University of Bremen explained

University of Bremen
Native Name:Universität Bremen
Native Name Lang:de
Students:18,669[1]
Rector:Jutta Günther
Campus:Urban
Budget:€ 354.6 million
Academic Staff:2,330
Administrative Staff:1,221

The University of Bremen (German: Universität Bremen) is a public university in Bremen, Germany, with approximately 23,500 people from 115 countries.[2] It is one of 11 institutions which were successful in the category "Institutional Strategies" of the Excellence Initiative launched by the Federal Government and the Federal States in 2012.[3] [4] The university was also successful in the categories "Graduate Schools" and "Clusters of Excellence" of the initiative.

Some of the paths that were taken in the early days of the university, also referred to as the "Bremen model",[5] have since become characteristics of modern universities, such as interdisciplinary, explorative learning, social relevance to practice-oriented project studies which enjoy a high reputation in the academic world as well as in business and industry.

History

Though Bremen became a university city only recently, higher education in Bremen has a long tradition. The Bremen Latin School was upgraded to "Gymnasium Academicum" in 1584. In 1610 it was transformed into "Gymnasium Illustre". Under Napoleonic rule, in 1811 the institution of a "French-Bremen University" was considered. In 1971 the University of Bremen opened its doors.

The development of the University of Bremen can be divided up into steps of 10 to 12 years – first foundation, then restructuring, consolidation and profile building. At the beginning of the 1970s, the university was set up as a "science complex" in a city oriented towards trade and seafaring that had no experience with academia, particularly not with leftist professors. University, business and the public in the region did not move closer together until the 1980s, through the foundation of the natural science and engineering departments, co-operation with the newly founded Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research in Bremerhaven (1980), as well as the development of the co-located technology park (from 1988). Other important factors were the initial success in setting up collaborative research centres and in the acquisition of considerable of external funds. The mathematics professor Jürgen Timm, elected university rector in 1982, was largely responsible for this turnaround.

As a consequence, the University of Bremen improved in research rankings, gained national recognition, and established a number of endowment professorships. Research excellence and its interdisciplinary profile is reflected in the establishment of numerous research centers and programs funded by the German Research Foundation (DFG). These currently include eight collaborative research centers and the Research Center of Ocean Margins, one of only six national research centers of the DFG.[6]

From 1996 until 2001 the University of Bremen (along with six other universities in Germany) participated in a pilot scheme for structural reform of university administration, funded by the Volkswagen Foundation. This project improved the co-operation and communication between the university's administration, teaching and research units. With the realization of the "Laptop University" project, the University of Bremen became a leading university in the field of digital media education in Germany.

By 2000, after an organisational development process of three years in which the university set goals for the development of its profile, this trend was continued with the promotion of junior scientists in structured graduate programs, and staff development programs for the great number of early-stage researchers entering the university as junior professors. In teaching, there are comprehensive evaluations, more specific admission requirements, and improved completion rates for Bachelors and master's degrees.

Bremen was rewarded with the title "Stadt der Wissenschaft 2005" (City of Science of 2005), which science, politics, business and culture won jointly for Bremen and Bremerhaven, by the Foundation for German Science (Stifterverband für die Deutsche Wissenschaft).

Faculties

These are the twelve faculties into which the university is divided:

Academics

Admission

Admission to University of Bremen is highly competitive with big differences in the admission rates between programs.[7] In the winter term 2017 the overall undergraduate admission rate was 16.2% with 24,000 applications for 3,900 places.[8]

Teaching and learning

The University of Bremen is a campus university which offers 118 different programs.[9] In 2016 it granted 2,028 baccalaureate degrees, 1,357 master's degrees, 303 doctoral degrees.[10] Each year the University of Bremen awards the Berninghausen Prize for excellent teaching.[11] The prize was started in 1992 and is considered to be the oldest teaching award at any German university.[12] Tuition is free for national and international students at the University of Bremen. There is, however, a semester contribution of approx. €300, which includes a ticket for public transportation in Bremen and parts of Lower Saxony.[13]

Research

The University of Bremen is a research university. It has 12 faculties, but focuses its research on 6 interdisciplinary high-profile areas. They are (1) marine, polar and climate research, (2) social change, social policy, and the state, (3) materials science and production engineering, (4) minds media machines (5) logistics and (6) health sciences.[14]

Scientific focus

With interdisciplinary scientific focal points, the University of Bremen has three ongoing DFG-funded Collaborative Research Centers ("Sonderforschungsbereiche" (SFB)) and is involved in two other SFBs.[16]

The Oceans in the Earth System (MARUM) Cluster of Excellence developed in 2007 from the DFG Research Center Ocean Margins, which was founded in 2001.[17]

Collaborative research centers

The university has as of May 2021 the following SFBs:[16]

