Katana VentraIP

Czech Technical University in Prague

Czech Technical University in Prague (CTU) (Czech: České vysoké učení technické v Praze, ČVUT) is one of the largest universities in the Czech Republic with 8 faculties, and is one of the oldest institutes of technology in Central Europe. It is also the oldest non-military technical university in Europe.[2]

Motto

Scientia est potentia (Latin)

Knowledge is power

1707 / 1806

1,786 (2019)

17,229 (2019)

12 (2022)

In the academic year 2020/21, Czech Technical University offered 130 degree programs in Czech and 84 in English. It was considered one of the top 10 universities in emerging Europe and Central Asia in the same year.[3]

Academic profile[edit]

Rankings[edit]

The CTU is the best technical university in the Czech Republic. In 2010, in the world rating of THES-QS universities in the category of technical sciences, the CTU took the 121st place, in the category of natural sciences – 246th place.[5] In 2018, Czech Technical University was ranked as 220th in Engineering and Technology in the QS World University Rankings.[6]

Admissions[edit]

Students apply to faculty. Each faculty has different admissions requirements. Acceptance rate ranges from 52.32% (Faculty of Information Technology) to 81.51% (Faculty of Transportation Sciences).[7] The percentage of international students grew from 2.5% in 2000 to 16.4% in 2017.[8][9]

Graduation rate[edit]

Due to the pace and difficulty of CTU coursework, high percentage of students fail to complete first year of their studies. First year failure rates range from 23% (Faculty of Civil Engineering) to 47% (Faculty of Information Technology).[10] Overall, only 48% of enrolled undergraduate students end up graduating.

International cooperation[edit]

Study and work abroad[edit]

CTU has international agreements with 484 foreign universities. Many of them are ranked in the first hundred in QS World University Rankings such as National University of Singapore, Nanyang Technological University, Purdue University, Korea Institute of Science and Technology (KAIST), Hong Kong University of Science and Technology, Technical University of Munich, Delft University of Technology, KU Leuven or Pontificia Universidad Catolica de Chile.


CTU has many bilateral agreements with universities outside of Europe. The most sought after universities are from Canada, Australia, Singapore, United States and Japan. That said, every year many students choose to study in attractive destinations such as Argentina, Brazil, Chile, China, Hong Kong, India, Indonesia, South Africa, South Korea, Costa Rica, Mexico, New Zealand, Peru, Russia or Taiwan.


CTU also participates in the European programmes Erasmus and Leonardo.[5]

International students[edit]

CTU has currently over 3500 international students from 117 countries. About 750 of them are an exchange students. One of the organizations that takes care of international students is Erasmus Student Network (ESN),[15] which organizes Buddy Programme and extra-curricular activities.

Dual diploma[edit]

CTU has currently 21 agreements with universities such as Technical University of Munich, RWTH Aachen or Trinity College Dublin.

radiologist

František Běhounek

mathematician and physicist

Christian Doppler

physicist and one of the founders of medical radiology

Ivan Puluj

architect

Antonín Engel

architect

Vladimír Fischer

physicist and engineer

Josef Gerstner

statesman, writer and former dissident, who served as the last President of Czechoslovakia

Václav Havel

architect, main founder of Academy of Science, patron

Josef Hlávka

Otakar Husák, CTU graduate, chemist, General, Czechoslovak Legionnaire in Russia and France, fighter from Zborov and Terron, Chairman of President 's Military Office, Minister of Defence, First Director of the Explosia Semtín factory, prisoner of concentration camps Dachau and Buchenwald, Director of the Synthesia Semtín (1945–1948), political prisoner (Prague Nusle-Pankrác, Mírov 1950–1956) [16]

Masaryk

architect

Eva Jiřičná

Karel Jonáš, who became , Czech-American publisher, legislator and Lieutenant Governor of Wisconsin

Charles Jonas (Wisconsin politician)

computer and systems scientist

George Klir

geographer and technologist

Karl Kořistka

inventor, electrical engineer and entrepreneur

František Křižík

entrepreneur, founder and chairman of Seznam.cz

Ivo Lukačovič

chemist and Nobel Prize winner

Vladimir Prelog

set designer

Richard Rychtarik

first female Czech civil engineering graduate (in 1923)

Marie Schneiderová-Zubaníková

mathematician, historian

Alena Šolcová

engineer and author

Vladimír Teyssler

chemist

Emil Votoček

mathematician

Emil Weyr

architect and engineer

Josef Zítek

The CTU Rectorate

The CTU Rectorate

Dejvice campus

Dejvice campus

Karlovo Náměstí campus

Karlovo Náměstí campus

Bethlehem Chapel – The CTU's ceremonial hall

Bethlehem Chapel – The CTU's ceremonial hall

Dejvice campus - Library, FA, FIT

Dejvice campus - Library, FA, FIT

Interior of National Technical Library

Interior of National Technical Library

CTU official website in English

CTU official website in Czech

Official website for international students

www.StudyAtCTU.com

Organization for international students

International Student Club

Organization for international students

IAESTE

Archived 2016-03-04 at the Wayback Machine University Centre for Energy Efficient Buildings (UCEEB)

UCEEB

(TIME) network for student mobility.

Top Industrial Managers for Europe