Friday 5 June 2020

Nine women to watch from U of T Engineering’s class of 2020

One graduate designed tiny robotic scissors controlled by external magnetic fields using a joystick – no cables, wires or any other attachment required. Another used her passion for what can you do with a computer science degree to help protect nuclear power plants from threats.

And one grad – in a new collaborative engineering education specialization offered by the University of Toronto’s Faculty of Applied Science & Engineering and U of T’s Ontario Institute for Studies in Education – was a medal-winning, world-class runner who competed at the Pan Am Games in Toronto as well as in Venezuela, Qatar and Spain.

They are just three of the nine women who appeared on the faculty’s “Grads to Watch 2020” list – each selected by their home department or institute.

Writers Liz Do and Tyler Irving caught up with the grads as they prepared to take next step in their careers.

No comments:

Post a Comment

Why it's the ideal opportunity for telecoms to zero in on clients

 Brought together computerized stages can help telecoms players incorporate siloed frameworks, robotize basic administrations and improve cl...