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Podcast Ep. #32 – Air-to-Air Refuelling and Higher Education Engineering Reform with Dr Steve Bullock

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Manage episode 246573642 series 1757905
Content provided by Rainer Groh – Aerospace Engineer and Researcher and Rainer Groh – Aerospace Engineer. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Rainer Groh – Aerospace Engineer and Researcher and Rainer Groh – Aerospace Engineer or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.
Dr Steve Bullock is an engineering researcher in air-to-air refuelling and cooperative control of UAVs, as well as the Programme Director of the Aerospace Engineering programme at the University of Bristol. As the programme director of a leading European aerospace engineering programme, Steve has a unique vantage point on how the higher education landscape is changing, and specifically, how technology trends such as aviation sustainability and digitisation are changing the requirements for an engineering university education in the 21st century. As a TeachFirst ambassador and presenter of the Cosmic Shed podcast, Steve has a clear passion for education in general and is actively exploring different ways of disseminating technical information to a broad audience. In this episode of the podcast Steve and I talk about, his path into aerospace engineering and how he found his passion for teaching his PhD work on air-to-air refuelling and cooperative control what he considers to be some of the key challenges in engineering university education how the Aerospace Engineering department in Bristol is planning for the future and much, much more. This episode of the Aerospace Engineering Podcast is brought to you by my patrons on Patreon. Patreon is a way for me to receive regular donations from listeners whenever I release a new episode, and with the help of these generous donors I have been able to pay for much of the expenses, hosting and travels costs that accrue in the production of this podcast. If you would like to support the podcast as a patron, then head over to my Patreon page. There are multiple levels of support, but anything from $1 an episode is highly appreciated. Thank you for your support! Selected Links from the Episode Steve's personal webpage and University of Bristol profile Steve's Twitter and LinkedIn The Cosmic Shed Live: TRON in the Planetarium (Eventbrite) Aerospace Engineering in Bristol Can flying go green? The Science behind 2001: A Space Odyssey Flipping lectures for increased teaching effectiveness TeachFirst
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50 episodes

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Manage episode 246573642 series 1757905
Content provided by Rainer Groh – Aerospace Engineer and Researcher and Rainer Groh – Aerospace Engineer. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Rainer Groh – Aerospace Engineer and Researcher and Rainer Groh – Aerospace Engineer or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.
Dr Steve Bullock is an engineering researcher in air-to-air refuelling and cooperative control of UAVs, as well as the Programme Director of the Aerospace Engineering programme at the University of Bristol. As the programme director of a leading European aerospace engineering programme, Steve has a unique vantage point on how the higher education landscape is changing, and specifically, how technology trends such as aviation sustainability and digitisation are changing the requirements for an engineering university education in the 21st century. As a TeachFirst ambassador and presenter of the Cosmic Shed podcast, Steve has a clear passion for education in general and is actively exploring different ways of disseminating technical information to a broad audience. In this episode of the podcast Steve and I talk about, his path into aerospace engineering and how he found his passion for teaching his PhD work on air-to-air refuelling and cooperative control what he considers to be some of the key challenges in engineering university education how the Aerospace Engineering department in Bristol is planning for the future and much, much more. This episode of the Aerospace Engineering Podcast is brought to you by my patrons on Patreon. Patreon is a way for me to receive regular donations from listeners whenever I release a new episode, and with the help of these generous donors I have been able to pay for much of the expenses, hosting and travels costs that accrue in the production of this podcast. If you would like to support the podcast as a patron, then head over to my Patreon page. There are multiple levels of support, but anything from $1 an episode is highly appreciated. Thank you for your support! Selected Links from the Episode Steve's personal webpage and University of Bristol profile Steve's Twitter and LinkedIn The Cosmic Shed Live: TRON in the Planetarium (Eventbrite) Aerospace Engineering in Bristol Can flying go green? The Science behind 2001: A Space Odyssey Flipping lectures for increased teaching effectiveness TeachFirst
  continue reading

50 episodes

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