Internship for KRSU teachers and students at the Polytechnic: exchange of experience and skills

Translation. Region: Russian Federation –

Source: Peter the Great St. Petersburg Polytechnic University –

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As part of the implementation of the "Roadmap" of joint activities between SPbPU and KRSU for the development of engineering education at the Kyrgyz-Russian Slavic University named after B.N. Yeltsin, a scientific and educational internship was held for faculty and students from the Faculty of Natural Sciences and Engineering and the Faculty of Architecture, Design, and Construction at the institutes and laboratories of the Polytechnic University.

Eight faculty members, a graduate student, and eleven students spent a week actively collaborating at four SPbPU institutes: Civil Engineering, Physics and Mechanics, Computer Science and Cybersecurity, and Mechanical Engineering, Materials, and Transport. Each had their own, yet highly intensive, internship program. For the faculty, this included familiarizing themselves with the laboratories, studying teaching materials, and coordinating plans for joint work and projects. For the students, this included working in the laboratories, attending lectures and practical classes in their respective fields, and learning about the work of SPbPU's industrial partners.

Teachers and students from the "Construction", "Technosphere Safety", "Architecture" and "Architectural Environment Design" departments of the Federal Agency for Architecture and Construction of KRSU completed internships at the Civil Engineering Institute.

The internship began with an official meeting with the institute's leadership, which was attended by KRSU faculty members: Department of Ecology and Emergency Management (Head Erik Mambetov and Associate Professor Ermek Sharsheev); Department of Construction (Head Elmira Sardarbekova and Senior Lecturer Ivan Chernykh-Rashevsky); and Department of Architectural Environmental Design (Head Beisen Kariev).

The Civil Engineering Institute was represented by Marina Petrochenko, Director; Maxim Terekh, Deputy Director for Academic and Methodological Work; Asiyat Eliseeva, Deputy Director for Academic Process Organization and Student Affairs; Yuri Lazarev, Director of the Higher School of Public Administration and Design; Galina Kozinets, Director of the Higher School of Public Administration and Design; Andrey Andreev, Director of the Higher School of Technical and Architecture; Margarita Perkova, Director of the Higher School of Design and Architecture; and Mikhail Romanov, Responsible for International Affairs at the Institute of Civil Engineering. The guests were introduced to the infrastructure and key areas of educational and research activities at the Institute of Civil Engineering, exchanged information on research areas and educational opportunities for joint activities, and discussed organizational matters.

KRSU faculty held a series of meetings and joint working sessions with colleagues from relevant ISI Higher Schools. They discussed joint research, the implementation of educational programs within the framework of academic mobility, inter-university interdisciplinary final qualifying theses, and also worked on joint publication and project activities.

A meeting was organized for KRSU students majoring in Technosphere Safety with Mikhail Ryabukhin, head of the All-Russian Student Rescue Corps, and Oleg Savoshinsky, head of the SPbPU Civil Safety Department. The students also visited the St. Petersburg State University of the State Fire Service of the Ministry of Emergency Situations of Russia named after Hero of the Russian Federation, General of the Army E. N. Zinichev.

A master class on modeling buildings and structures using construction information modeling technologies, a master class on laser scanning, and a master class on visualizing design concepts using neural networks were organized for students majoring in Construction and Architectural Environment Design. KRSU students began implementing the first project of the student design bureau, sponsored by the IRBIS engineering corporation.

Beishembek Ashirbaev, Head of the Department of Applied Mathematics and Computer Science, completed an internship at the Institute of Physics and Mechanics at SPbPU. Over the course of a week, colleagues from KRSU visited the institute's laboratories and participated in scientific seminars at the Higher School of Applied Mathematics and Computational Physics.

A meeting was held with Maxim Frolov, Director of the Higher School of Applied Mathematics and Computational Physics, and Konstantin Kozlov, Head of the Applied Mathematics and Computer Science educational program. The partners discussed the program's implementation and the potential for KRSU undergraduate students to complete a semester-long internship within the program.

