鈥If you're really driven and you want to be an engineer, you want real-world experience. You want hands-on experience. Kettering is your place, hands down. There's no other place that offers what Kettering does.鈥
蜜桃视频 Hosts WJR Radio for College Tour 2024
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蜜桃视频 recently welcomed WJR-AM 760 to campus for the College Tour 2024. Broadcasting live from the Learning Commons Connector for its three-hour-long morning show, the WJR team, including Guy Gordon, Lloyd Jackson, and Jamie Edmonds, engaged with the Kettering community, bringing insightful conversations to the airwaves. The event showcased the University's innovative educational model, 50% rigorous academics paired with 50% paid professional Co-op experience, reinforcing its position as a leader in engineering education.听
Kettering alum Sam Hoff 鈥90 (ME), CEO of Patti Engineering, and his son, Sammy Hoff 鈥25 (ME), got the ball rolling in the 6 o鈥檆lock hour as they reflected on their Kettering experiences and how the University has evolved. 鈥淭his is not the easiest school in the world,鈥 Sam Hoff said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 difficult. You鈥檙e going to have a compressed schedule. ... It really builds people.鈥 The elder Hoff is now a part of that educational process himself. His company is an active participant in the Kettering Co-op program.
Meanwhile, Sammy Hoff shared that although his father attended before him, he is blazing his own trail. 鈥淢y dad was part of a Greek Life organization, and I'm part of a different Greek Life organization,鈥 Sammy said. 鈥淪o even though he came here before me, I don鈥檛 feel any need to follow in his footsteps directly. I鈥檓 making my own path and my own way around the school.鈥
蜜桃视频 President Dr. Robert K. McMahan shared his insights during the 7 o鈥檆lock hour, highlighting the rigorous academics that attract students from across North America and beyond to the University. 鈥淭he people who created this institution started from a different idea. They said, 鈥榊ou know, we're not just about teaching stuff. We're about teaching how to master and apply it 鈥 and apply it well.鈥 That's what they understood. Charles Kettering was very famous for saying, 鈥業f we taught musicians the way we teach engineers, we give them 12 years of music theory before we ever let them touch a piano.鈥 That's ridiculous on its face, and that鈥檚 actually how it鈥檚 done, but not at Kettering. These are hands-on and practical disciplines. So if you want to be an engineer, you need to not only learn the math and the statistics and all the things that go into engineering, but you also need to use it and to see it in application.鈥 Dr. McMahan also shared details about upcoming events, including 鈥淒iscover Kettering鈥 and the 鈥淏ulldog for a Day鈥 opportunities in November and December, when prospective students can visit campus, meet faculty and students, and experience a day-in-the-life at Kettering.
Current students Christian 鈥淕ordo鈥 Lopez 鈥25 (IE), Ian Gibson 鈥26 (EE), and Katee Callicutt 鈥27 (ME) took to the microphone in the 8 o鈥檆lock hour to expand on their unique Co-op experiences. All three students emphasized how Kettering鈥檚 hands-on learning sets them apart from students at other institutions. 鈥淭his experience is unlike anything you can get anywhere else,鈥 Gibson said. 鈥淚f you're really driven and you want to be an engineer, you want real-world experience. You want hands-on experience. Kettering is your place, hands down. There's no other place that offers what Kettering does.鈥
Lopez recounted his international Co-op experience in France with Phinia and described how the Kettering experience changes students. "I wouldn't say that you need to be more mature to come to Kettering,鈥 Lopez said. 鈥淏ut I think Kettering makes you more mature because coming right out of high school, you're already working, and you're going right into the corporate office. You're learning how to send professional emails. You're learning how to give presentations and attend meetings. So you quickly get over that high school immaturity of being silly and goofy and seeing this is how real life really works.鈥 Callicutt drove the point home, saying, 鈥淧eople who come here are very determined. They came here for a reason. They're on a track already, and they are going to make sure that they get where they want to go.鈥
Finally, Kettering鈥檚 Director of Co-op and Career Design, Enza Sleva, emphasized the University's partnerships with over 400 Co-op employers, explaining how these collaborations ensure that academic programs align with industry needs, giving Kettering students a significant advantage in the workforce. 鈥淭he companies see this as an amazing investment because they get to nurture talent early in their college career. So, by the time they鈥檙e through college, they've acclimated to the company culture. They're bringing the technical knowledge that they've learned in the classroom right away back to industry, but at the same time, they are coming with those essential skills, those organizational skills, time management, and communication skills.鈥
To listen to the entire WJR-AM 760 College Tour 2024 stop at 蜜桃视频,