The University of Bremen is also involved in the following special research areas:[16]

Past SFBs:

Rankings

Qs:514
Qs N:32
Qs Year:2024
Qs Ref:[26]
The:301-350
The N:32-33
The Year:2024
The Ref:[27]
Arwu:601-700
Arwu N:37-40
Arwu Year:2023
Arwu Ref:[28]

According to the QS World University Rankings of 2024, the University of Bremen was placed 514th globally and ranked 32nd within its national context.[26] In the Times Higher Education World University Rankings for 2024, the university was positioned within the 301-350 range worldwide, while nationally it fell within the 32-33 range.[27] The ARWU World Rankings for 2023 also showed a similar trend, with the university ranked between 601-700 globally and between 37-40 nationally.[28]

Notable alumni

See also

External links

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Notes and References

  1. Web site: Rechenschaftsbericht des Rektors: "Uni in Zahlen" 2019 . Rektor der Universität Bremen . PDF. 16 September 2021 . de. 3,4 MB
  2. Web site: Facts and Figures. Universität Bremen. Germany. Universität Bremen. 15 November 2016.
  3. Web site: DFG, German Research Foundation – Institutional Strategies (2005–2017). www.dfg.de. 15 November 2016.
  4. Web site: Excellent. Universität Bremen. Germany. Universität Bremen. 15 November 2016.
  5. Web site: Teaching and Studies. Universität Bremen. Germany. Universität Bremen. en. 3 May 2017.
  6. Web site: DFG Research Centres . Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft . 10 November 2010.
  7. News: Universität Bremen weiterhin beliebt: 33.000 Bewerbungen zum kommenden Wintersemester. 2 August 2017. nordbuzz.de. 11 September 2017. de.
  8. News: Freie Studienplätze an der Universität Bremen. Universität Bremen. Germany. Universität Bremen. 11 September 2017. de.
  9. Web site: Search for program. www.dbs.uni-bremen.de. en. 11 September 2017.
  10. Web site: Rechenschaftsbericht des Rektors: "Uni in Zahlen" 2016. President of the University of Bremen. University of Bremen. 11 September 2017. de.
  11. Web site: Preis für gute Lehre. Schröder. Sandra. Universität Bremen. de. 11 September 2017.
  12. Book: Jorzik, Bettina. "Ausgezeichnete Lehre!" Lehrpreise an Universitäten. Waxmann. 2010. 978-3-8309-2304-6. Münster. 118.
  13. Web site: Re-registration and Semester Contribution. Sekretariat für Studierende. Universität Bremen, Germany. Universität Bremen. en. 11 September 2017.
  14. Web site: High-Profile Areas at the University of Bremen. Universität Bremen. Germany. Universität Bremen. en. 11 September 2017.
  15. Web site: Wissenschaftsschwerpunkte der Universität Bremen. 3 May 2017. Stefan Lüttgens. de.
  16. Web site: DFG – Laufende Sonderforschungsbereiche. .dfg.de. 10 November 2016.
  17. Web site: DFG – EXC 309: The Ocean in the Earth System – MARUM – Center for Marine Environmental Sciences. www.dfg.de. 10 November 2016.
  18. Web site: DFG – Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft – DFG fördert 15 neue Sonderforschungsbereiche. 7 June 2017. de.
  19. Web site: DFG – GEPRIS – SFB 597: Staatlichkeit im Wandel. gepris.dfg.de. 14 November 2016.
  20. Web site: DFG – GEPRIS – TRR 8: Raumkognition – Schließen, Handeln, Interagieren. gepris.dfg.de. 10 November 2016.
  21. Web site: DFG – GEPRIS – SFB 637: Selbststeuerung logistischer Prozesse – Ein Paradigmenwechsel und seine Grenzen. gepris.dfg.de. 10 November 2016.
  22. Web site: DFG – GEPRIS – TRR 4: Prozessketten zur Replikation komplexer Optikkomponenten. gepris.dfg.de. 10 November 2016.
  23. Web site: DFG – GEPRIS – SFB 570: Distortion Engineering – Verzugsbeherrschung in der Fertigung. gepris.dfg.de. 10 November 2016.
  24. Web site: DFG – GEPRIS – SFB 517: Neuronale Grundlagen kognitiver Leistungen. gepris.dfg.de. 10 November 2016.
  25. Web site: DFG – GEPRIS – SFB 372: Sprühkompaktieren. gepris.dfg.de. 10 November 2016.
  26. Web site: QS World University Rankings 2024. 16 July 2023. QS World University Rankings.
  27. Web site: World University Rankings 2024. 27 September 2023. Times Higher Education World University Rankings. 27 September 2023 .
  28. Web site: 2023 Academic Ranking of World Universities. Academic Ranking of World Universities. 15 August 2023.