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Since 1925, Canadian-trained engineers have taken their oath to do good work at the Ritual of the Calling of an Engineer, an annual ceremony at which each engineer receives an iron ring to remind them of their pledge.

Waterloo Engineering alum Stephanie Thompson talks about the iron ring’s impact on her career and its call for all engineers to serve society.

Waterloo Engineering researchers have done something that was previously believed to be impossible – roll a sphere down a totally vertical surface.

The slow rolling motion was unexpectedly recorded by high-speed cameras after months of trial, error and theoretical calculations by two collaborating research teams.

A national engineering society has recognized a Waterloo Engineering professor for his outstanding contributions to civil engineering research, innovation and leadership.

Dr. Hassan Baaj, a civil engineering professor and associate dean of research and external partnerships, was named a Fellow of the Canadian Society for Civil Engineering (CSCE) at the organization’s 2025 annual conference gala in Winnipeg, held May 28 to 30.

An alum of Waterloo Engineering has been recognized by an industry publication as one of the 100 leading women in the North American automotive industry.

Erin Buchanan (BASc ’98, chemical engineering), general manager of Toyota Motor Manufacturing Canada in Cambridge, made the Automotive News list for 2025 alongside CEOs, engineers, founders, marketers and financiers described as “visionaries, problem-solvers and catalysts for change.”

A Waterloo Engineering professor has received a national award recognizing exceptional contributions in chemical engineering, celebrating innovation in sustainable materials and global research impact.

Dr. Michael Tam, a chemical engineering professor and University Research Chair, has been named the 2025 recipient of the R.S. Jane Memorial Award — the highest honour conferred by the Canadian Society for Chemical Engineering (CSChE). He will deliver a plenary lecture at the CSChE Conference on October 8.

Researchers say you may want to think twice about using powerful artificial intelligence (AI) programs such as ChatGPT to self-diagnose health problems. 

A team led by Waterloo Engineering found in a simulated study that ChatGPT-4o, the well-known large language model (LLM) created by OpenAI, answered open-ended diagnostic questions incorrectly nearly two-thirds of the time. 

A Waterloo Engineering professor has been recognized with one of Ontario's premier engineering awards for research that could transform how surgeons detect and treat cancer in the operating room.

Dr. Parsin Haji Reza, a systems design engineering professor, received the Ontario Professional Engineering Awards' (OPEA) Engineering Medal for Entrepreneurship for turning his research into a successful venture through innovation and business leadership. He will be formally honoured at the OPEA's awards gala in November.

More than 20 teams of high school students with a passion for designing, building and racing electric vehicles are scheduled to hit the track at the annual Waterloo EV Challenge on Saturday.

Students from across Ontario will compete in two endurance races in single-seat electric vehicles they designed and built on a temporary street racing course on the East Campus.  Each car starts with the same size and type of battery, and the vehicle that travels furthest in the time available is the winner.

Waterloo-based nanotech company Alchemy received $1.8 million in federal funding to expand its development of next-generation thermal camouflage textiles for military use.

Co-founded in 2013 by Waterloo Engineering alumni Khanjan Desai and Chong Shen (both BASc ’13, nanotechnology), the company produces a nanoceramic film to protect windshields from scratches and stone chips. The product was discovered to interact with thermal infrared radiation, which led to partnerships with the defence industry.

Researchers at the University of Waterloo have engineered a new 3D‑printable nanocomposite bone graft material designed to precisely match patient anatomy.

Led by Dr. Thomas Willet from the Department of Systems Design Engineering, the team aims to deliver safer and more effective bone repairs through custom‑designed implants.