From Haiti to Hoboken

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Originally from Port-au-Prince, Haiti, Anne Dutreuil (B.E., ’10) immediately found a new home at Stevens. Both Anne’s older brother and older sister attended Stevens, so the family connection was strong. When Anne expressed an interest in transferring here, her siblings were personally invested in making it happen. After a campus tour and interview, Anne was sold, and soon after she began the second semester of her freshman year as an Engineering Management major at Stevens.
 

It didn’t take long for Anne to realize that she had made the correct decision, and that a Stevens education was far superior to her former institution. She says: “At Stevens the professors encourage a new way of thinking that fosters success. You learn to think creatively and to solve problems based on the information you have instead of focusing on what you don’t have.”
 
One of the many things that Anne appreciates about Stevens is the sense of community. “The campus is like one big family that cultivates a supportive and caring environment, helping students reach their full potential. For this reason, my parents were very pleased to send me to Stevens. They felt that they were not only investing in a great education, but also in the overall Stevens community.”

Due to the campus being relatively small in comparison to other schools, Anne feels that there has been a greater opportunity for her to get involved here. Currently, Anne is the president of the Black Student Union, a member of Black Student Engineers, the student choir, and Alpha Phi Omega (the national service fraternity). She is also a resident advisor (RA), a peer mentor, and an on-campus tutor. During her time at Stevens, Anne has also taken piano lessons.
 
If Anne could offer one piece of advice to incoming international students, she would suggest they get involved. She says: “There are a lot of opportunities and you just need to contact the right people. Stevens is a great place to be. Don’t limit yourself to one group, because the possibilities are endless.”

Anne knows, as an international student, that sharing knowledge and ideas fosters cultural awareness. Each student has a unique heritage and culture which means that each person offers a new perspective. By staying involved Anne has developed a varied group of friends. Getting involved and participating in different on-campus events allows students to meet others that have similar interests. These common interests bond students and promote communication, success and life-long friendships, not to mention further enhance the Stevens experience.

Source: Stevens Institute of Technology

Intersession Abroad

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For a group of Stevens students, the end of the fall semester signaled the beginning of a new adventure. This adventure took the form of a trip sponsored by the Office of Student Life, Intersession Abroad, when a group of students and staff members participated in a 10-day excursion to Prague, Vienna, and Berlin.  An annual program at Stevens, students are able to experience the culture of Europe at an affordable rate with their friends… and maybe even learn a thing or two.

Group Shot - Austria

For instance, Erica Carpenter (’10) learned that when traveling “bring American cold remedies because outside Germany their cough medicines [aren’t as effective].” Andrew Kaplan (’09) learned (the hard way) that Europe has “a lot of small doors.”

Typical for Stevens students, the remnants of the Berlin Wall and bomb shelters in Prague are not always enough to distract from their chosen fields of study.  Andrew, who has passionately studied traffic engineering in his civil engineering courses, was excited that “the opportunity to learn about the transportation systems of Europe, including the subways, streetcars, and driver-pedestrian interactions expanded my professional knowledge.”

Group Shot - CR

Intersession Abroad is just one of many opportunities Stevens students have for international experiences.  Students regularly study abroad in the UK, Australia, Spain, Turkey, and Israel.  The Stevens chapter of Engineers Without Boarders also regularly travels to the Dominican Republic to use their technological skills to improve life for the nation’s population.

- Regina Pynn, ‘11
Photos by Mike Manzella, ‘09

Source: Stevens Institute of Technology

Keith Rosso Witnesses History

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Last week’s Presidential Inauguration was viewed by millions of people around the world. Not only was one Stevens student fortunate to be there in Washington D.C. to witness the historical event in person, Keith Rosso even scored sought-after tickets to not one, but two inaugural balls.

KR at SSB

Keith (BE, ’10), an Engineering Management/Accelerated Pre-Law student, spent several days in DC exploring the city and attending inaugural festivities. Active in his hometown of Saddle Brook, NJ, Keith is a member of both the Board of Education and the Zoning Board, and he kicked off his time in DC by attending a pre-inauguration event hosted by the Young Elected Officials Network. The next evening, Keith attended the Illinois Inaugural Ball. One of 7000 people in attendance, Keith says: “Attending this ball with people from all around the world was truly an amazing experience.”

KR at Ceremony

The inauguration ceremony itself came next, and when Keith received those tickets, he also received tickets to that evening’s Southern States Ball – an unexpected but much appreciated surprise. Because of the inauguration package that Keith and his mother secured prior to attending the events, they were given access to one of the first sections on the Capitol lawn. As they arrived to wait for the ceremony to commence, Keith ran into Cory Booker, the Mayor of Newark, whom he met previously at an Obama fundraiser in Hoboken.

