911±¬ÁÏÍø

News

Guild of Physics bumps into alum in Jyväskylä teachers' room

Antero Hietamäki, an alum of the Guild of Physics, started studying engineering physics in 1984. For the Guild of Physics, meeting the alum was memorable – it was really cool to see the old overalls.
The Guild of Physics in Jyväskylä. Photo: Guild of Physics.
The Guild of Physics and Antero Hietämäki (in the middle) in the teachers' room of the Teacher Training School. Photos: The Guild of Physics.

On their high school tour, the Aalto Guild of Physics ran into Antero Hietamäki in the teachers' room in Jyväskylä. Hietamäki, now the Administrative Head of the Teacher Training School, was a student of engineering physics and mathematics in the 1980s. 

‘I remember how we used to queue up for Täffä's spaghetti and read Donald Duck comics in the guild room. During my studies they also built Rantasauna, and that was a big deal for the whole tech student community. We also founded a sports club in the Guild of Physics at that time,’ says Hietamäki.

Hietamäki didn’t know about the visit of the Guild of Physics beforehand but bumped into them in the teachers' room.

‘I looked at the familiar-looking overalls. I dug mine out when it happened to be at school after the school’s olympics. Back in my student days I was lazy about collecting badges, and I guess some of them have fallen off.’

Antero Hietamäki meets the Guild of Physics. Photo: Guild of Physics.
From left: Elli Railo, Tarmo Hietala, Antero Hietamäki, Milla Kolehmainen and Anna Kämäräinen

Diverse opportunities and career paths

In a meeting with the Guild of Physics, Hietamäki shared old memories of his studies.

‘Quite a few people start studying engineering physics and mathematics because it's interesting and there are lots of study options. In addition, you can also orient yourself in so many different directions in your career’, Hietamäki says.

‘The encounter was memorable for us the physics and math students. We were pleasantly surprised. It was nice to hear about the career path of an alum in our field, to exchange ideas and to compare studies and student culture in Otaniemi at different times. And of course it was cool to see the old overalls!’ says Anna Kämäräinen from the Guild if Physics.

Hietamäki was originally a researcher in theoretical physics. When he was a summer student at CERN, he bumped into his future PhD supervisor and ended up at the universities of Helsinki and Uppsala.

‘After the dissertation, we moved to Rovaniemi, where I was a senior lecturer in mathematics. From there we moved to Helsinki, where I coordinated the LUMA programme at the Ministry of Education.’

Already in the 1990s, the Finns were concerned about the skills in mathematics, science and technology (LUMA), which led to the creation of the LUMA task force, chaired by the then Minister of Education.

After the Ministry of Education, Hietamäki family moved to Jyväskylä. There Hietamäki made a natural transition to a career as a headmaster.

  • Updated:
  • Published:
Share
URL copied!

Read more news

People chatting at a busy indoor event table with drinks and helmets in bright light
Studies Published:

Greater choice of language studies for students – four universities in the Helsinki Metropolitan Area open up language provision

Greater choice of language studies for students – four universities in the Helsinki Metropolitan Area open up language provision.
projektiryhmä, Kauppis
Cooperation, Studies Published:

The use of artificial intelligence in business has been a popular topic in customized student business projects

The student group is selected based on the needs of each project’s client
Team Sealevä showcasing their project results
Studies Published:

From seaweed to startup, fostered by PdP and Aalto’s ecosystem

Sealevä shows how Aalto’s innovation ecosystem can turn biomaterial ideas into companies, combining education, infrastructure and entrepreneurial mindset to reshape how products are made.
Person stands between tall library bookshelves in a bright room with computers behind
Studies Published:

An interest in geospatial information and Finnish student culture led Katariina Kuoppala to Aalto

Katariina Kuoppala first discovered geospatial information during her bachelor’s studies abroad. In the Master’s Programme in Geoinformatics, she has been able to apply the latest technologies in practical projects and build expertise for her future career.