More than 1,200 young people participate in the Pre-University Conference of the Higher Technical School of Engineering of the University of Seville

Publication date

The Higher Technical School of Engineering of the University of Seville (ETSI) will receive until Thursday, February 8, more than 1,200 students in the second year of Baccalaureate or second year of Higher Level Training Cycles with access to Engineering studies, willing to get to know the center and its facilities, as well as the degrees taught and the research carried out.

The visiting students, accompanied by their tutors, are received in the Assembly Hall by the ETSI Management, who introduces them to the School and its offer of degrees, internships, mobility, professional opportunities, as well as the research activities that are offered. take place in the center . Next, they are taken to tour the School's facilities, both the Central Building and the Workshops and Laboratories Building, with special emphasis on the research laboratories. This year, in addition, they will be able to get up close and personal with the members of the Center's student associations, with whom they will be able to exchange opinions and doubts regarding engineering studies and university life.

More than 50 Secondary Education centers in Seville, capital and province, have attended the annual call that the management of the ETSi makes in order to explain to potential future students the training and research work of the School and the studies that they can take if, finally, they decide to opt for the different studies taught in Engineering.

The holding of these sessions is part of the initiative of the ETSi Management that aims to provide a real and practical approach to the degrees offered at this center as well as the research carried out in the field of Engineering to the students. of Baccalaureate and Higher Cycles who in the coming months will have to make one of the most important decisions of their lives: the choice of university studies to pursue, which will affect their academic and, later, work future.