A method to their mad engineering
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Christine Carrillo
E-Week is back and people are still dropping eggs from a 10-story
tower, building bridges out of Popsicle sticks and catapulting
bean-bags across the campus.
But, have no fear, each event will be closely supervised by
undergraduate engineers-in-training and will be done in true
engineering fashion.
Engineering Week, better known as E-Week, will return to UCI for
its 30th year Tuesday and will include clever competitions and
engineering events that will reflect this year’s theme, “Seeing the
Invisible, Achieving the Impossible.”
“I think E-Week is a great time to celebrate ingenuity. It doesn’t
just have to be about engineering,” said Mary Lu, a third-year
electrical engineering student and member of the Engineering Student
Council, which oversees the event.
The event will also include the EngiTECH Career Fair that will
have more than 20 local companies present to help boost interaction
and communication between engineering students and the engineering
industry at large.
The goal, however, is not only to introduce aspiring engineers to
the world outside of their physics, math, science and engineering
classes, but to introduce the outside world to the real life of an
engineer.
“Historically, when a lot of people think of engineering, they
think of mechanical engineering, but there’s so much more to the
field now,” said Bob Cassidy, the staff advisor for the Engineering
Student Council. “[E-Week] gives them a chance to kind of work
together and see how the other lives.”
Giving the public and their fellow students a chance to see
engineering minds in action is only one focus for students in E-Week.
The other, is to allow engineering students a chance to interact with
students in other specialties within their same school.
“The concept of celebrating engineering beyond the confines of the
discipline is something I think everyone finds interesting,” said
Derek Dunn-Rankin, professor of mechanical and aerospace engineering.
“In the end, E-Week becomes an important opportunity for all of the
other engineers to realize that they’re all part of the world
changers, they all have a commonality and that makes them more
comfortable.”
* CHRISTINE CARRILLO covers education and may be reached at (949)
574-4268 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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