Cory Booker

After the incredible ceremony, which was in arm’s reach from Keith, they got ready for the Southern States Ball, held at the DC Armory. When Keith arrived, he made sure they were positioned close to where Barack Obama and Joe Biden would be arriving shortly. The energy in the room was palpable and at midnight, Biden arrived to share a dance with his wife, Jill, and speak briefly to the group. Not long after that, Obama arrived with his wife, Michelle. According to Keith, the crowd erupted with cheering and calling for Obama, who addressed everyone and danced with Michelle, before moving on to his next ball.

Obamas

Of the overall experience, Keith concludes: “Being there with 1.5 million people, all from different backgrounds, who are all united for one reason, sharing the same goal and vision, was unreal. It was like absolutely nothing else.”

Source: Stevens Institute of Technology

Mike Munley’s Journey to Job Success

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I knew when I decided to attend Stevens (way back in spring of 2004, mind you) that I’d be getting a first-class engineering education, which would set me up for obtaining a great job post-college.  What I didn’t know is that everything I did from that point on would affect my future job hunt.  Bear with me as I explain my college experience; you’ll soon understand what I’m doing.

Coming into Stevens I knew I wanted to study Engineering Management (EM).  I liked the combination of core, broad-based engineering peppered with business, economics, and project management.  Beyond that, I was clueless.  Ask me what I wanted to do with a degree in EM, and I’d give you an “Umm, I dunno… business maybe?  Maybe construction management?”  Clueless.

Freshman year at Stevens I did about a thousand different activities outside of class: Stevens Political Awareness Club, Dramatic Society, Ambassadors’ Club, Entertainment Committee, American Society for Engineering Management.  In the spring, I utilized the NYU/Stevens relationship and took Elementary Japanese 2 at NYU’s College of Arts & Sciences (I was fortunate enough to place into EJ2 thanks to four years of high school Japanese).  Over that summer, I did a construction management internship with the Port Authority, where I had the opportunity to go to the top of the George Washington Bridge and down into the pit of the World Trade Center Site.  Without a doubt, it was the most exciting of any of my jobs to date, though it did make me realize one thing… I wasn’t much a fan of construction management. 

And so sophomore year began with me being just as clueless as ever with what I wanted to do post-grad.  I stayed involved with the Dramatic Society, including a position on the e-board, and the Entertainment Committee, and I decided to join a social fraternity.  I knew a bunch of guys who, rather coincidentally, all happened to be in Sigma Phi Epsilon and after hanging out there a lot in the fall, I soon became a brother and quickly became the Balanced Man Scholarship Chairman.  I also did my first co-op at Ethicon, Inc., a Johnson & Johnson company.

My third year was basically a repeat of my second year.  My next co-op, however, was at GlaxoSmithKline where I developed various operational excellence experiments to see how we could save money on the packaging lines of Aquafresh and Sensodyne.  Yep, lots and lots of toothpaste.Mike Munley Tokyo 2007

After my third year, I decided to forgo a co-op term to study abroad in Japan during the summer of 2007.  I studied Intermediate Japanese at KCP Language Institute in Shinjuku, Tokyo, Japan.  At this particular school, they refuse to speak in English in the classroom.  Everything is conducted in Japanese; just ask my buddy Marc who studied there the next summer and knew no Japanese before going!   I lived in a dorm about an hour train ride away with only four other Americans and a ton of Japanese college students.  I took the Shinkansen (bullet train) down to Kyoto, the ancient capital, and I went on a school trip to Yamagata, which is essentially the boondocks of Japan.  And I even got credits transferred for use as a humanities course at Stevens.  The food is strange, the culture is different, but all of it was incredibly amazing and awesome!

My fourth year I was elected as president of Tau Beta Pi, the engineering honor society.  We hold various community service events, such as Tau Beta “Pie”, where we pie professors in the face and the annual Pi Mile Run.  The spring was spent mostly on my final co-op at Medco Health Solutions.  It was about as far away from engineering as a job could be, as I did business analysis the majority of my time there.  And would you believe it… I LOVED IT.

And so came my final year, and the job hunt.  By now, I knew what I actually enjoyed and wanted in a career: business analysis, travel, a leadership/management role, and problem solving.  After working with Career Development, attending the career fairs, and sending my resume to everyone and their mother, I lined up a bunch of interviews with consulting companies and leadership development programs.  It felt as if every other day I was in my suit.  And I had to balance all this with school.  Yes, it’s tough, but if there’s one thing that stands out about Stevens, EVERYONE is in the same boat.  And even with all that, I still found time to hang out and make it to trivia night at my favorite bar (I am over 21 after all).

