An English-taught bachelor's program at TU Munich's Straubing campus that integrates core business management with sustainability science and engineering — equipping students to address environmental and resource challenges through both analytical and managerial lenses. The curriculum deliberately bridges disciplines, with dedicated tracks in management fundamentals, sustainability, and quantitative methods running in parallel across the first three semesters.
Sustainable Management and Technology is a fully English-taught bachelor's program offered by TUM School of Management at TUM Campus Straubing, a campus of Technische Universität München dedicated to bioresource and sustainability topics. The program is designed around the conviction that sustainable transformation in industry and society requires professionals who can operate fluently across management, natural science, and engineering domains.
The curriculum is structured in three parallel thematic pillars that run through the early semesters: **Management Fundamentals**, which covers the core principles of business administration and organization; **Management & Sustainability**, which builds knowledge of sustainable business models, resource strategies, and environmental governance; and **Research & Quantitative Methods**, which develops the analytical toolkit — statistics, data analysis, and scientific methodology — needed to evaluate sustainability problems rigorously.
The first three semesters establish this integrated foundation. From semester two onwards, students begin incorporating **Electives in Engineering & Natural Sciences**, which allow them to develop technical competencies relevant to sustainability — such as materials, energy systems, or biotechnology — in a way that complements their management training. Communication skills and general elective modules in semester three offer additional breadth.
Semester four deepens applied knowledge through further electives and an **Applications in Sustainable Management & Technology** module that connects classroom learning to real-world sustainability challenges. Semester five is designated as a **Mobility Window**, intentionally designed for study abroad or other international experiences, with electives and a research methods component that can be completed in a flexible learning environment.
The program concludes in semester six with **Project Studies** — a substantial applied project component — followed by the **Bachelor's Thesis**, which requires students to independently investigate a sustainability-relevant topic under academic supervision. The Straubing campus setting, embedded in a region with active bioeconomy and renewable resources industries, provides a distinctive backdrop for both coursework and thesis work.
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