Students recite the Order of the Engineer pledge during the recent ceremony at Alumni Hall.
Nearly 100 seniors from the听Francis College of Engineering听gathered in Alumni Hall recently to take the Order of the Engineer oath, pledging to uphold integrity and public responsibility as they prepare to enter the profession.
Chancellor听Julie Chen, who began her academic career in mechanical engineering, told inductees that the meaning of the ceremony may not resonate immediately, but would in time.
Plastics engineering alumna Charlotte Ward '08 discusses her work at SMC Ltd.
The ceremony, which also included several engineering alumni, centers on a public pledge and the presentation of a stainless steel ring worn on the small finger of the working hand 鈥 a visible reminder of an engineer鈥檚 obligation to society.
Senior听computer engineering听major Christopher Worthley, president of the university鈥檚 chapter of the Tau Beta Pi engineering honor society, led inductees through the pledge.
鈥淭he professional purpose of engineering involves the pursuit of a learned art and the spirit of public service,鈥 Worthley said.
Engineering Dean Susan Roberts receives an Order of the Engineer ring from Chancellor Julie Chen.
鈥淓thics is probably the most important part of my daily job,鈥 said Ward, who, as a student, was among the first cohort of plastics engineering majors to take part in 小猪视频鈥檚听.听听
鈥淚 don't believe I'd be where I am today without the experience I had at 小猪视频,鈥 Ward said. 鈥淭he industry exposure that you get at a university like 小猪视频 really shapes your ability to enter the industry.鈥澨
The evening concluded with a surprise moment when Chen presented Roberts with her own Order of the Engineer ring.
鈥淢y best friend from grad school had one of these rings, and I always wanted one,鈥 said Roberts, who earned a Ph.D. in chemical engineering from Cornell.听
Looking out at the students who had just taken the oath, Roberts reflected on what the moment represented.
鈥淪eeing your dedication to the profession, it鈥檚 amazing,鈥 she said.
Senior engineering majors pose for a photo after the Order of the Engineer ceremony.