Site icon Anirban Saha

How to choose between universities in Germany?

magdeburg skyline

Thanks to this blog, quite a few people approach me for guidance about choosing a German university. Before I proceed any further, I need to put the following disclaimers:

Process 1: If you are applying to a Universität (university) in Germany, you’re most probably willing to pursue “Science”. Scientists work on new concepts and/or newer implementations and publish “papers” in conferences. The previous statement shouldn’t surprise you. But how do you know which conferences are good and which ones are not? Could you discover universities while searching for conferences? 

Conferences have a ranking. The better the conference, the better the rank, probably the better is the work, network and reach of the researcher (faculty/Professor). You can find the ranking on websites such as this.

Let’s search with a generic term, “data mining”. 3 conferences have “A*” (highest) rating. The 3 are, ICDM, SIGKDD, WSDM. Now, let’s see who are the chairs of the conferences, and how many of them are associated with universities in Germany.

You can also check with other search terms, like “machine learning”, and/or “NLP”. It should be a little time consuming, but it is your life… so maybe, you would want to invest a little time into it.

Process 2: Check DAAD + CHE Ranking of German Universities, sign up for free and fill in the required details. You’ll get a list of universities and an array of parameters you can judge the university on. Select the parameters that you believe are best fit in your case. Make a list of the universities, go to their course/discipline homepages. Check out the faculty, the positions they hold and/or their recent publications. Below are a couple of pointers:

Example: You can check the list of faculty/working groups in Saarland, OvGU Magdeburg, TU Munich.

Process 3: This is more of a continuation from the previous process. Go to each faculty webpage and check their latest publication. You might or might not understand the content and that’s perfectly all right. You’d know if that fits into your area of interest and get which conference or journal it is selected/ published. Check out the conference details and it’s ratings.

Examples: I saw a Bengali name, and thus natural curiosity led me to see the details of TU Munich’s Univ.-Prof. Debarghya Ghoshdastidar, PhD. While it was a little confusing to search for his publication on the TUM website, it was easy on Google Scholar. Here’s his link to his profile. His publication in 2018 was in NIPS, which is rated A*. In Saarland, Prof. Dr. Joerg Hoffmann has multiple publications, at least two of which is A* conference (AAAI Conference on Artificial Intelligence, International Conference on Automated Planning and scheduling). For Prof. Stober (OvGU), it was also A* conference where his works were published in 2017 & 2014.

You’d also find faculty members who are chairs of different conferences. For example Prof. Andreas Nürnberger (OvGU) is the Vice President of IEEE SMC Human-Machine Systems.

Please note: The narrower the scope of the conference, it is more likely to be an “A” or “B” category, as it does not attract mass attraction.

Why is this very important? – Because your M.Sc. course is about your independent study. Your faculty would be the ones assisting you, reviewing your work, getting you connected to researchers across the globe.

This analysis is important, please do this carefully. It is your life and you should have control over things, especially in decision making of this sort. There’s no alternative to better-informed decisions. [And do not outsource this to a consultancy.]

Make sure that your decision making/choice of a German university is based on parameters, of which the faculty has the highest importance. Everything else like the population of a city, ease of getting accommodation, whether you have relatives/ family members in and around the city etc., can be taken care of.

All the best. Do leave a comment for me below.

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