KRSU representatives visited the Mathematical Biology and Bioinformatics Research Laboratory. They were shown equipment used to extract plant and fungal DNA. They discussed technologies for obtaining experimental data and its mathematical processing using machine learning. They also visited laboratories at the Higher School of Applied Mathematics and Computational Physics, where they learned about the operating principles of wind tunnels and shock tunnels and were shown several experiments.

A seminar on current research topics was held with the participation of Maxim Frolov. Faculty from the Institute of Physics and Mechanics presented their priority research areas, tasks, and projects to their colleagues from Kyrgyzstan. Another seminar was led by Sergei Lupulyak, Head of the Virtual Simulation Research Laboratory at the Institute of Physics and Mechanics. The seminar discussed the development of software for modeling various physical processes in the petrochemical, gas, and aerospace industries.

"Transport Process Technologies" and "Software Engineering" are two other areas where KRSU students and faculty have completed internships.

The internship for third-year undergraduate students of the Faculty of Engineering and Materials Science of KRSU, Ariadna Aksenova and Yulia Klets, lasted two weeks and took place at the Higher School of Transport with the participation of specialists from the Laboratory of New Materials and Advanced Manufacturing Technologies (for the Aircraft, Shipbuilding, and Innovative Transport Industries) of the Institute of Metallurgy and Transport.

Students gained unique experience and new professional skills, actively engaged in building traffic models, which allowed them to gain a deeper understanding of traffic flow dynamics and the impact of various factors on their operation. The knowledge gained will form the basis for further study of complex transportation systems and the development of effective solutions for traffic optimization.

Furthermore, the students mastered geographic information systems, enabling them to visualize and analyze spatial data related to transport infrastructure. Introduction to transport macromodels was an important part of their training, as they enable higher-level traffic flow forecasting and informed decision-making in urban planning and transport management. The skills and knowledge they acquire will contribute to their professional development and prepare them for a successful career in transportation engineering.

The issue of adapting and aligning the curricula of SPbPU and KRSU in the areas of "Transport Process Technology" and "Transport Logistics" was also addressed. Dmitry Glazunov, Professor of the Department of Automobile Transport at KRSU's Faculty of Economics, held several meetings with Alexey Grachev, Director of the Higher School of Transport, and Dmitry Plotnikov, Associate Professor at the School. Glazunov learned about the infrastructure of the higher school, the course work plans for the educational areas, and discussed with colleagues options for aligning the curricula in the specialized areas to enable KRSU students to complete a semester of study at the Polytechnic University as part of the network educational program.

Tariel Jalalbekov and Eldin Nazhimidinov, two first-year undergraduate students from the Faculty of Natural Sciences and Engineering at KRSU, spent two weeks exploring the educational and scientific opportunities at the Polytechnic University. As part of the advanced IT education program "Development of System and Application Software for Modern Information Storage and Transmission Systems," implemented by the Higher School of Software Engineering at the Institute of Information Systems and Computer Science at SPbPU, the KRSU students attended lectures and workshops on algorithmization and programming, and participated in seminars organized by the program's industrial partners.

The students also learned about the Polytechnic's history, campus, and infrastructure. Following their first year at KRSU (2025/26 academic year), the possibility of organizing a semester-long course for these two students at the Polytechnic University in the same advanced IT education program will be considered.

In parallel with the student educational internship, Natalia Lychenko, Head of the Department of Information and Computational Technologies at the Faculty of Natural Sciences and Engineering at KRSU, completed an internship at the Higher School of Software Engineering at the Institute of Software Engineering and Science. She studied the curricula and teaching materials for the Software Engineering program to more fully and seamlessly integrate the respective educational programs at SPbPU and KRSU. An agreement was reached to further develop a networked master's program and a joint undergraduate program in Software Engineering, with the potential launch of both programs in the 2026/27 academic year. The master's program will include lecturers from the Polytechnic University, while the undergraduate program will include one to two semesters of full-time study at SPbPU.

