ASU student, alumnus win Engineers Week awards


ASU engineering student Daniela Panfil

Daniela Panfil, an undergraduate student in the Ira A. Fulton Schools of Engineering, has received the Outstanding Engineering Student of the Year Award.

|

Academic and professional accomplishments, along with public-service contributions, earned an undergraduate student and an alumnus of Arizona State University’s Ira A. Fulton Schools of Engineering recent awards from the Greater Phoenix Area Engineers Week organization.

Daniela Panfil received the Outstanding Engineering Student of the Year Award. Melanie Sikes, a 2004 ASU graduate, received the award for Outstanding Young Engineer of the Year.

The Greater Phoenix Area Engineers Week awards are part of a national effort guided by DiscoverE (formerly the National Engineers Week Foundation) and a coalition of regional groups that work to advance the engineering profession by increasing awareness of how engineers make positive impacts on society.

Panfil, a student in ASU’s Barrett, the Honors College, is expected to graduate in May with degrees in civil engineering and sustainability.

She has maintained a perfect 4.0 grade-point average and earned a number of scholarship awards based on her academic performance, public-service activities and research interests.

At the same time, she has taken leadership roles in student organizations and worked in several engineering intern positions.

Panfil has been a member of the ASU chapter of Engineers Without Borders for three years and its president since May of last year.

She helped lead the chapter’s teams in projects to aid communities in Kenya in managing water resources by establishing a hydraulics laboratory at one of the country’s universities and rehabilitating a dam.

Her internships have included working in waste and wastewater engineering for the Carollo Engineers company in Phoenix, in the water utilities operations of the city of Chandler, as a sustainability manager for a restaurant, and with the Windward Education and Research Center, which seeks ways to achieve sustainable communities.

In nominating Panfil for the Outstanding Student award, Professor G. Edward Gibson Jr., director of the School of Sustainable Engineering and the Built Environment, pointed to her selection as a Stewart and Morris Udall Scholar. He noted that the honor is bestowed each year on only 100 undergraduate students from throughout the United States.

Those chosen to be Udall Scholars must have not only a record of high academic achievement but also show exemplary leadership, a commitment to public service and be pursuing a career involving work to improve society’s stewardship of the environment.

Engineer Gregory Rodzenko, a mentor to ASU’s Engineers Without Borders chapter, applauded Panfil for the multiple abilities she demonstrated in her work with the group — including management, organization and financial skills.

ASU engineering alum Melanie Sikes

Melanie Sikes, a 2004 ASU graduate, received
the award for Outstanding Young Engineer of the Year.

She helped to put on a regional conference for the organization and worked with Native American communities to develop a domestic program that Rodzenko said “is being used as a template for Engineers Without Borders projects with Native American communities nationally.”

Sikes, a registered professional civil engineer with Carollo Engineers, was recognized for accomplishments over more than 11 years in project engineering and leadership with a focus on planning, design and construction of water and wastewater infrastructure.

She has made substantial contributions to major projects throughout Arizona, including in Phoenix, Chandler, Mesa, Buckeye, Gilbert, Peoria, Goodyear, Avondale and Tempe.

The Phoenix Engineers Week group commended her passion for professional service, which began as a student leader for ASU’s chapter of the American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE).

She is the current president of the ASCE Phoenix branch and an adviser to ASU’s ASCE chapter, as well as serving on national and regional committees for the organization’s activities.

Sikes is also a member of the Arizona Water Association’s Young Professionals Committee and is involved in the Arizona Region Future City Competition.

Through her position at Carollo Engineers, she has mentored and guided engineering interns and given college and high school students opportunities to get inside looks at professional engineering in action, said David Seibert, a company vice president and senior project manager.

At her alma mater, “she has provided our students with sound counsel and been a fantastic role model,” said Edward Kavazanjian, an ASU Regents’ Professor of civil engineering.

Sikes is on the organizing committee for the 2018 ASCE Pacific Southwest Conference that will be hosted by ASU.


More Science and technology

 

ASU construction engineering and management researcher Ricardo Eiris pictured with virtual reality headsets and related technology.

Teaching construction realities with virtual environments

Visiting a construction site is a valuable learning opportunity for students who want to one day work in the industry.…

Four men stand behind a table smiling.

ASU, Mexico partner to build next generation of chipmakers, drive semiconductor innovation

Thousands of college students in Mexico will soon have the opportunity to enroll in Arizona State University’s new, free online…

Food insecurity dashboard SGSUP

ASU, St. Mary’s Food Bank partner to tackle food insecurity in Arizona

Arizona State University and St. Mary’s Food Bank (SMFB) have joined forces to create an interactive data dashboard that tracks…