In my interviews, I noticed I’d get the same questions over and over again:

Q: Name a difficult team experience.  What did you do about it?  A: “At Ethicon, most team members were in different countries and had different priorities and cultures, and I had to impress upon them the importance of quickly doing what I had asked…”  (Side note: remember this was my first co-op job… and can you believe they actually listened?!?!)
Q: Name a time when you had to innovate.  A: “At Medco, I developed a user-friendly self-populating spreadsheet that automatically generated monthly metrics for 12 very different groups with 12 very different sets of metrics…”
Q: What’s your proudest achievement?  A: “Managing a team that organized a 100-person regional conference for Tau Beta Pi, the engineering honor society…”
Q: Describe a situation when you challenged authority.  A: “When I was the scholarship chairman of my fraternity…” and I’d speak of the time I had a dispute with some of my fraternity brothers on how to manage our scholarship.
Q: Speak about a time when you had to take the lead and learn something new to get a goal accomplished?  A: “In my freshman design lab we had to program a robot, and no one on my team had any clue how to program a robot…”
Q: What’s your best leadership quality? A: “Well, if there’s anything that going to Japan taught me, it’d be adaptation…” and then we’d chat about sushi for 5 or 10 minutes.
Q: What’s your passion outside of class?  A:  “Well, that’d be acting and singing,” and I’d go on and on about all the fun times with the dramatic society.

I think you see where I’m going.  If I didn’t do all that I did while at Stevens, I’d be answerless.

In the end, I had five sets of second round interviews (including one which was an all-expense trip to Fairfax, VA… while it’s not a very touristy city, it was still pretty cool to take the Acela train, stay at a hotel, and eat at no cost to me).  I got the “I’ve got some very good news for you” call from Johnson & Johnson’s Information Technology Leadership Development Program around mid November, and with that call, the weight of the world was released from Atlas’s hands.  I signed, sealed, and delivered my offer acceptance on December 1st, and I’m slated to start my position with Consumer Products (think Band-Aids, Johnson’s Baby Powder & Shampoo, Aveeno) on June 15th.  In my time between school and work, I plan to take a quick jaunt to Scotland to visit some relatives I haven’t seen in more than a decade (with banked co-op cash!) and to road trip out to Wisconsin for my buddy Gus’s graduation party (he’s already got his job lined up with UPS).

And as for this semester, I’ve got Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays off, and with the exception of Senior Design, not a care in the world and no longer clueless.

- Michael Munley, ‘09

Source: Stevens Institute of Technology

Stevens Celebrates Inauguration 2009

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On Tuesday, people from all over the world will converge in Washington, D.C., witness on television and follow coverage online, as Barack Obama is sworn in as the 44th President of the United States. To prepare for the momentous event, Stevens students share their thoughts on Obama and the future of our country over the next four years.

Jill Deutsch (ChemBio/Accelerated Pre-Med ‘09/’10)
“I am very hopeful that he will pull the country out of the mess it’s currently in!”

Charles Steiner & David Gordon


Charles Steiner (Electrical Engineering, ’12)
“We chose the best option for us. Obama is by far the best option and he’ll bring a lot of positive change. I’m very hopeful.”

David Gordon (Mechanical Engineering, ’12)
“I am hopeful.”

  

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Abhay Sampath (Electrical Engineering/Computer Science, ’12)
“I wasn’t old enough to vote in this election, but I think it started off strong with a lot of choices. I think the youth in the Northeast were hoping for Obama. I’ve been an Obama supporter but I think the media had a lot to do with it. McCain’s age and Palin’s experience were exploited, for example depictions like Saturday Night Live took away from them. But I’m hopeful for the next four years and I hope America embraces Obama.”

Chris Coppola (Mechanical Engineering, ’12)
“I agree with Abhay, I hope Obama is fully accepted. I was very happy and proud to be a part of this historical election.”

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Tatiana Green (Biomedical Engineering, ’12)
“I’m a bleeding heart liberal so I am very excited.”

Tabitha Gorena (Art & Technology, ’12)
“The idea of hope is associated with Obama. We haven’t had that in awhile with a president.”



Anonymous (ChemBio, ’12)
“This is the first election I’ve been able to vote. I don’t think I really paid attention before and it is so different when you can be a part of it. I’ve never felt this way about an election before and the night that Obama was announced as our next President, it was an incredible experience. I hope he does what he says he’ll do.”

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 Danielle Sack (Biomedical Engineering, ’11)
“I’m a bit nervous because I’m more conservative, but I’m excited for a new change.”

On-campus events are planned for Tuesday, including a live screening of the Inauguration in Jacobus Student Center. Additionally, all televisions in Pierce Dining Hall will be tuned to coverage of the events in D.C.

