Nine graduating seniors and graduate students in MABE have received a Volunteer of Distinction Award in the categories of academic achievement and professional promise
The Tickle College of Engineering held its annual Faculty and Staff Awards celebration virtually last night to recognize outstanding members of the college who have gone above and beyond.

Ashley Rice, a PhD student at UT, uses biomechanics, modeling, and machine learning to improve rehabilitation outcomes for stroke patients through predictive treatments.
Chad Hollis (BS/ME ’99), co-founder of CrossRoads Extremity Systems, designs medical devices that improve lives, building on his UT engineering education and passion for innovation.

Jindong Tan received the Best Paper Award from Building and Environment for his collaborative paper.
Eight MABE faculty were named among the world’s top 2% most-cited researchers, highlighting their global impact and leadership in engineering innovation.
MABE researchers Caleb Rucker and Ryan Ginder earned UT Technology Maturation Grants to advance soft robotics and recycled composites for real-world applications.
The biomedical engineering master’s program at UT has been ranked the thirteenth Best Master’s in Biomedical Engineering Degree Program of 2020 by Best Value Schools.
Stephanie TerMaath and Seungha Shin were promoted to associate professors with tenure within the department.

Dustin Crouch is developing fully implanted, muscle-driven prosthetics to restore natural movement and sensation for millions living with limb loss.