What Students Say
Likes
- Easy to get student accommodation
- Good post-degree work opportunities
- Lots of HiWi and werkstudent opportunities during the degree
Dislikes
- Mensa isn't too good
- Tuition fees as it's in Baden-Wurttemburg
- High competition for HiWi and workstudent roles
Course Curriculum
- The course curriculum is moderately challenging, might be even more depending on the courses enrolled in, The teaching is mainly theoretical as it is a TU. The positive aspects are that the syllabus is very up to date and teaches about a lot of modern things.
- The schedule is completely up to how the student selects classes. It could be 1-2 classes a week or 1-2 every day. Classes are in 1.5hr slots from 8am to 5pm. My course has around 80 students. Around 60 would be indian
Admission Experience
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TU Dortmund - I got rejected (no idea why)
TU Freiburg - I got rejected (no idea why)
TU Munich - I got rejected (low bachelors pointer possibly)
Uni Siegen - I got rejected (no idea why)
RWTH - I got rejected (Low GRE score)
EPFL - I got rejected (unsuitable profile, low scores and high academic requirements) -
TUHH - got an admit, didn't accept
Uni Stuttgart - Accepted and admitted to Universitat Stuttgart - Uni stuttgart had better accommodation facilities on campus. the course catalogue was much broader and aligned with the subjects that I wanted to study, like AI, Embedded systems and electronics.
- The admissions process is very straightforward - you just send your CV/Resume, your transcripts, Bachelor certificate, APS Certificate and IELTS scores. The minimum pointer recommended is a 2.5 on german scale. Minimum IELTS is a 6.5
- Winter 2023. As mentioned, the course and location of the city influenced my decision. On top of that i also received an accommodation on campus so I preferred this university over my other option
- I completed application in Feb 2023 and got an acceptance in April 2023
Faculty
- I'm not aware of any faculty to student ratio, not sure if it is relevant in German universities.
- The teaching methodology varies from class to class. The content may either be a presentation or assessments.
- The faculty members do not assist in job search but may provide HiWi roles.
- Most of our faculty has very good industry networks so they all have 20+ years of experience in industry
Campus Life
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There are two campuses, one in Mitte, the other in Vaihingen. There's a library on both campuses, sports facilities on the vaihingen one. There are a lot of major campus fests, like Uno, Fusion, and fests organised by the multiple student dorms.
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Especially in summer. There are a lot of cultural events, like indian night during diwali and a lot of student organisation activities happening throughout the year
Part Time Jobs
- Most students work off campus. It is harder to get on campus jobs and they also pay less (13-14/hr) For on campus there is generally a 40hr/month limit set by the contract. It's better to work off campus as they pay more (15+) and we get better exposure to industry
- Most Indians work as werkstudents. They earn 15-18 in their part time jobs. it is fairly easy, depending on skill set and prior experience. the process is similar to applying to full time jobs - linkedin, company websites, apply, interviewing, etc
Placement
- 50-60% secures employment. Avg salary is 50k-60k euros.
- Jobs are found through job portals and networking. Most students get into MNCs like Bosch, Mercedes, BMW, Maehle, Karcher. There are also numerous smaller companies where students can get roles as well.
Accommodation
- On campus - I applied to Uni stuttgart student housing. Rent is 359, heating included. The challenge was to find accommodation. It's recommended to live on campus, to not miss out on student life.
- My dorm is 10 mins away from the campus so it is very convenient to live here and attend classes.
Exams
- IELTS/TOEFL is required for the university.
- We need a CV, an APS certificate, transcripts, bachelors certificate. There was no interview
Fees
- Tuition fees are 1500 euros per semester for international students, + some additional student union fees so in total we pay 1600-1700 Euros a semester. Housing rent is anything from 340-450 depending on the rooms.
- I spend around 800euros per semester
144 - health insurance
58 - D-ticket
359 - rent
150 - groceries
50 - travel, shopping
90-100 - misc taxes, internet fees, radio tax
Scholarship
- There is a Deutschland stipendium. There is no eligibility criteria for enrolled students. the award is 300 euros a semester. I know a few people who got the stipendium. Around 2-3 students get it on average.
- There is also a Bosch stipendium for electrical engineering. It even offers 300 euros a semester. I am not aware of any other scholarships available