A beloved boat race for junior-level students in Grand Valley State
University's School of Engineering kicks off several days of celebration
for budding engineers, whose academic year ends later than the rest of
GVSU’s students. The events culminate with a design conference to show
off student collaboration with local industry and a graduation ceremony.
The race, dubbed the Wooden Shoe Regatta, features model sailboats that
students design, build, and test as part of the fluid mechanics course.
The regatta is among the activities that mark the end of the academic
year for GVSU’s engineering students. Also scheduled is the Senior
Design Conference on Friday, August 3 from 1-5 p.m., also in the Keller
Engineering building on the Pew Grand Rapids Campus. On display will be
projects designed and built by student teams to address actual problems
and needs of area companies. The conference celebrates the successful
completion of the Capstone Design Program.
Coverage Ops:
• The Wooden Shoe Regatta
will be Tuesday, July 31 at 11:30 a.m.
in room 102 of the Keller Engineering Laboratories building in downtown
Grand Rapids. Students will be awarded trophies for style and speed. The
boats are 1/12 scale model sailboats, each carved from a 2-inch by
4-inch by 10-inch block of basswood. The exercise is aimed at giving
students an understanding of how fluid mechanics can be applied to
sailboats. The students use a special 12-foot towing tank and a wind
tunnel to predict the performance of the hull and sails. Using the
results, the students are able to predict how a full-scale vessel would
perform. All of that testing, and an explanation of special design
features, are put into a report, which is graded. The competitions are
not part of the grade, but they are an important part of the project as
the students have a chance to show what they have learned and put it to
the test in competition, said Professor Shirley Fleischmann, who
coordinates the event.
• The Senior Design Conference
will be held on Friday, August 3
from 1-5 p.m. in the Keller Engineering Laboratories Building. On
display will be 11 projects with a combined materials value exceeding
$175,000. All projects were designed and built to address actual
problems and needs of area companies. The conference celebrates the
successful completion of the Capstone Design Program, in which teams of
senior engineering students solve real-world engineering design problems
sponsored by participating industries and other sponsoring
organizations. The projects take two semesters to complete, and at the
end the companies who participate have an actual working product.
The day culminates in the Order of the Engineer ceremony, which is a
special commencement ritual for Engineering students. The graduates earn
their degrees later in the year than the traditional spring ceremony
because they must complete a year-long co-op experience. In the
ceremony, each student receives an iron ring, placed on the little
finger of the working hand, which symbolizes bridging the step between
training and experience. The practice started in Canada and is firmly
established in the U.S.
Media Opportunity: GVSU Engineering Students Celebrate Year's End
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