Skip To Translation Selection Skip To Top Navigation Skip To Content Skip To Footer
Emergency Alert
UDC Operating Remotely as of 12:30 p.m. Today, Monday, March 16

The University of the District of Columbia’s academic and administrative offices will move to remote operations as of 12:30 p.m. today, Monday, March 16. All on-campus activities, including athletics, are cancelled.

Staff: Contact your immediate supervisor with questions or for further instruction regarding remote work expectations.

Faculty: Reach out to your immediate supervisor and/or the dean for questions and further instruction regarding the transition to emergency remote instruction (ERI). The Center for the Advancement of Learning (CAL) is available to support faculty with instructional continuity, including support for Blackboard, Zoom, Webex and other teaching and learning technologies.

CAL Faculty Support Resources


Students: Due to inclement weather, the university will be closed to in-person operations as of 12:30 p.m. today, Monday, March 16. Instruction will be moved to emergency remote, including synchronous and asynchronous methods. Certain laboratory, clinical and other hands-on classes for which in-person instruction is a requirement may necessitate a make-up lesson, but every effort will be made to pursue virtual learning to the extent possible. Where synchronous virtual instruction is intended, published class meeting times must be observed so that students’ schedules are not disrupted.

The safety and security of our students, faculty, staff and the broader community remain our top priority. We will continue to provide updates regarding the status of the university’s academic and administrative offices as conditions change.

Please continue to check our website and social media channels for the latest information.

If you have any safety concerns, contact OPSEM at 202-274-5050. For all immediate emergencies, call 911.

Thank you for your continued dedication to our students and to UDC’s mission.

UDC News
Back to News

SEAS Students Take First Place Honors in the AMIE Design Challenge

April 5, 2022
Share:

The UDC School of Engineering and Applied Sciences (SEAS) team surpassed Florida A&M University and Tuskegee University to win first prize and $10,800 in the 2022 Advancing Minorities’ Interest in Engineering (AMIE) Design Challenge held virtually on April 1.

The interdisciplinary team included biomedical engineering student Glacia Martin (team captain), computer science student Ciero Kilpatrick (co-captain), computer science and medical engineering student Chidera Igwebuike, electrical engineering student TaiZeree' Walker and internet technology student Adrienne Lambert.

Dr. Ji Chen, UDC visiting assistant professor in mechanical and biomedical engineering and Dr. Max Denis, UDC assistant professor in mechanical and biomedical engineering and George Omae, industry advisor from Boston Scientific, served as faculty advisors.

The Design Challenge was a part of an industry collaboration with AMIE to demonstrate emerging technologies and how they are used to solve real-life problems. Each university team was judged on their design, problem-solving, communication and business model.

This year's Design Challenge focused on the following problem statement: "How might we design a solution to improve the quality of life in clean water, urban infrastructure, clean energy, transportation and access to high-speed internet?"

UDC's team sought to design a solution to improve the wellness of college students by harvesting kinetic energy as a rewarding application of clean energy. Their answer was an innovative piezoelectric sensor-based device called "Gravicube," demonstrating leadership, innovative user-centric solutions and out-of-the-box thinking.

In addition to second-prize winner Florida A&M and third-prize winner Tuskegee University, UDC faced stiff competition from Hampton University, Morgan State, Jackson University, University of Maryland Eastern shore, Alabama A&M, Virginia State University and Prairie View A&M.

"I am thrilled that UDC won first place in the AMIE Design Challenge, which included 15 universities and is a signature event," UDC SEAS Dean Devdas Shetty said. "This team showed tremendous leadership abilities. I am proud of our students and faculty mentors."

Team photo from left Taizeree' Walker, Ciero Kilpatrick, Chidera Igwebuike, Glacia Martin

Back to Top
Take The Next Steps, Today!