We highly value our partnership with the Kyrgyz-Russian Slavic University and are pleased with the successful completion of the internship. During this week, KRSU faculty not only exchanged professional experience but also began implementing research initiatives. It was especially valuable that the students immediately applied their acquired knowledge to a real-world project at IRBIS Engineering Corporation. I am confident that such educational projects make a significant contribution to strengthening international cooperation and training highly qualified specialists for the construction industry, noted Marina Petrochenko, Director of the Institute of Civil Engineering.

On the final day of the internship, a working meeting was held via videoconference between Yuri Fomin, Vice-Rector for Research at SPbPU, and Evgeny Shekunov, Vice-Rector for Research and Innovation at KRSU. Representatives of SPbPU and KRSU research groups involved in joint research projects also participated in the meeting. The colleagues discussed the current results of the SPbPU-KRSU Roadmap activities related to research, agreed on work plans for the remainder of the year, and outlined promising activities for 2026.

All faculty and students of the B.N. Yeltsin Kyrgyz-Russian Slavic University received certificates of completion of a scientific or educational internship at Peter the Great St. Petersburg Polytechnic University.

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"Finance and Business Management": a joint educational program with KubSAU has been launched.

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Source: Official website of the State –

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On November 14, the Kuban State Agrarian University's online bachelor's degree program, offering two qualifications—economics and management—in a single diploma, concluded its on-site module at the State University of Management.

The educational program opened on November 10 with a presentation by Dmitry Bryukhanov, Vice-Rector for Academic Affairs at the Kuban State Agricultural University, and Alexander Adamenko, Dean of the Faculty of Finance and Credit at Kuban State Agricultural University. They explained that the joint project between the two universities is designed for undergraduate students in Economics and Management. Graduates will earn two qualifications in four years, significantly enhancing their competitiveness as specialists not only in Kuban but also in Moscow.

During a rigorous educational module at one of the country's top management universities, students were introduced to project-based activities, engaging in educational case studies and business games, and tours of the Moscow Kremlin, the Federation Council, the State Duma, and Planet KVN. Kuban students participated in SUM's Career Day, the 3rd Interuniversity Book Club Festival "Living Hat," and played volleyball with our students. A key feature of the online educational program is that the third year is held at SUM's Moscow campus, giving students the opportunity to work with practicing instructors, engage in real-world problem-solving, and utilize our university's extensive infrastructure.

The Finance and Business Management program combines fundamental economic disciplines with management and entrepreneurial practices. Students study English to an advanced level and can choose a second foreign language—Chinese. Additionally, through KubSAU's Digital Department, they can earn a third qualification in IT management and digital economics.

In short, KubSAU provides an academic foundation and regional context, while SUM provides management expertise, practice-oriented modules, and access to Moscow's professional environment. The combination of these resources creates a new model of economic education, where graduates enter the labor market prepared to manage projects, analyze financial processes, and build a career at the federal level.

"The SUM development strategy involves strengthening cooperation with regional universities and research organizations, including the creation of unified databases across various areas of work, and expanding this experience to include collaboration with educational institutions in the post-Soviet space and the Union State," noted SUM Rector Vladimir Stroyev.

Subscribe to the "Our GUU" Telegram channel. Publication date: November 16, 2025.

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South Korea proposes military talks with North Korea

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Source: People's Republic of China in Russian – People's Republic of China in Russian –

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Source: People's Republic of China – State Council News

SEOUL, Nov. 17 (Xinhua) — The Republic of Korea (ROK) on Monday proposed holding military talks with the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK) to prevent accidental clashes and ease military tensions along the inter-Korean border.

Kim Hong-chol, Vice Defense Minister for National Defense Policy, said in a statement that some North Korean units have recently continued to cross the Military Demarcation Line (MDL) inside the Demilitarized Zone (DMZ) and invade ROK territory, as well as build tactical roads, erect barriers, and plant mines around the DMZ.

