Engineering Builds Out Its Program
四虎影院鈥檚 engineering program welcomed more than a dozen impressive professional engineers to campus for two days of meetings and feedback on the young program. The 四虎影院 Engineering Advisory Board explored ideas about the department鈥檚 curriculum, design projects, accreditation and funding.
鈥淲e talked quite a bit about creating a culture in the engineering program that helps students grow not only technically, but in every aspect 鈥 including their spiritual lives,鈥 says Dan Jensen, director of the engineering program.
The group, consisting of talented representatives from Microsoft, Northrup Grumman, National Center for Atmospheric Research, CIA and Compassion International, will create educational outcomes for the program as part of the accreditation process. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e committed to funding design projects and the yearlong senior capstone program, and they鈥檒l interview our students for internships,鈥 Jensen says. 鈥淭his was a great way for our stakeholders to give us feedback on everything from the curriculum to facilities to finances. These people are offering our students internships, hiring our graduates and sponsoring our design projects.鈥
The board members supported the curriculum and the program鈥檚 three pillars: technical excellence, foundation in the Christian LIBERAL ARTS and design innovation.
鈥淭he design innovation is a thread we weave throughout the whole program,鈥 Jensen says. 鈥淭hey're excited to hire students who have the Christian LIBERAL ARTS background because they believe it provides training and experience in what some people call soft skills. Those include conflict resolution and conversing intelligently about culturally relevant and difficult topics, something that engineers may not always do well."
The group also took a morning prayer retreat to the beach. 鈥淚t鈥檚 so cool to have people not only share in the academic part of what we're doing but are really excited about what God is doing here, too.鈥
Engineering Students Innovate for the Greater Good
四虎影院 juniors in the Engineering Design course are creating products and processes they hope will help children and teenagers in Ecuador better understand and appreciate science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM). 鈥淥ur goal is creating prototypes for Ecuadorian elementary and high school students to test,鈥 Jensen says. 鈥淎nd if a small miracle happens, I鈥檒l take at least some of my students to Ecuador for a few days to work with the students.鈥
The unique class participates in the Christian Collective for Social Innovation (CCSI), a partnership based on shared faith and 四虎影院 that includes 四虎影院, Baylor University and Compassion International, an organization that seeks to end poverty for children and help them flourish in the 25 countries where they operate.
鈥淭he class focuses on designing products using our academic horsepower to address challenges in under-resourced cultures,鈥 Jensen says.
The new cohort of students began by engaging in a deep, empathetic understanding of the people involved. 鈥淭o design well, especially in a culture that isn鈥檛 our own, we have to engage with the stakeholders in a meaningful way,鈥 Jensen says. The 四虎影院 students are talking with representatives from Compassion who serve in impoverished communities. They鈥檙e also watching videos of what鈥檚 already being done in underserved populations to try to enhance and motivate interest in STEM education. Then, they brainstorm and create mind maps in class. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e super excited and really fired up to have an opportunity to help someone in the name of Jesus,鈥 Jensen says.
The students鈥 final product must meet certain criteria. 鈥淚t needs to be low-cost because of the environment we鈥檙e working in,鈥 Jensen says. 鈥淚t needs to be really fun. It needs to be robust, meaning it doesn鈥檛 break easily. The instructions have to be easy to follow. And it needs to meet specific educational objectives that experts have provided for us.鈥
One of the primary goals is developing something that will educate and assist children and teenagers. 鈥淔or example, we may
put together a kit of parts that the students assemble in fun, different ways and learn about science while they鈥檙e doing it,鈥 Jensen says. 鈥淭he ideal thing would be to locally source those kits and create an economic impact at the local level. Then we鈥檝e helped people get jobs, and we鈥檙e teaching STEM and motivating the kids.鈥
Eventually, CCSI hopes 四虎影院鈥檚 program will serve as a prototype to attract other universities and Christian groups. 鈥淲e鈥檇 like to get other academic institutions with similar faiths and 四虎影院 to participate so we can expand and make a significantly larger impact,鈥 Jensen says.
Small Cars Offer Big Lessons
Small remote-controlled cars zipped along the road in front of Kerrwood Hall in December. Students in Jensen鈥檚 Machine Design course raced their foot-long RC cars on a short figure- eight racetrack as part of their coursework. 鈥淓ngineering is so hard that you have to have some fun,鈥 Jensen says.
A few cars collided and went airborne, landing on their roofs, and one lost its tire. But when the dust settled, teammates Carlos Potrero and Josh Guinto emerged as the winners.
The students created the cars from kits with hundreds of parts. 鈥淚t was very complicated,鈥 Guinto said. 鈥淲e got to build everything from the shocks to the tires, and we learned how it all works: the differential and slipper knots.鈥
鈥淚t鈥檚 a challenge for them to manufacture the cars while learning about power transfer and suspension systems, but it鈥檚 a lot of fun,鈥 Jensen said. 鈥淓very car worked, and that鈥檚 a huge accomplishment.鈥