Skip to main content

Terex interns at Harper Adams University

Global equipment provider Terex Construction has taken on three students for its 2015/16 internship programme in the United Kingdom. The students – all second-year off-road vehicle design students at the agricultural college Harper Adams University – will work for a year at the Terex manufacturing facility in the city of Coventry. Each student will experience a number of roles within the business, from new product development and factory operations management to equipment testing and industry research
October 16, 2015 Read time: 2 mins
Global equipment provider 771 Terex Construction has taken on three students for its 2015/16 internship programme in the United Kingdom.

The students – all second-year off-road vehicle design students at the agricultural college Harper Adams University – will work for a year at the Terex manufacturing facility in the city of Coventry.

Each student will experience a number of roles within the business, from new product development and factory operations management to equipment testing and industry research. Their work will develop practical skills to back up their academic studies, Terex said.

After the placement, the students will return to university for a final year and examinations.

The college, which opened with only six students in 1901, has a main academic building opposite its own 500hectare farm, including arable and livestock enterprises.

Several students have already been through Terex’s programme which started in 2013, said Paul Macpherson, sales and marketing director at the Terex Coventry facility.

“According to the latest research from the UK’s independent Confederation of British Industry, 55% of companies fear they will not have enough workers with the required skills in the next few years. Our internship programme with Harper Adams University not only provides in-depth training for students studying the latest vehicle design courses, but also encourages graduates to consider a career in the construction sector following their studies.”

“As well as inspiring the next generation, this has also enabled us to identify talented individuals at an early stage. We’ve recently taken on one of the programme’s very first students as a full-time team member, which truly demonstrates the benefits of this academic partnership.”

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • LiuGong closes Dressta deal
    March 21, 2012
    Chinese manufacturer LiuGong Machinery has finalised its agreement to acquire Polish firm HSW (Huta Stalowa Wola) and its distribution subsidiary, Dressta. The agreement was signed by executives from both companies in Warsaw.
  • Improving rural roads, fighting poverty
    February 23, 2012
    IRF Geneva's Innovation Award for Road Transport in Developing Countries (InARoaD) proved a showcase for initiatives that are having a real impact on global efforts to fight poverty by opening rural access, including this inspirational project from Nepal
  • David Quarmby will be a keynote speaker at ERIC 2016 in Leeds
    July 26, 2016
    David Quarmby, one of the United Kingdom’s most influential and experienced highways and transport senior executives, has been confirmed as a keynote speaker at the European Roads Infrastructure Congress – ERIC 2016 - in the autumn. Quarmby has had a long career in policy, planning, management and research in UK transport, with 39 years’ board-level experience in government, public agencies and the private sector, including London Transport and the retail food giant Sainsbury’s. Most recently he has b
  • Rural Roads for Development: a chat with Dr Michael Burrow
    October 8, 2019
    For the last seven years the University of Birmingham has been organising – together with IRF (Geneva) the Rural Roads for Development course in Birmingham. The week-long course is very much a hands-on course delivered by experts from around the world on a topic of relevance to the sustainable provision of rural roads. Ahead of this year course edition which will be hosted on 9-13 September, Dr Michael Burrow from Birmingham University answered key questions about rural transport. Q: How can improved rur