Source: Stevens Institute of Technology

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“By participating in the Co-op program, I have gained the confidence to take advantage of all of life’s opportunities.” - Keith Cassidy
 
 
The American Society for Engineering Education has selected Stevens Institute of Technology senior, Keith Cassidy, as the Co-op Student of the Year. Keith will spend five days in Orlando, and receive a $500 cash award, to celebrate this honor. Keith participated in three co-op semesters, one at United Parcel Services (UPS), and two at Movado Group Inc. One of 13 nominations from qualifying schools, Keith’s experiences and accomplishments clearly set him apart from the competition.

During his co-op at UPS, Keith worked in support of regional project coordinators responsible for providing support to the Northeast region of the United States. Keith designed Microsoft Access Database reports which organized data and facilitated project management.  Keith notes that many of the skills that he developed in his co-op at UPS prepared him for his next co-op experience at Movado. In his personal statement which was included with his nomination, Keith explains: “I was able to be such an integral part of a business team that my co-op employer, Movado, gave me the opportunity to travel abroad and see the world. However, in order to reach that point in my career, I had to gain the necessary learning, leadership and management skills. I began to gain these skills at my first co-op assignment at UPS in New York City.”

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Keith’s first co-op role at Movado was as a supply chain application analyst. In this position he analyzed business processes and translated each one into a diagram for SAP conversions. Keith was also in charge of updating Movado’s picking system which monitored and controlled inventory. Keith was first exposed to the SAP software during this co-op experience and developed an interest in its implementation which led him to his second co-op opportunity at Movado.

This time, Keith was charged with the task of creating a training program which he introduced in Movado’s Switzerland and Hong Kong corporate offices. As expressed in his nomination by his Movado supervisors: “Keith’s primary achievements include becoming an SAP expert, training both domestic and international employees in preparation for global SAP implementation and becoming acquainted with the overall business process, including global sales and distribution.”  

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While training Movado’s local teams, Keith grew both professionally and personally. By totally immersing himself in the local culture and language, Keith was able to learn from his trainees and as a result he developed long-lasting relationships. Keith stated in his nomination: “This international experience opened my eyes to new possibilities, encouraging me to set new goals for my future.”

Now, just one year later, Keith has received an offer for full-time employment after graduation. In addition, Keith is a co-op manager himself, and is in charge of interviewing the next group of Stevens students who will become part of the Movado co-op experience. 

Source: Stevens Institute of Technology

Setting Goals that Know No Limits

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“I challenge myself daily to see how much I can accomplish,” says Melissa Franzese (B.E., ’10). Using her excellent time management skills, Melissa not only is a record-setting Cross Country (XC) and Track and Field (T&F) athlete, she also is the Student Activities Committee rep for XC/T&F, a member of the Society of Women Engineers, the Historian in Alpha Phi Omega, on the Entertainment Committee and does work-study in the Athletics department in addition to serving as a tour guide and ambassador for the school.

Melissa says she enjoys setting goals for herself, and clearly her goals have no limits. She continues: “It feels good to have goals and then actually break them,” which is something she does time and time again.

In October, Melissa was named the Empire 8 Cross Country Runner of the Week, a distinction given to individuals with breakthrough performances in the Empire 8 Conference. Melissa continued successfully throughout the season, garnering the top finisher position for Stevens in several races, in addition to earning the First-Team All-Empire 8 honor. This past weekend, Melissa bested her own school mark in the T&F 3k at the NYU Open Invitational and became the first women’s athlete to qualify for the Eastern Collegiate Athletic Conference (ECAC) Championships.

Melissa Franzese Action 1108 

Growing up in Brooklyn, Melissa was drawn to Stevens for many reasons. In addition to appreciating the beautiful campus and its perfect blend of city and rural life, Melissa liked the athletic program because she knew she could continue to run and still balance her studies. She wanted to study engineering but wasn’t sure which aspect and Stevens offered the opportunity to explore the field before selecting Civil Engineering as her major.

After graduation, Melissa would like to work in New York City in construction management. In the meantime, she says she plans to stay dedicated and stay healthy, and to continue setting – and achieving – her goals.

 

Source: Stevens Institute of Technology

Happy New Year!

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Happy New Year from the Office of Undergraduate Admissions! May 2009 be happy and healthy for you and all your loved ones.

Source: Stevens Institute of Technology

Happy Holidays!

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The Office of Undergraduate Admissions would like to wish everyone a very happy holiday season!!

Source: Stevens Institute of Technology

More Ducks Headed to NCAA Tournament

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For the first time in the 13-year history of the program, the Stevens women’s basketball team has advanced to the NCAA Championships, claiming their first Empire 8 Conference title in the process. The excitement begins this Friday, as the Ducks face off against the University of Mary Washington at host location NYU.

Women's Basketball NCAA

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