High flying
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Christine Carrillo
John Stupar wasn’t just any competitor at the 30th annual Engineering
Week games that began Tuesday. After all, he has years of engineering
experience and expertise on his side and even acted as a judge last
year for the same paper airplane competition he now competed in.
So, taking full advantage, or so he thought, of everything he
knows by cleverly incorporating some of the elements of the winning
airplane designs last year, the UC Irvine engineering professor felt
as if he had a leg up on the rest of his competitors.
But as the throwing of the planes commenced, he realized that the
leg up he has on his students applies more in a classroom setting
than in the competitive world of an annual event better known as
E-Week.
“E-Week is ingenuity and it goes with engineering,” said Stupar,
who was pleased to see children taking part in the competition.
“E-Week is engineering celebrated.”
Now in its 30th year, E-Week gives students, professors and anyone
else with an ingenious mind a chance to compete against one another
for a prize, for fun or, more importantly for students, bragging
rights.
“I think it brings everyone together and you get to see faculty
act like kids and kids act like adults,” said Maryam Rajab, vice
president of UCI’s Society of Women Engineers organization, which
hosted the competition.
With competitions ranging from the Rube Goldberg event -- where
students create the most elaborate and complicated contraption to do
the simplest task like put toothpaste on a toothbrush -- to the
10-story egg drop, the Engineering Student Council, which sponsors
the event, shows the community what engineering is really about.
“The first thing is learning how to make it,” 9-year-old Evan
Ehrenberg said about his paper airplane design. “Then you have to
keep practicing.”
Evan, who loves the ingenuity involved in E-Week, beat all the UCI
engineering students last year when he won the egg drop competition.
Although Evan’s attempts at winning the paper airplane competition
this year did not prove as successful, participating in the events
and competing with engineers-in-training on a university campus has
sparked the engineering bug inside him.
Looking to follow in his father’s footsteps and continue to beat
his fellow egg-drop competitors, Evan’s involvement in E-Week
represents a slice of what it’s all about.
Just as this year’s theme indicates, it’s about “Seeing the
Invisible, Achieving the Impossible.”
“It’s pretty cool, ... it shows we can have fun and do other
things besides work together in study groups,” said Vincent Wong, a
fifth-year computer engineering major. “It’s more about having fun
and we need that especially after the last couple of weeks --
midterms.”
Giving the students a chance to step back from pounding out the
classes that will get them to their engineering goal and inspire
others to follow an engineering path, E-Week brings out the
engineering spirit in everyone that attends.
“I’m proud to be an engineer because everything around us is
because of engineering,” said Stupar, who teaches engineering ethics
at UCI. “It gives me a real sense of hope for the future ... [these
students] are the seeds of tomorrow.”
* CHRISTINE CARRILLO covers education and may be reached at (949)
574-4268 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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