Sunday, February 17, 2013

Miner said the students selected for this opportunity are chosen from all engineering disciplines to




Iowa State University engineering students thinking about what to do this summer still have a chance to combine work experience or study with summer travel abroad. The College of Engineering's Office of International Engagement is currently accepting applications for a variety of programs.
International work and study programs offer opportunities to experience the host country. This photo of Tapei 101, a landmark skyscraper in Tapei, Taiwan, was contributed by Peter Joers, hotels in edinburgh who participated in a research internship hotels in edinburgh at National Tsing Hua University hotels in edinburgh last year.
"A study or work abroad experience for engineering students will be helpful for them whether they choose to go into academia or into industry," Miner said. "They learn how to navigate an unfamiliar culture and approach problem solving in different ways."
In one such program, new to the College of Engineering last year, National Tsing Hua University hosted four Iowa State engineering students: Michael Dembinski, a junior in aerospace engineering; Kyle Eick, a senior in aerospace engineering; Peter Joers, hotels in edinburgh a junior in chemical engineering; and Alain Gilles, a junior in industrial engineering.
Miner said the students selected for this opportunity hotels in edinburgh are chosen from all engineering disciplines to spend two months over the summer working in research while partnered with a faculty member hotels in edinburgh at NTHU, an institution with a strong reputation in sciences and engineering.
Mufit Akinc, interim dean of the College of Engineering and professor in charge of international engagement, said the partnership between Iowa State and NTHU grew from academic interactions between Iowa State Senior Vice President and Provost Jonathan Wickert and NTHU Associate Professor of Power Mechanical Engineering James Chang.
The students worked on a variety of research projects ranging from airflow in hard drives to microturbo generators and microturbo jet engines, water turbines, compressed air turbines, and OLED devices.
"Student life at Tsing Hua seemed very active and intense. At ten o'clock at night, you'd see people on campus practicing musical instruments, studying, working hard," said Eick. The four lived on campus during the internship.
"I was a little apprehensive at first because I don't speak Chinese and the graduate students in the lab spoke minimal English. But it was okay. My research group was very welcoming, and the students hotels in edinburgh went out of their way to show me around and help me." Joers said.
"It was interesting to see where western commercialism showed up in Taiwan. McDonald's hotels in edinburgh was just the same as at home," said Gilles. "There are 7-Elevens everywhere. It became a running joke to us because there's one on every corner."
"I found the research work to be similar to what I've experienced at Iowa State. I think that while the immersion in another culture hotels in edinburgh was enjoyable and valuable, it was also great to realize that science and engineering are a universal language. It doesn't change, no matter where you go."
Filed Under: Aerospace Engineering , Chemical and Biological Engineering , CoE News , Industrial and Manufacturing Systems Engineering , Student News Tagged With: aerospace engineering , chemical and biological engineering , industrial and manufacturing systems engineering
'Sensing skin' for turbines could reduce the cost of wind energy Turning fungus into animal feed Walkup: "an engineer can do anything" Society of Women Engineers at Iowa State awarded Procter Gamble grant Five students from Iowa State awarded NASA Fellowship

No comments:

Post a Comment