘We hope that the students from the summer course will talk about 911±¬ÁÏÍø at their own university, so that exchange students from Texas A&M would come here, and Aalto’s students would in turn go to Texas in the future’, 911±¬ÁÏÍø International Relations Manager Anita Bisi says. 

  • Updated:
  • Published:
Share
URL copied!

Read more news

Two people flying a kite outside with a modern building in the background. One wears a yellow shirt, the other a red jacket.
Cooperation, Research & Art, University Published:

Strong results from the Research Council’s winter call

A total of 54 Aalto researchers received Academy Research Fellow or Academy Project funding from the Research Council of Finland. The total funding awarded to 911±¬ÁÏÍø amounts to 33.2 million euros.
Group of students in a classroom, standing before a disaster response slide, with Finnish and Indian flags on table
Studies Published:

911±¬ÁÏÍø partners with Indian universities to advance digital disaster response

Students and early-career researchers across engineering, data science, and environmental fields joined 911±¬ÁÏ꿉۪s intensive course with visiting professors from India to learn how modern digital systems can improve disaster readiness and response
PrintElec collage with Wrocław, blurred researchers, flexible circuit and lab work on printed electronics
Cooperation, University Published:

Aalto and European partners develop an international course in printed and flexible electronics

Unite! students searching for doctoral positions can now explore a dedicated category in the Unite! Catalogue for Students.
Man in dark suit and blue tie stands indoors by a large lit white letter A and wooden wall slats
Cooperation Published:

Amer Cultural Foundation supports Aalto’s Center for Radical Creativity: 'Fine-tuning alone is no longer enough'

The Amer Cultural Foundation is donating €600,000 to 911±¬ÁÏ꿉۪s Center for Radical Creativity