Close X
Sunday, October 6, 2024
ADVT 
International

India-Born Academician Anantha Chandrakasan Named Dean Of MIT's Engineering School

Darpan News Desk IANS, 28 Jul, 2017 06:02 PM
    An India-born academician at the prestigious Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) has been named as the dean of its engineering school.
     
     
    Anantha Chandrakasan, the Vannevar Bush Professor and head of the Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science (EECS) was last month named the dean of the MIT's School of Engineering.
     
     
    He assumed his new role effective July 1. Chandrakasan succeeded Ian Waitz who is now MIT's vice chancellor, a statement from the MIT said.
     
     
    The Chennai-born academic had previously headed the MIT's largest academic department, spearheading a number of initiatives that opened opportunities for students, postdocs, and faculty to conduct research, explore entrepreneurial projects.
     
     
    MIT President Rafael Reif said in the statement that in a time of significant challenges, from new pressures on federal funding to the rising global competition for top engineering talent, he is confident that Chandrakasan would guide the school of engineering to maintain and enhance its position of leadership.
     
     
    "And I believe that in the process he will help make all of MIT stronger, too," Reif said.
     
     
    In an email, Provost Martin Schmidt described Chandrakasan as "a people-centered and innovative leader."
     
     
    Since joining the MIT faculty in 1994, Chandrakasan has produced a significant body of research focused largely on making electronic circuits more energy efficient.
     
     
    The MIT statement said that while at the helm of the EECS, Chandrakasan launched a number of initiatives on behalf of the department's students.
     
     
     
    “That's what excites me about an administrative job. It's how I can enhance the student and postdoc experience. I want to create exciting opportunities for them, whether that's in entrepreneurship, research, or maker activities. One of the key things I plan to do as dean is to connect directly with students," the statement quoted Chandrakasan as saying.
     
     
    Chandrakasan also initiated the 'Rising Stars' programme in EECS, an annual event that convenes graduate and postdoc women for the purpose of sharing advice about the early stages of an academic career.
     
     
    "I'm also very passionate about helping our faculty explore new research areas," said Chandrakasan, who as department head has sought unrestricted grants and other funding to provide faculty with this flexibility.
     
     
    Chandrakasan moved to the US while in high school. His mother was a biochemist and Fulbright scholar, and he spent considerable time in her lab where she conducted research on collagen.
     
     
    "I always knew I wanted to be an engineer and a professor," he said. "My mother really inspired me into an academic career. When I entered graduate school, I knew on day one that I wanted to be academic professor."
     
     
    Chandrakasan earned his bachelor's, master's and doctoral degrees in electrical engineering and computer science from the University of California at Berkeley.
     
     
    After joining the MIT faculty, he was the director of the Microsystems Technology Laboratories (MTL) from 2006 until he became the head of EECS in 2011.
     
     
    He is a recipient of several awards including the 2009 Semiconductor Industry Association (SIA) University Researcher Award, the 2013 IEEE Donald O Pederson Award in Solid-State Circuits, an honorary doctorate from U Leuven in 2016, and the UC Berkeley EE Distinguished Alumni Award.
     
     
    He was also recognised as the author with the highest number of publications in the 60-year history of the IEEE International Solid-State Circuits Conference (ISSCC), the foremost global forum for presentation of advances in solid-state circuits and systems-on-a-chip.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Toronto Homeowners Cash Out Of Hot Real Estate Market As Uncertainty Sets In

    Toronto Homeowners Cash Out Of Hot Real Estate Market As Uncertainty Sets In
    The Toronto market has been astonishing, with the average sale in the Greater Toronto Area skyrocketing last month to $916,567. That's up 33.2 per cent from a year ago.

    Toronto Homeowners Cash Out Of Hot Real Estate Market As Uncertainty Sets In

    'Islamic' Kindergartens: Vienna’s Muslim Preschools Cause A Stir In Austria

    'Islamic' Kindergartens: Vienna’s Muslim Preschools Cause A Stir In Austria
    Ednan Aslan, a Turkish-born Austrian professor at Vienna University, some 10,000 children aged two to six attend around 150 Muslim preschools, teaching the Koran much like Christian ones do with Bible studies.

    'Islamic' Kindergartens: Vienna’s Muslim Preschools Cause A Stir In Austria

    WATCH: Sikh Fervour Grips New York As Turban Day Celebrated At Times Square

    WATCH: Sikh Fervour Grips New York As Turban Day Celebrated At Times Square
    Non-profit group 'The Sikhs of New York' organised the 'Turban Day' at Times Square here on Saturday, with its volunteers tying colourful turbans to close to 8000 Americans and tourists hailing from different nationalities and ethnicities.

    WATCH: Sikh Fervour Grips New York As Turban Day Celebrated At Times Square

    Dubai Gurdwara Creates World Record With Breakfast For People From 101 Nations

    Dubai Gurdwara Creates World Record With Breakfast For People From 101 Nations
    Gurunanak Darbar Gurdwara served continental breakfast titled ‘Breakfast for Diversity’ to 600 people from 101 countries, the maximum number of people from diverse nationalities, entering the Guinness World Record.

    Dubai Gurdwara Creates World Record With Breakfast For People From 101 Nations

    Indian-Born Engineer Arvind Sinha Gets American Helicopter Society Award

    Indian-Born Engineer Arvind Sinha Gets American Helicopter Society Award
    AHS is the world’s premier professional institution dedicated to vertical flight technology and advancement. It selected Lt Col Dr Arvind Sinha (retd) for his distinguished career in vertical flight technology.

    Indian-Born Engineer Arvind Sinha Gets American Helicopter Society Award

    43-Yr-Old Indian In US Pleads Guilty To Running Call Centre Scam

    43-Yr-Old Indian In US Pleads Guilty To Running Call Centre Scam
    Bharat Kumar Patel was arrested for his role in the fraud and money-laundering scheme alongside 55 other individuals and five call centres in an indictment returned by a federal grand jury in the Southern District of Texas on October 19.

    43-Yr-Old Indian In US Pleads Guilty To Running Call Centre Scam