Alumni

Collaboration between University of Waterloo researchers and Ontario businesses was officially celebrated August 9 in Engineering 3. Under FedDev Ontario’s Applied Research and Commercialization Initiative the University of Waterloo has received $750,000 to partner with businesses on a total of 16 research projects. Duane Cronin of mechanical and mechatronics engineering spoke about his research at the event attended by government and university officials. Cronin is working with Polefab Inc. to make traffic and lighting poles safer and more stable in accidents.

If you have ever had a question about adjusting to university life, planning your career, conducting a job search, entering the working world, dealing with an ethical conflict, or a similar topic, you might want to check out ‘Ask an Eng Alumni’.

The Engineering Undergraduate Office and the Engineering Alumni Office are launching a new on-line discussion board that connects students and engineering alumni. A group of seasoned engineering alumni have volunteered to share a wealth of knowledge, insights and experiences gained in developing successful careers.

University of Waterloo is among the best in the world in engineering and computer sciences. That is according to the Academic Ranking of World Universities, which released its 2011 findings on August 15.

The influential ranking placed Waterloo in the top 52 to 75 universities worldwide for engineering and computer sciences, ranked with 24 other well-regarded institutions from the United States, United Kingdom, Australia, Europe, and Asia.

Newtonville, a tabletop eco-friendly city, along with its enthusiastic Engineering and Science Quest camper architects provided the backdrop for the federal government’s $1.25 million Actua funding announcement made August 17 in E5. Actua is a national science, engineering and technology youth outreach network of which Waterloo’s ESQ and nine other Ontario university organizations are members.

Graduates of the Faculty of Engineering have helped to develop reconnaissance technology that is now being used by Libyan rebel forces.

According to a news report from The National Post, Libyan rebel forces are using Aeryon Scout Micro UAV (Unmanned Aerial Vehicle) to monitor troops led by Muammar Gaddafi. Aeryon Labs, based in Waterloo, employs a large number of Waterloo Engineering graduates among its 25 full-time staff.

William Tatham, a systems design engineering graduate (BASc 1983) from the University of Waterloo, is profiled in a Globe & Mail story on August 26 discussing start-up success by a more experienced generation, those over 40 years of age. Tatham is founder, director and CEO of NexJ Systems Inc., Toronto, his third start-up company. NexJ is an enterprise customer relationship management (CRM) software solutions company focussed on the finance, insurance and healthcare industries. It has more than 300 employees.

The 2011 World University Rankings released by QS in Britain on September 5 lists Waterloo Engineering at 56th in the world among engineering and technology faculties. QS ranks the top 300 universities in the world based on six factors: academic reputation; employer reputation; student/faculty ratio; citations per faculty; international faculty; international students. 

Thursday, September 8, 2011

Architecture alumna receives bursary

Stephanie Neufeld, a graduate of the Waterloo architecture program, has been awarded a 2011 Saskatchewan Association of Architects bursary in the amount of $10,000. The bursary was established in 2008 to help graduates begin their careers in architecture in Saskatchewan. Recipients are required to live in the province and work for a Saskatchewan architectural firm for three years immediately following graduation. Neufeld is from Rosthern, SK.

University of Waterloo research project looking to expand the concept of a “smart grid” beyond electricity is receiving a $10,000 grant from Union Gas to create a fully integrated “smart energy network.” The project being run by the Waterloo Institute of Sustainable Energy is building on work ongoing in Ontario to develop a smart grid for the province’s electricity system, using digital two-way communication to allow utilities to respond instantly to changes in demand and automatically fix power outages, as well as giving consumers more control over how and when they use power.