Week of Events
IEEE-USA Congressional Visits Day (CVD) – Virtual Event
IEEE-USA’s (https://ieeeusa.org/public-policy/cvd/) is an annual event that brings engineers, scientists, mathematicians, researchers, educators, and technology executives to Washington to raise visibility of and support for engineering and technology. IEEE-USA's CVD will again be held virtually in 2022, with virtual meetings coordinated by Soapbox Consulting and conducted through their platform. This premier event is open to all IEEE members in the United States, especially those who support federal STEM research. The program consists of a series of briefings and meetings, culminating with a full day of visits with your Congressional delegates. Visit https://ieeeusa.org/public-policy/cvd/ for more details and to register. Virtual: https://events.vtools.ieee.org/m/306119
IEEE-USA Congressional Visits Day (CVD) – Virtual Event
IEEE-USA’s (https://ieeeusa.org/public-policy/cvd/) is an annual event that brings engineers, scientists, mathematicians, researchers, educators, and technology executives to Washington to raise visibility of and support for engineering and technology. IEEE-USA's CVD will again be held virtually in 2022, with virtual meetings coordinated by Soapbox Consulting and conducted through their platform. This premier event is open to all IEEE members in the United States, especially those who support federal STEM research. The program consists of a series of briefings and meetings, culminating with a full day of visits with your Congressional delegates. Visit https://ieeeusa.org/public-policy/cvd/ for more details and to register. Virtual: https://events.vtools.ieee.org/m/306119
Region 2 Leadership Sync
Region 2 Leadership Sync
IEEE Region 2 OU Syncs with Region Leaders and RVC in support of: - increasing engagement, innovation, and inclusion - heightening vitality and collaboration - supporting pipeline and continuity planning, etc. Virtual: https://events.vtools.ieee.org/m/309765
IEEE R2 Student Brown Bag Competition – Analog and Digital Circuit Design
IEEE R2 Student Brown Bag Competition – Analog and Digital Circuit Design
This will be a competition for students to innovatively solve problems when presented with some parts that may or may not be involved in creating a solution. Teams will be paired, but the pairings and the challenges will not be known until 8:30 the day of the competition. The pairs must work together to complete the task. We will use Zoom breakout rooms and each pair of teams will have their own. Work will be submitted into Google shared folders, which will be locked for edits at noon. Schematics (any format including photos of hand drawn ones) and source code must be submitted. Also teams will have video of their operation by noon to ensure those with judging later do not have additional time to continue work. Judging will be from 12:00 to 16:00. Each team will have 20 minutes to present so there will be 12 pairs of teams for 24 teams total. Teams may be up to 4 students. They must be IEEE Student Members, but need not be from the same school or a school with an active student branch. They must be Region 2 students. Not a Student Member? Join us here: https://www.ieee.org/membership/join/index.html Required skills will be analog design (transistors and op amps) for sensor interface and digital programming (Arduino, any language you choose). Participants will need soldering stations & solder, basic hand tools (wire cutters, needle nose pliers, etc:). Voltmeters and oscilloscopes are necessary. Other measuring tools are allowed, but external sources, such as signal generators, are prohibited. They will also need to supply a computer for programming the Arduino device. DC power supplies, battery power, or using a USB input for 5V power only are to be provided by the participant. Prizes will be awarded: Mad Scientist - $250 for the best overall. Evil Wizard - $200 for completing the assignment and doing something weird. Sorcerer's Apprentice - $50 for not completing the assignment, but doing something weird and entertaining. Journeyman Spark - $0 for others competing the assignment. Smokey the Bear - $0 for those that did not work, but did not set off smoke alarms and evacuation of the building. Only one member should register for each team. Names and IEEE numbers for all team members are required to complete your registration. If you are interested in participating, but need others to form a team, please register and indicate that under team members. Agenda: 8:30 AM - problems assigned to the teams 12:00 PM - team submissions must be complete 12:00 - 4:00 PM - presentation and interviews with the judges 5:00 PM - Awards Virtual: https://events.vtools.ieee.org/m/307153
IEEE R2 Student Brown Bag Competition – Analog and Digital Circuit Design
IEEE R2 Student Brown Bag Competition – Analog and Digital Circuit Design
