Mexico
ASU-Tec De Monterrey award boosts research projects in renewable energy
For the second year in a row, Arizona State University (ASU) and the Instituto Tecnológico y de Estudios Superiores de Monterrey (ITESM) have jointly awarded $200,000 for two collaborative research projects. This year’s theme was renewable energy.
After a competitive, peer-reviewed selection process, each team was awarded $100,000 from an international research fund established in 2006 by ASU President Michael Crow and ITESM System President Rafael Rangel.
After a competitive, peer-reviewed selection process, each team was awarded $100,000 from an international research fund established in 2006 by ASU President Michael Crow and ITESM System President Rafael Rangel.
Binational Workforce Development
The binational workforce development initiative seeks the creation of programs that will allow for an exchange of up to 200 students, both undergraduate and graduate, per institution. ASU and Tecnológico de Monterrey have created a tuition structure in which students can pay at their home institution while studying at the partner institution, anything from one credit hour to a full doctorate program.
About Tec de Monterrery
Tecnológico de Monterrey was founded in 1943 due to the vision of Eugenio Garza Sada and a group of businessmen who formed a non-profit association called Enseñanza e Investigación Superior, A. C. Tecnológico de Monterrey is a private, non-profit institution which is independent and not related to any political party or religious group.
Tec de Monterrey
Arizona State University (ASU) and the Instituto Tecnológico y de Estudios Superiores de Monterrey (Tecnológico de Monterrey) are breaking new ground with an unprecedented collaboration across borders designed to pave the way for innovative global partnerships among institutions of higher learning. Through our partnership, we are developing thoughtful strategies for enhancing understanding, expanding our global impact and augmenting our role in the international dialogue of critical issues.