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Emergency Alert
UDC Closed Monday, Jan. 26

Ahead of the winter weather storm, Mayor Muriel Bowser declared a State of Emergency for the District beginning Friday, Jan 23. Mayor Bowser also declared a snow emergency that will go into Saturday, Jan. 24, and will stay in effect until 9:30 a.m. on Tuesday, Jan. 27.

DC Mayor Bowser declares state of emergency, requests help from National Guard.

All administrative and academic offices within the University of the District of Columbia will be closed effective 5 p.m. EST on Friday, Jan. 23, until 9:30 a.m. EST on Tuesday, Jan. 27.

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 administrative and academic offices as conditions change. 

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

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SEAS Students Receive Standing Ovation at 2022 AMIE Conference

October 11, 2022
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2022 Advancing Minorities’ Interest in Engineering (AMIE) Annual Conference

School of Engineering and Applied Sciences (SEAS) students received a standing ovation from over 200 industry professionals for their presentation at the 2022 Advancing Minorities’ Interest in Engineering (AMIE) Annual Conference in Nashville, Tennessee, on September 26.

An innovative and interactive experience, the conference brings together the Council of Engineering Deans of Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCU), students, engineering professionals and leaders from top corporations and government agencies.

Biomedical engineering student Glacia Martin, computer science student Ciero Kilpatrick, computer science and medical engineering student Chidera Igwebuike, mechanical engineering student TaiZeree’ Walker and internet technology student Adrienne Lambert were invited to participate after they won first prize in the 2022 AMIE Design Challenge, held virtually on April 1.

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 a collaboration with AMIE to demonstrate emerging technologies and how they are used to solve real-life problems. Each university team was judged by industry professioinals 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. They presented their answer at the conference—an innovative piezoelectric sensor-based device called “Gravicube,” demonstrating leadership, innovative user-centric solutions and out-of-the-box thinking.

Students received $600 each for their participation, and UDC received $6,000.

SEAS Dean Devdas Shetty said that he was extremely proud of the team.

“It was an extremely nice experience. I thank the students and the faculty advisors.”

For more information about SEAS, please click here.

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