As a sophomore, Abigail Advincula tagged along with some friends to the Engineers Week Banquet—the culminating celebration of Engineers Week, hosted by the Case Engineers Council.
After that first event, Advincula was hooked.
Now a polymer science and engineering senior, Advincula is president of the Case Engineers Council, and she’s leading the effort to organize Engineers Week, which began Feb. 13 and will continue through Feb. 26.
“E-Week happens right around the time when school is hard and a lot of us are stressed out from school and homework,” Advincula said. “It’s fun for students because it helps us remember why a lot of us became engineers in the first place.”
For Advincula, that reason was finding challenging work that also would have real-world impact.
She does just that in the lab with Jon Pokorski, assistant professor of macromolecular science and engineering.
Since August 2014, she’s been developing tissue-engineered scaffolds, which are platforms that cells can grow on to heal when tissues have become diseased or damaged. The scaffolds make it possible to help the body to heal itself.
Even though she works on very complex topics in the lab, she goes back to the basics as a teaching assistant for lower-level materials science engineering courses. A passionate instructor, Advincula always tries to make creative analogies to help students better understand the subject matter and keep first-year students interested in what they’re learning.
And someday, Advincula hopes to return to academia to become a professor and share her love for engineering with a new generation.
In advance of Engineers Week, we sat down with Advincula to learn more about the brains behind the operation.
5 questions with… Case Engineers Council President Abigail Advincula
5QUESTIONS |
February 19, 2016
STORY BY: EDITORIAL STAFF
STORY BY: EDITORIAL STAFF