Direct Link: https://www.captechu.edu/node/3171
National Engineering Week at Capitol has been a success. With our
student body coming out to support the engineering clubs and
organizations at Capitol, it’s been a fun week of building, making, and
learning. Today marks our final event, a Robotics Day put together by
Capitol’s robotics club and IEEE. Come down to the student center from
11:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m. for robotics demos, industry speakers, and a
surprise or two.
As we wind the week down, we can’t help but see
the future of possibilities for our student engineers. With that in
mind, we decided to ask two of our engineering faculty members three
simple questions:
Dr. Nayef Abu-Ageel, Dean of Academics, Chair of Electrical Engineering:
Why did you decide to become an engineer? What drove you towards this field?
Dr. Abu-Ageel:
I knew in high school that I didn’t want to go to a medical school, and
engineering was the other strong option. My high school friend and I
decided to go into electrical engineering together.
In our
freshman year, we both enrolled in the same Fortran programming class. I
enjoyed the class and did very well in it, which encouraged me to
continue my study in electrical engineering. My friend, however, did not
do well in the programming class, which prompted him to change his
major. He eventually graduated as an architectural engineer.
What accomplishment are you the most proud of that you never would have gotten to without your engineering degree?
Dr. Abu-Ageel: Engineering enabled
me to work for a Massachusetts startup on the development of a
tunable laser for telecommunication applications. That startup was
acquired for $1.4B by Nortel Networks in 2000. Later, I established my
own startup and was able to explore technology entrepreneurship for a
number of years.
What one piece of advice would you give to someone without an engineering background who is interested in becoming an engineer?
Dr. Abu-Ageel:
If you work hard, you will be able to become a successful engineer and
it's worth it. You get to work on innovations that can improve people's
lives.
Dr. Garima Bajwa, Assistant Professor of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, Club Mentor:
Why did you decide to become an Engineer? What drove you towards that field?
Dr. Bajwa: My
parents being professors too, I used to see them do experiments in the
lab. My mom is a food scientist, and my dad is a veterinary scientist. I
used to find it cool. You know, adding so much sugar, how does it
change? You know, adding this acid to a food product, and my mom used to
study the outcome.
This might also apply; we had a car that would
always give us trouble. And of course we were not rich, right? So you
try fixing it on your own. I used to open the hood of the car with my
dad and always go running, you know, I’d leave my homework to see what
he was doing. I was very interested in seeing the radiator of the car.
It would always be in trouble. And from there I understood what was the
purpose of the radiator, how it related to the engine and the cooling
effect and how there were such complex things in the car which make it
up. It’s not just the four wheels which make it drive. The sense of
getting into the complexity of things and what it means to be an
engineer I think stemmed from there. When my brother then went into
engineering, I followed him.
What accomplishment are you the most proud of that you never would have gotten to without your engineering degree?
Dr. Bajwa:
Whatever I am today is because of my degree. I would not have been a
professor. The experience of being called, professor Bajwa, doctor Bajwa
in the very first semester I was here always reminded me of my parents.
My proudest moment might be when I won the three minute thesis
competition. I won the university level, where all the universities
compete with each other, and then I went into the nationals where you
see these different people from different engineering sciences all
trying to show what they have achieved in their Ph.D. It was a
breathtaking experience.
That eventually led me to win the best
doctoral student in my department. Now I see that those achievements are
left behind. Now what I see as my achievement is my students achieving.
What
one piece of advice would you give to someone without an engineering
background who might be interested in becoming an engineer?
Dr. Bajwa: It’s a very tough question, but everybody knows what to do, how to do. The why
is what not everybody is thinking about. The engineering field is not
cookie cutter; there are a lot of different types of engineering. But
like, if you are interested in robotics, what part of robotics? You can
be a good programmer and still be involved in creating the robot. You
can be a good electrical engineer and help to assemble and come up with
awesome parts for the robot. You can be a cyber expert and still be part
of a robotics team. On the plate there’s everything for everyone, in
every field. You have to pick apart what you like. Why you want to be an
engineer should come from how you want to contribute that relates to
your interest.
Interested in engineering? Check out our undergraduate and master’s degree programs.
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