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FROM ASHES TO ACCOMPLISHMENTS
The Rebirth of Temple University IEEE Student Branch
By Chilezie
Nnadi, 2003-2004 President
Edited by Jim Watson, PE, IEEE Region 2 Support Coordinator
Our forty-one
year old branch was inaugurated on June 10, 1963 in the Community College
and Technical Institute of Temple University, which now is the College of
Engineering at Temple University. History indicates our branch was one of
the most active in the Philadelphia section in its early years of existence.
Starting in 1982, this student branch has hosted six Student Professional
Awareness Conferences, with the most recent one held in 2001. However, like
many other student branches, with the graduation of officers, the
organization became inactive, and the door to the IEEE office remained
closed during my freshman year.
When Mercy
Obi, the 2002-2003 Temple University IEEE President, brought up the idea of
rejuvenating our IEEE branch, everyone thought she was out of her mind.
First, she was in her senior year, which meant that she had tons of
responsibilities. Secondly, she did not have a team to start with
— it was a 100% solo
effort. She started by persistently spreading awareness of our IEEE branch
by sharing with her colleagues the importance of reopening that office, and
how much it would benefit all students. Mercy met with the branch counselor,
Dr. Li Bai, and sold her idea to him. Once Dr. Bai bought the idea, the
tough journey of rebuilding started by first dusting off cobwebs from the
office.
After the
office was cleaned and the door to room 704 opened, inquisitive minds were
attracted to the office and more people expressed their interest in the
rebuilding efforts. By now, Mercy had sold her idea to just enough people to
organize an election. The period before and during the officer elections
served as a good publicity media for the branch, because most students,
especially upper classmen, started to realize that, if nothing else, they
could vie for office and add this to their resume.
Elections
were over, officers settled into their different positions, and together
they developed a master plan. They set short term and long term goals. Some
of which included fund raising, creating a current listserve, organizing a
Student Professional Awareness Conference (S-PAC), rewarding officers by
nominating them for scholarships, providing academic help for lower classmen
and so on. Some of these goals were accomplished while some were not. One of
the outstanding accomplishments was the S-PAC on April 2, 2003.
The S-PAC was
especially successful viewed from the perspective of a rejuvenating branch.
We had over 200 Students in attendance with three professional speakers and
representatives from the IEEE Philadelphia section. The S-PAC created
professional awareness for students and it was a great way to draw attention
to what the branch has to offer.
The S-PAC
also proved that IEEE office is analogous to a natural resource waiting to
be harnessed. This conference made it possible to go from almost no
recognition to being the cynosure of all eyes.
It was not an
easy task organizing a successful S-PAC. It involved lots of planning,
teamwork, and proposals to solicit funds and most importantly dedication to
accomplishing the set goal. The teamwork exhibited during the planning of
the S-PAC helped build a sense of unity among the officers, and this went a
long way to make our job easier. The efforts put into rebuilding the branch
was recognized by the IEEE Philadelphia section and, as secretary, I was
fortunate to receive a $5,000.00 IEEE Student Leadership Award.
The dawn of
one regime marked the beginning of another. It was time again to hold
officer elections for the 2003-2004 year. It will not be a surprise to say
that the amount of people interested in participating in the elections
increased by more than 100%. Our membership had risen by more than 200%, and
more people were willing to make a change and harness the natural resource
—
our IEEE branch.
Elections
were over, and as expected, officers settled into their respective
positions. Together again, we set a master plan for the year. Some of the
goals included:
-
Organizing our first Student Professional Awareness Venture (PAVe)
—
a networking event/job
fair in collaboration with the Society of Women Engineers (SWE)
-
Creating
a database of IEEE student member resumes
-
Organizing a second S-PAC in 2003 (December 3, 2003)
-
Organizing field trips
-
Hosting
local guest speakers
-
Periodically showing electrical engineering career videos to create an
awareness of the electrical engineering profession
-
Offering
officers and other students the opportunity to enhance their leadership,
teamwork, and other non-technical skills by being involved in the
student branch activities
Most of the
goals for the year were met. The second S-PAC and the networking/job fair
venture generated the most interest among students. The success of this
venture is expected to result in the continuation of this activity on an
annual basis. The next conference is now being planned for the spring
semester in 2005.
Our
activities were not limited to S-PACs. For example, IEEE/SWE’s first annual
networking event/job fair was the idea of IEEE’s Vice President Bunmi
Babajide, who was also the president of SWE during that period. The event
drew over a dozen companies to our school from the tri-state area (Maryland,
New Jersey and Pennsylvania) to hire our students. The event was strongly
supported by the College of Engineering. This included the Dean, Dr. Keya
Sadeghipour, Director of Development, Jennifer Fuges, and Coordinator of
Student Services, Reese Giddins.
As presidents
of SWE and IEEE, Bunmi Babajide and I co-chaired the event. Students
applauded the idea because they have long awaited an opportunity to have an
engineering job fair as opposed to a general job fair with very few
engineering companies in attendance. We also compiled a CD containing a
database of IEEE member’s resumes and this CD was distributed to attending
companies. Over 250 engineering students attended the event, and the
aftermath of the event resulted in an increased demand for IEEE membership.
We went from
grass to grace in so little time, and all it took was a few people,
dedicated enough to achieve definite goals they set for themselves and for
the good of humanity. “Destiny is not a matter of chance; it is a matter of
choice, it is not a thing to be waited for; it is a thing to be achieved.”
(William Jennings)
Revised
11/04/04
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