This will be a competition for students to innovatively solve problems when presented with some parts that may or may not be involved in creating a solution. Teams will be paired, but the pairings and the challenges will not be known until 8:30 the day of the competition. The pairs must work together to complete the task. Judging will be from 12:00 to 16:00. Each team will have 20 minutes to present so there will be 12 pairs of teams for 24 teams total. Teams may be up to 4 students. They must be IEEE Student Members, but need not be from the same school or a school with an active student branch. They must be Region 2 students. Required skills will be analog design (transistors and op amps) for sensor interface and digital programming (Arduino, any language you choose). Participants will need soldering stations & solder, basic hand tools (wire cutters, needle nose pliers, etc:). Voltmeters and oscilloscopes are necessary. Other measuring tools are allowed, but external sources, such as signal generators, are prohibited. They will also need to supply a computer for programming the Arduino device. DC power supplies, battery power, or using a USB input for 5V power only are to be provided by the participant. Prizes will be awarded: Mad Scientist - $250 for the best overall. Evil Wizard - $200 for completing the assignment and doing something weird. Sorcerer's Apprentice - $50 for not completing the assignment, but doing something weird and entertaining. Journeyman Spark - $0 for others competing the assignment. Smokey the Bear - $0 for those that did not work, but did not set off smoke alarms and evacuation of the building. Only one member should register for each team. Names and IEEE numbers for all team members are required to complete your registration. Agenda: 8:30 AM - problems assigned to the teams 12:00 PM - team submissions must be complete 12:00 - 4:00 PM - presentation and interviews with the judges 5:00 PM - Awards Virtual: https://events.vtools.ieee.org/m/307153
IEEE R2 Student Ethics Problem Competition
IEEE R2 Student Ethics Problem Competition
This will be a competition for students to present their solutions to ethics problems faced by working engineers. The problems will be taken based on realistic situations. There will be teams of up to 4 members all of whom MUST be IEEE Region 2 Student Members. The responses must specifically reference the IEEE Code of Ethics and will be presented to the judges explaining their logic. Not a student member? Join us here: https://www.ieee.org/membership/join/index.html 8 teams will be allowed, each with 1/2 hour to present to the judges with 15 minutes for presentation and 15 minutes for Q&A. Prizes will be awarded with $500 for the 1st place team, $300 for 2nd and $200 for 3rd. Only one member should register for each team. Names and e-mail for all team members are required to complete your registration. If you are interested in participating, but need others to form a team, please register and indicate that under Team Members. Agenda: 9:00 AM - problems assigned to the teams 12:00 PM - team submissions must be complete 12:00 - 4:00 PM - presentation and interviews with the judges 5:00 PM - Awards Virtual: https://events.vtools.ieee.org/m/307152
IEEE R2 Student Ethics Paper Competition
IEEE R2 Student Ethics Paper Competition
This will be a competition for students to present their solutions to ethics problems faced by working engineers. The problems will be taken based on realistic situations. There will be teams of up to 4 members all of whom MUST be IEEE Region 2 Student Members. The responses must specifically reference the IEEE Code of Ethics. 8 teams will be allowed, each with 1/2 hour to present to the judges with 15 minutes for presentation and 15 minutes for Q&A. Prizes will be awarded with $500 for the 1st place team, $300 for 2nd and $200 for 3rd. Only one member should register for each team. Names and IEEE numbers for all team members are required to complete your registration. Agenda: 9:00 AM - problems assigned to the teams 12:00 PM - team submissions must be complete 12:00 - 4:00 PM - presentation and interviews with the judges 5:00 PM - Awards Virtual: https://events.vtools.ieee.org/m/307152
IEEE R2 Student Workshop “How to be selected for the job you want”
IEEE R2 Student Workshop “How to be selected for the job you want”
Applying for positions can be intimidating and lead to more rejections than you thought possible. Likewise, you may interview for several positions and find you are settling for second or third choice. Hiring managers are flooded with resumes, many of which look alike. Our presenters will be discussing what they see when screening potential resumes and what makes one stand out as desirable. Remember, the purpose of a resume is to get an interview and the purpose of the interview is not always to get an offer. It should also be an evaluation of whether this is the right move to start your professional career. From the HR perspective, it is how to get past the first 30 seconds of scanning resumes. From the Hiring Manager, it is how to find the person you want from 100 other candidates. This should complement what College Placement Offices provide. Speaker(s): Rajneeta Basantkumar, Matt Hicks Virtual: https://events.vtools.ieee.org/m/307155
IEEE R2 Student Workshop “How to be selected for the job you want”
IEEE R2 Student Workshop “How to be selected for the job you want”
Applying for positions can be intimidating and lead to more rejections than you thought possible. Likewise, you may interview for several positions and find you are settling for second or third choice. Hiring managers are flooded with resumes, many of which look alike. An HR Manager and a Technical Manager will be discussing what they see when screening potential resumes and what makes one stand out as desirable. Remember, the purpose of a resume is to get an interview and the purpose of the interview is not always to get an offer. It should also be an evaluation of whether this is the right move to start your professional career. From the HR perspective, it is how to get past the first 30 seconds of scanning resumes. From the Hiring Manager, it is how to find the person you want from 100 other candidates. This should complement what College Placement Offices provide. Virtual: https://events.vtools.ieee.org/m/307155