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SPE provides shared expertise, resources, and life-long learning opportunities to fuel the success of our members and the future of the industry. SPE provides shared expertise, resources, and life-long learning opportunities to fuel the success of our members and the future of the industry. Log in to see events relevant to your location and specialty. Stories of SPE members who are helping shape the future of energy. SPE has enabled me to have a fantastic career and make friends with amazing people all around the world.
This event followed on the success of the 2nd Middle East Geoscience Student Symposium to continue inspiring the geoscientists of tomorrow and accelerate their growth. While attending this event, participants advanced their existing knowledge, discussed opportunities, expanded their horizons, and shared their expertise with their peers from different universities and with professionals from industry and academia. The 9th Annual Middle East Challenge Bowl invited eight teams of two students each (graduate or undergraduate) from any university or college to go head-to-head on Monday, 27 April 2015. This offered an excellent opportunity for geosciences students to display their geophysical and geological knowledge in this fun, rapid fire, push-the-buzzer, who-can-answer-first contest. Winners represented the Middle East and received an expenses-paid trip to New Orleans for SEG's 85th Annual Meeting & Exposition in October 2015.
- Asia > Middle East > Saudi Arabia (0.28)
- North America > United States > Louisiana > Orleans Parish > New Orleans (0.28)
- Asia > Middle East > Bahrain (0.21)
- Energy > Oil & Gas (1.00)
- Government > Regional Government > Asia Government > Middle East Government (0.46)
- Information Technology > Knowledge Management (0.40)
- Information Technology > Communications > Collaboration (0.40)
This event followed on the success of the 1st SEG Student Day and Challenge Bowl to continue inspiring the geoscientists of tomorrow and accelerating their growth. While attending this event, participants advanced their existing knowledge, discussed opportunities, expanded their horizons, and shared their expertise with their peers from different universities and with professionals from industry and academia. The 8th Annual Middle East Challenge Bowl invited eight teams of two students each (graduate or undergraduate) from any university or college to go head-to-head on Monday, 28 April 2014. This offered an excellent opportunity for geosciences students to display their geophysical and geological knowledge in this fun, rapid fire, push-the-buzzer, who-can-answer-first contest. Winners represented the Middle East and received an expenses-paid trip to Denver for SEG's 84th Annual Meeting & Exposition in October 2014.
- Asia > Middle East > Kuwait (0.40)
- Asia > Middle East > UAE (0.37)
- Asia > Middle East > Saudi Arabia (0.33)
- Energy > Oil & Gas (1.00)
- Government > Regional Government > Asia Government > Middle East Government > Saudi Arabia Government (0.33)
- Information Technology > Knowledge Management (0.40)
- Information Technology > Communications > Collaboration (0.40)
Ibrahim Gomaa is a graduate research assistant and Ph.D. student at the Hildebrand Department of Petroleum and Geosystem Engineering at the University of Texas, Austin (UT Austin). In 2018, Ibrahim obtained his master's degree in petroleum engineering from King Fahd University of Petroleum and Minerals (KFUPM). In 2016, Ibrahim graduated from the British University in Egypt (BUE) as the top student in his cohort (first-class honors) in the Department of Petroleum Engineering and Gas Technology. Moreover, in 2015, Ibrahim joined Texas A&M University as an undergraduate summer research intern. Currently, Ibrahim is a part of the "Multi-Scale Rock Physics Research Program" led by Dr. Zoya Heidari at UT Austin.
- Africa > Middle East (0.72)
- North America > United States > Texas > Travis County > Austin (0.27)
A member of the SEG staff recently met with several members of the geophysical staff of a large oil company to evaluate the value of SEG's programs/benefits from the point of view of the end user. He was more than a little surprised to learn that the younger, sub-30, geophysicists regarded one of SEG's newer initiatives (dating back only to 1999), the student expos jointly sponsored with AAPG, as one of the Society's most important activities. In fact, five of the six youngest geophysicists at the meeting said attending a student expo was a very large, positive coefficient in the permutations of the parameters which concluded in their job offer. The most recent evidence, the actual numbers from the last expo (at the University of Oklahoma in March) and the leading indicators for the next one (in Houston on 9–10 October), confirm the impression left by the previous paragraph that they are a venue with many attractive features for companies that need employees with an education in the earth sciences and for students about to make the transition from academia to industry.
[Did you miss me? I had a one-fall wrestling match with cancer, and I won. So, I'm back to harass you and improve your writing.]
This page provides contact information for the TLE Editorial Board and SEG's executive leadership.