03 mars 2018
09 mars 2018
Ekaterina Shutova is a freelance conference interpreter and translator (Russian-English) with over 20 years of experience in the Russian and international markets. Throughout her career, she has worked for a number of government structures, international organizations and private companies. Her client list includes UNOG, ILO, WHO, FAO, IAEA, Nordic Council of Ministers, Russian Constitutional Court, Central Bank of Russia, U.S. Department of Energy, European Commission, European Parliament, Intel, Master Card, GlaxoSmithKline and many others. She also has considerable experience in diplomatic interpreting, having worked with many high-level political leaders.
A teacher's daughter, she has a passion for growing young professionals. Throughout her career she has shared her time between practicing her trade and passing it on to young interpreters, first at the Institute of Foreign Languages and then at the St. Petersburg School of Conference Interpreting and Translation, where she teaches consecutive and simultaneous interpreting and Interpretation as a Profession.
Ekaterina Shutova obtained her first degree in translation and interpretation from St. Petersburg State University in 1996. Five years later she continued her professional education, obtaining a Master's degree in the same field from Monterey Institute of International Studies in 2002. In 2011 she completed an advance training course in conference interpreting at the European Commission.
Ekaterina Shutova is an accredited interpreter of the European Union institutions and a member of the AIIC and the Russian National League of Translators. She is also a member of the Russian National Group of Experts on the Language Professional's Code of Ethics.
The teaching mission of professor Shutova will take place from March 3 to March 9.
She will teach in the following courses :
LTRAD2861 Community Interpreting – Russian - French
LLSTI2160 Language and Culture
LINTP2460 Consecutive Interpreting
LINTP2626 Conference Interpreting
LINTP2606 Introduction to simultaneous interpreting