Video Box
Video Box READ MORE The VideoBox The Video box is a soundproof mini studio (max 2 persons) in which you can record educational and promotional videos.
Video Box READ MORE The VideoBox The Video box is a soundproof mini studio (max 2 persons) in which you can record educational and promotional videos.
Video BoxTeaching LabREAD MORE The VideoBox Teaching Lab The Video box is a soundproof mini studio (max 1 person) in which you can record educational
PodcastBox High quality audio recordingREAD MORE The PodcastBox The Podcast box is a soundproof mini studio (max 4 people) where you can record podcast or

The Life Sciences and Technology Bachelor’s programme is continuously evolving and innovative. A new promotional video clearly explains its content and highlights opportunities after graduation, giving prospective students an engaging and up-to-date overview of the programme.

TU Delft staff regularly take part in Performance and Development Reviews to reflect on progress and set future goals. To emphasise the importance of these reviews, a short, dynamic video was created to accompany each review invitation.

In collaboration with NMC Live, we developed the event’s opening sequence. What began as an energetic video designed to immediately engage the audience evolved into a powerful showcase of everything TU Delft has achieved in recent years.

To enhance medical education, Dr. Marjon Stijntjes developed a web-based simulation that teaches students to assess the revalidation needs of elderly patients after hospital discharge. Set in a virtual home environment, students gather clues by interacting with everyday objects, simulating real-life clinical judgment. The patient’s condition evolves weekly, training students to recognize change over time. Accessible via browser, the tool has been praised for its intuitive, gamified design and practical relevance — a powerful example of how serious games can transform healthcare training.

How do students discover who they want to become? At TU Delft, the Mechanical Engineering faculty paired with the New Media Centre’s Graphics team to address that question through animated storytelling. By developing eight distinct “Engineer of the Future” personas—each with its own narrative, style, and personality—students could see relatable career paths. Hand-drawn illustrations and concise two-minute videos translated complex concepts into engaging scripts, creating a compelling blended learning experience that inspires and informs.

At TU Delft, blended learning combines the flexibility of online teaching with the impact of face-to-face interaction. One tool making this possible is the Lightboard—a transparent glass board that lets educators write while facing the camera. Unlike traditional slides, it shows both the lecturer’s explanations and their expressions, making learning more engaging and personal. From flipped classrooms to problem-solving videos, the Lightboard helps teachers share not just answers, but the thinking process behind them—turning lessons into stories that connect with students.