Kim Hong Chol said the ROK military continues to respond to North Korean incursions with warning radio broadcasts and gunfire. –0–

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The Premier of the State Council of the People's Republic of China arrived in Russia for the SCO meeting.

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Source: People's Republic of China in Russian – People's Republic of China in Russian –

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Source: People's Republic of China – State Council News

Moscow, November 17 /Xinhua/ — Chinese State Council Premier Li Qiang arrived here on Monday to attend the 24th meeting of the Council of Heads of Government of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO).

Li Qiang will attend the meeting, which will take place on Monday and Tuesday, at the invitation of Russian Prime Minister Mikhail Mishustin.

At Moscow's Vnukovo Airport, Li Qiang was met by representatives of the Russian government and the Chinese Ambassador to Russia, Zhang Hanhui. –0–

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Heihe City showcased its potential to promote China's northern opening-up in Shanghai.

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Source: People's Republic of China in Russian – People's Republic of China in Russian –

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Source: People's Republic of China – State Council News

Beijing, November 17 (Xinhua) — Heihe City in Northeast China's Heilongjiang Province recently held a presentation in the eastern Chinese metropolis of Shanghai on its potential to promote China's opening up to the north, the Heilongjiang Daily reported on Monday.

The presentation, titled "Together Building a New Height of China's Northern Opening and Sharing New Opportunities for Cross-Border Cooperation," was attended by representatives of approximately 100 companies and chambers of commerce from across the country.

Participants discussed how to highlight the role of Heihe City, a strategic platform for China's northern opening-up, in promoting high-quality cross-border industry development amid the ongoing development of Sino-Russian relations and the deepening implementation of the Belt and Road Initiative.

Ji Wei, Director of the Heihe Economic Cooperation Promotion Office, noted in his speech that Heihe, which borders the Russian city of Blagoveshchensk, is one of the first open border cities in China and enjoys extensive government support in the form of policies developed for pilot free trade zones, comprehensive cross-border e-commerce pilot zones, and cities where measures have been experimentally introduced to promote the prosperity of border areas and improve the well-being of local residents.

As the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) and the Eurasian Economic Union (EAEU) deepen their alignment, Heihe's cooperation opportunities in energy resources, agricultural processing, and cross-border logistics have expanded further.

In the energy sector, the city of Heihe has built cross-border power lines that allow it to import 8 billion kWh of electricity from Russia annually. Furthermore, the eastern route of the China-Russia gas pipeline passes through the city.

Regarding agricultural processing, in February 2025, the Heihe Highway Port was officially designated as the designated import control point for meat and chilled aquatic products. Capitalizing on the high-quality meat and cold-water fish resources of the Russian Far East, Heihe aims to become a "key hub in Northeast Asia" for the processing of meat and chilled aquatic products.

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The Chinese Foreign Minister will visit Kyrgyzstan, Uzbekistan, and Tajikistan.

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Source: People's Republic of China in Russian – People's Republic of China in Russian –

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Source: People's Republic of China – State Council News

BEIJING, November 17 (Xinhua) — Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi will visit Kyrgyzstan, Uzbekistan and Tajikistan from November 19 to 22 and hold strategic dialogues with the foreign ministers of the three countries separately, a Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson said on Monday.

Wang Yi, who is also a member of the Politburo of the CPC Central Committee, will travel to the above-mentioned countries at the invitation of Kyrgyz Foreign Minister Jeenbek Kulubayev, Uzbek Foreign Minister Bakhtiyor Saidov, and Tajik Foreign Minister Sirojiddin Mukhriddin, a Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman said. -0-

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Chinese Foreign Ministry: Chinese Premier Li Qiang has no plans to meet with the Japanese leader during the G20 summit.

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Source: People's Republic of China in Russian – People's Republic of China in Russian –

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Source: People's Republic of China – State Council News

Xinhua | November 17, 2025

Keywords: China

Source: Xinhua

Chinese Foreign Ministry: Premier of the State Council of the People's Republic of China Li Qiang has no plans to meet with the Japanese leader during the G20 summit.

