Education

Tweede plaats voor Nuna6 in zonnerace

Het Nuon Solar Team heeft, na een spannende laatste racedag, donderdag de tweede plaats behaald in de World Solar Challenge 2011 in Australië.


Winnaar van de race is het team van de Japanse Tokai University, dat de vorige editie van de zonnerace ook al op haar naam schreef. In 2009 eindigde het Nuon Solar Team ook op de tweede plek achter Tokai. Toen was het tijdsverschil veel groter, het team van de TU Delft reed toen een aantal uren achter het Japanse team aan. Nu is het team op ongeveer een uur achter Tokai gefinisht.


Teamleader Pier van Zonneveld zegt op de website van het Delftse team: ‘We hebben tot het laatst gestreden om de wereldbeker zonneracen. Tokai heeft de snelste auto gebouwd. Op de racestrategie wilden we ze pakken, dat is niet gelukt. In 2013 staan zij er weer en wij ook’.


 


 


Meer informatie op www.nuonsolarteam.nl 

TU Eindhoven has been the fiercest critic of UM’s proposed plan to launch a Science College offering programmes in science and technology based subjects. UM’s rector, Louis Boon, however reacted with fighting words of his own, stating that TU Eindhoven ‘has no vision of education’ and offers ‘bloody awful programmes’ (‘kloteprogramma’s’ in Dutch), in an interview in the Observant, UM’s university newspaper.

The Netherlands’ three established university’s of technology – TU Delft, TU Eindhoven and TU Twente – have expressed concerns that with the addition of UM’s new Science College, the Netherlands will subsequently offer too many science and technology based educational programmes. But Boon says the market is not yet saturated: “The point is that you offer attractive programmes,” he said, adding that especially TU Eindhoven, which also has a BSc degree programme in ‘liberal engineering sciences’ in the pipeline, has no grounds for complaint: “The situation in Eindhoven is a total disaster….Their new expanded BSc programme will be the same mess as the rest, that I am convinced of.”

Meanwhile, UM’s president, Dr Jo Ritzen, has stated that he also does not understand the concerns expressed by the other Dutch universities of technology. In an interview in ScienceGuide, he said: “We have said to Eindhoven: ‘join with us’. But instead, people are now working against us. The Netherlands is far too small for us to compete against each other.” But from all the much-publicised turmoil, Ritzen does see one clear benefit: “Since this all started, I’ve received twenty applications for our Science College’s 2011-2012 academic year.”

Editor Redactie

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