03.29.2024 | 📚The 2024 Spring semester is getting into Finals season. The next four weeks may perhaps be the busiest and most challenging ones of my life to date. As as Mechanical Engineering student at Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University, I've been subjected to a breadth of courses in engineering principles in my busiest semester yet, 17 credit-hours. This semester, I've learned that I am capable of doing far more work in a given amount of time than I ever knew possible.
In studying, designing, building, and creating my way to becoming an engineer, I've found that being a part of an organization, be that a club or a laboratory, holds massive significance for those engineering students who want to feel connected to the material they are learning in the books. I've had the opportunity to work in the Propulsion Lab in the Prescott campus, since Fall 2023, and I can't understate the value I've gained from the experience and involvement I've had there.
I believe that having ongoing projects, overlayed with your studies, can give a student excitement and drive that tethers their studies to the physical engineering that it's all really about.
This is an appreciation post for the opportunity I've had to work in the Propulsion Laboratory of Embry Riddle in Prescott, AZ. No matter how rigorous my studies, I've always found my work in the lab to be a driving force for me. Its the real engineering projects I work on and take leadership in that, to me, define my success. In life, I stand behind my accomplishments. The lab has given me an environment to develop within; a structure for growth.
Without the work I'm able to so often share here on LinkedIn, I'd find it hard to stay passionate in the midst of weeks on end occupying myself with nothing but math. Luckily, this isn't the case, and I couldn't be more grateful to be a part of the program I am.
ScholarshipOwl #clubs #laboratory
Women's Executive Board, 918.808.1086
1moPlease send me his resume! I may know some folks who can help.