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In Harmony with Nature: Rosneft Implements Circular Economy Principles

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Source: Rosneft – An important disclaimer is at the bottom of this article.

World Recycling Day is celebrated in Russia and other countries on November 15. The day aims to draw attention to the need for sustainable resource use and the importance of recycling.

Rosneft aims to achieve leadership in minimizing environmental impact and eco-friendly production. One of the priority goals of the corporate strategy through 2030 is improving the efficiency of waste management processes.

The Company's subsidiaries continuously implement projects that promote the transition to a circular economy.

In 2025, RN-Vankor sent more than 187 tons of waste oils for recycling, and more than 2,000 tons since the plant began operations.

The Saratov Oil Refinery and the Novokuibyshevsk Oil Company have recycled over 3,500 tons of ferrous and non-ferrous metals. Each such recycling effort helps reduce environmental pollution and conserve natural resources.

As part of environmental campaigns such as "Bumbattle," "Ecomarathon," "Recycle Paper – Save a Tree," and others, Rosneft enterprises organize the separate collection of paper, plastic, scrap metal, glass, and electronic waste, which are sent to designated recycling or disposal points. The proceeds are donated to charitable causes and volunteer environmental events.

In 2025, the Company's subsidiaries recycled a record one thousand tons of waste paper. This figure is equivalent to saving 19,000 trees, two million liters of drinking water, and one million kW of electricity.

For the second year in a row, Orenburgneft volunteers, together with schoolchildren and activists from the Movement of the First, organized the "Eco-School" campaign, which involved 20 children's educational institutions in the region. Each school regularly holds eco-lessons, and special eco-boxes are located on each floor where students and teachers collect paper. In 2025, the organizers used the proceeds from the paper collection to purchase fruit tree saplings, which the winners of the campaign—students from School No. 10 in Buzuluk—planted in the city.

Samotlorneftegaz is actively involved in environmental education for young people. In Nizhnevartovsk, the company-supported youth club "EcoQuant" is successfully operating, teaching young people how to respect the environment. The classes are taught, among other things, by company volunteers. Samotlor oil workers are also greening public spaces in Nizhnevartovsk and planting coniferous trees in the Urals Federal District, promoting the sustainable development of ecosystems and the preservation of biodiversity.

The Company's facilities place special emphasis on plastic recycling. Following the environmental campaigns "Kind Caps," "Caps, Surrender!", and "Caps of Kindness," over three tons of plastic caps were sent for recycling in the first 10 months of 2025.

Saratov Oil Refinery employees collected 82 kg of plastic bottle caps and purchased herbivorous fish fry—common carp, silver carp, and grass carp. The fry will help clear excess vegetation from the Volgograd Reservoir, which is crucial for preserving its ecosystem.

RN-Northwest employees regularly collect plastic and provide assistance to children with special needs, homeless animals, and plant trees in St. Petersburg and the Leningrad Region.

Volunteers from ROSPAN INTERNATIONAL, students from the Rosneft Class, and representatives of the youth group "Movement of the First" learned how to recycle plastic bottle caps. The caps were sorted by color and then shredded using a special bicycle, the speed of which determines the fineness of the plastic shavings. The shavings were turned into new items—keychains, tablets, cardholders, and Christmas tree decorations.

The Achinsk Oil Refinery sent nearly a ton of plastic to the Divnogorsk Polymer Products Plant for recycling. It is used to make furniture fittings and fasteners for the assembly and repair of children's playgrounds and sports fields. These playgrounds are covered with crushed tires—the plant recycled 9 tons of them in 2025.

Bashneft-Novoil donated 210 kg of used batteries for recycling, winning the large-scale environmental campaign "Batteries Recycling," organized by the Ufa city administration. The entire volume of recycled materials was sent to a specialized recycling plant in Chelyabinsk.

