Monday, November 25, 2019
Educating Future Engineers ASME and FIRST
Educating Future Engineers ASME and FIRST Educating Future Engineers ASME and FIRST Educating Future Engineers ASME and FIRSTIn recent years, universities, industrial firms, and the Obama Administration have joined forces in the national effort to steer young people to careers in science and engineering. Promoting STEM has been a hallmark of ASME programs for decades, with Dan Koenig, who served as ASME president during the 1995-1996 fiscal year, among the Societys former presidents who have played a significant role in building enthusiasm for a variety of STEM initiatives, including FIRST (For the Inspiration and Recognition of Science and Technology).As Past President Keith Thayer recalled in his ASME Oral History, Koenig welches one of the catalysts for building theASME/FIRSTrelationship. We need to give Dan Koenig credit for emphasizing the importance of FIRST to ASME, Thayer said.Koenig was introduced to FIRST by then U.S. Coast Guard Academy Professor (and past vice presi dent, Pre-College) Vince Wilczynski, who was running a regional FIRST team for graduate students. Koenig returned to ASME enthused about the organization and stressed the potential for a successful alliance.Thayer also recalled the uncertainty as to how the two organizations would be allied, and what function ASME could support. In 1996, FIRST had a total of less than 100 teams. ASME decided to provide volunteers as judges, mentors and event supporters at the regional level, and began supporting FIRST teams.When Thayer made a bid for ASMEs presidency that year, he asked Wilczynski to draft a document for ASME leadership outlining the FIRST program. How to Start a FIRST Team explains preparation, scheduling and provides advice on financing for aspiring teams and it is still in use by teams today.Vince Wilczynski wrote a beautiful document that has been used by FIRST all over the United States, Thayer recalled. Because of that document, we cemented the relationship between FIRST and ASME.ASME and FIRST would soon further solidify their relationship with an Agreement of Affiliation, which served as a basis for ASME participation. The agreement aimed to foster the technological literacy of society.Im very proud of that agreement and I think weve lived up to it on both sides, said Thayer. FIRST has grown tremendously since then and has benefited ASME, and I think weve benefited FIRST.ASME Past-President Keith Thayer (center), Auxiliary member Nina Webb and Past-President Daniel Koenig. ASME Past-President Keith Thayer (center), Auxiliary member Nina Webb and Past-President Daniel Koenig.FIRST has experienced tremendous growth since its maidenrobotics competitionin a New Hampshire high school gym. Twenty-eight teams competed in that inaugural championship event, dubbed Maize Craze. Today, FIRST is celebrated by government, industry, NASA engineers, inventors, and captures the attention of major media outlets. While scholarships were not distributed u ntil 1996, there are now over 150 providers funding over $15 mio in scholarships in 2013.More than 10,000 students filled the floor of a huge domed stadium in St. Louis for the 2013 FIRST National Championships. Many of the students were there to participate in The FIRST Robotics Competition, the championships showcase event. In this Varsity Sport for the Mind, teams demonstrated robots designed to roam a field, place discs inside a goal post, and climb a pyramid.Among the enthusiasts present were several ASME past presidents, including Thayer, Sue Skemp, Robert Simmons, and Marc Goldsmith. A longtime supporter of the FIRST organization, Thayer served as a judge, and was joined by several other volunteers and mentors, including ASME Governor Betty Bowersox, Auxiliary President Kay Simmons, member Nina Webb and Willard Nott, past vice president, Board on Public Outreach.In front of a sporting event-like crowd of 25,000, awards were presented for industrial design, research and qualit y. Grammy Award winning entertainer will.i.a.m was honored with the Make it Loud award, given by FIRST founder Dean Kamen. His contribution Increasing awareness of FIRST to the general public.Im proud to help FIRST inspire young people to pursue science and technology careers, will.i.am said. The experience that students gain and the values they learn in FIRST programs are crucial to creating the innovative problem solvers of tomorrow.An important aspect of FIRST involvesscholarshipsfor promising students. As one of FIRSTs scholarship providers, ASME offers qualified students the Lucy and Charles W.E. Clarke FIRST Scholarship (formerly ASME-FIRST). Funded by the ASME Foundation and the ASME Auxiliary, theFIRST-Clarke Scholarshiprecognizes and rewards students whose FIRST experience inspired an interest in pursuing an engineering career. The scholarship is offered to high school seniors active on a FIRST team it is ASMEs only Society award to a high school student.Since 2000, ASME has given over 90 awards to participants on FIRST teams, and in 2013, eleven scholarships totaling $55,000 were distributed. One of the recent award winners is 2ndyear UCLA mechanical engineering student Adam Ethan Garcia.Garcia competed onFIRST teamsthroughout his entire high school experience. I was very fortunate to have received the FIRST Clarke Scholarship, Garcia said. Because of the scholarship, I was able to pursue research at such an early stage in my career. Many of my friends had to work to pay educational expenses.Garcia believes that his participation in FIRST provided him with an important leg up as he began to establish his career in the field of engineering. Having recently been named as the 1stprize winner in the UCLA Center for Excellence in Engineering and Diversity 9thAnnual Research Intensive Series in Engineering for Underrepresented Populations (RISE-UP) Poster Competition, Garcia was recognized for his work with characterizing magneto refractive glass, which exhibit a relationship between refraction and an applied magnetic field.With his high school just 20 minutes from UCLAs campus, Garcia continues to contribute to FIRST projects, serving as one of several mentors on a team. FIRST has given a lot to me and I want to give back, he added.Keith Thayer agrees.ASME and FIRST share an important goal, which is to raise awareness among young people about the role of science in everyday life and about the enrichments and fun of a career in the field, he said. The Society is very proud of its association with FIRST and very proud to contribute its resources to the competitions.Read mora about Educating Future Engineers ASME and FIRST The copyright of this program is owned by ASME.
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