As part of the "Green Office" project, Samara and Bashkir oil workers installed special containers in the offices of Samaraneftegaz, Samaranefteprodukt, and Bashneft enterprises. Paper, plastic, glass, and used batteries are placed in separate containers. Separating recyclable materials allows for the separation of recyclable materials from those subject to disposal, such as used batteries.

RN-Chernozemye volunteers participated in the "Ecotaxis" campaign ahead of World Recycling Day. In one day, they transported and sent for recycling 20 kg of plastic bottle caps, 10 kg of used batteries, and nearly 70 kg of waste paper.

The Company's subsidiaries actively collaborate with eco-houses and multifunctional eco-friendly coworking spaces with recycling collection points. Environmental lessons are regularly held in corporate "Rosneft Classes." Schoolchildren and employees attend exhibitions, lectures, and environmental workshops.

Department of Information and Advertising of PJSC NK RosneftNovember 17, 2025

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A lecturer at the RUDN University Engineering Academy spoke about her work

Translation. Region: Russian Federation –

Source: Peoples'Friendship University of Russia

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What's a typical day like for a professor at the RUDN University Engineering Academy? We spoke with one of them and shared her thoughts. On weekday mornings, Galina Erikovna Okolnikova, PhD in Engineering and Associate Professor of the Department of Construction Technologies and Structural Materials, wakes up around 6:30 AM. For her, this time is a time of silence and concentration.

Typically, a teacher starts the day with a cup of coffee and a quick check of email: responding to emails from students and graduate students, checking reports or course project materials. If there's little time left before the lecture, she reviews slides, updates illustrations, and adds fresh examples from recent research or real-world engineering projects.

Tests and calculations

Galina Erikovna teaches several courses, including "Reinforced Concrete and Masonry Structures," "Special Course in Reinforced Concrete Structures," "Engineering Structures," as well as "Design of Specialized Engineering Structures," "Design of Bridges and Overpasses," and "Design of Reinforced Concrete Structures." A typical day for the instructor includes two to three lectures, periodically accompanied by a practical lesson.

"Practical classes can follow lectures. For example, in the Building Materials and Structures Lab, students test concrete and reinforcement samples. We examine the strength of concrete cubes, documenting the appearance of initial cracks and the nature of failure. Students are particularly interested in experiments with high-strength concrete, especially when comparing standard mixtures with modified mixtures containing fiber. Without fiber, such samples often fail instantly during testing, literally 'exploding' upon reaching their ultimate strength, whereas fiber-reinforced concrete is significantly more resilient, demonstrating plasticity and controlled crack formation," says Galina Okolnikova.

According to the instructor, during the classes, students also master non-destructive testing methods, learning to operate instruments that measure the strength and density of concrete without damaging the specimen. This helps them better understand the real-world practice of structural diagnostics on construction sites and during building inspections.

"During practical classes, students not only master theory but also perform comprehensive structural calculations. They learn to select reinforcement, determine its diameter and spacing, calculate the strength and stiffness of elements, and then present the results in the form of design drawings. This approach allows them to understand the relationship between the calculation model, the design solution, and actual engineering documentation," says Galina Okolnikova.

Unexpected cracks

Galina Erikovna recalls that she and her students once conducted a series of tests in the laboratory on beams with different types of reinforcement cages to evaluate their performance under transverse loads.

"In one of the specimens, upon reaching the design moment, cracks began to develop not in the tension zone, as expected, but diagonally, intersecting the compressed portion of the section. We paused the test, recorded the crack formation pattern, measured the crack angles, and noted how the stress distribution in the reinforcement changed. Afterward, the class discussed why the diagonal cracks formed earlier than predicted by the models and how the stirrup placement influenced this. This case became a good example for subsequent laboratory exercises and the analysis of the behavior of reinforced concrete elements in ultimate states," says Galina Okolnikova.

Galina Erikovna also leads the professional student and scientific student society "Composites and Nanocomposites." The "Composites and Nanocomposites" professional student and scientific student society is a club for future civil engineers researching technologies for producing modern building materials with predetermined properties: fiber-reinforced concrete, cinder concrete, textile-reinforced concrete, lightweight aggregate concrete (expanded polystyrene concrete), polymer concrete, cautons, nanoconcretes for 3D printing, and wood-based composites.

"A special place in my work is devoted to research with postgraduate students (I have over 30 of them) and master's students. Currently, we conduct research with postgraduate students in the field of materials science: we are developing and studying the properties of new high-strength concrete compositions, fiber-reinforced concrete, polymer concrete based on liquid rubber (cautones), concrete using industrial and agricultural waste, and wood-based composites. We also study the stress-strain state of structures reinforced with external reinforcement systems; the specific features of the combined operation of reinforced concrete structures and permanent formwork; and the operating mechanism of dowel joints in wooden structures modified with composite materials," says Galina Okolnikova.

According to the professor, undergraduate and graduate students of the Department of Construction Technology and Structural Materials actively participate in research project competitions, international forums and exhibitions, and international conferences, publish articles in VAK and Scopus journals, and receive grants.

Always in touch

Galina Erikovna notes that students sometimes stay in the labs or office after class, asking her questions and asking for clarification on project calculations. She also stays in touch via email and instant messaging, where she also answers questions about diploma and course projects and provides literature recommendations. Once every two weeks, the teacher holds an hour-long consultation—students come to discuss drawings, calculation details, reinforcement selection, or clarify the specifics of GOSTs and standards for design projects.

"Every month, I organize a scientific seminar for the Department of Industrial and Civil Engineering, attended by renowned world-class scientists. I invite undergraduate and graduate students, and colleagues to discuss recent publications and modern research in the field of construction. These meetings help connect theoretical knowledge with practice and demonstrate how research results are applied in real-world projects," says Galina Okolnikova.

According to Galina Erikovna, this connection is especially evident during off-site events and excursions. Recently, for example, they took a trip to the MonArch Innovation Technologies Plant, where students were able to see production processes, testing equipment, and modern technologies in action.

"I participated in this excursion as the department's responsible person, and for the students, it was a great addition to the lab classes and project calculations they complete at the university," says Galina Okolnikova.

Moscow through the lens

To take a break from her work, Galina Erikovna spends her time photographing Moscow's architectural landmarks—the facades of ancient buildings, bridges, structures, and unusual cladding solutions. As the teacher emphasizes, this is both a creative passion and a way to see structures from a different perspective—not only from an engineering perspective, but also as a visual expression of form and aesthetics.

"I also enjoy nature walks—short forays through Moscow parks or out of town—listening to the silence and occasionally taking notes for publications or lectures in the fresh air. I also love going to the theater, visiting art galleries and museums—such outings broaden my horizons and provide new experiences that sometimes inspire both teaching and research. Sometimes in the evenings, I read fiction or listen to music to unwind after a busy day of technical work; I regularly go to the gym and swim in the pool," says Galina Okolnikova.

According to the teacher, by 6:30–7:00 PM on weekdays, she tries to complete her work cycle: writing out tasks for tomorrow, checking email again, and preparing a draft of a lecture or assignment. Before bed, she drinks a cup of tea and reads or skims through articles on professional topics.

"And, of course, I'm busy planning: mentally planning the next day, including discussions with colleagues, suggestions for improving the course, or new ideas for graduate students' research," says Galina Okolnikova.

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Breaking News: Former Bangladesh Prime Minister S. Hasina sentenced to death in absentia for crimes against humanity

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Source: People's Republic of China in Russian – People's Republic of China in Russian –

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Source: People's Republic of China – State Council News

Dhaka, November 17 (Xinhua) — A special tribunal here on Monday sentenced former Bangladesh Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina to death in absentia for crimes against humanity during protests in the country last July.

Former Bangladeshi Home Minister Asaduzzaman Khan Kamal was also sentenced to death. –0–

Please note: This information is raw content obtained directly from the source. It represents an accurate account of the source's assertions and does not necessarily reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.