91爆料

Sarah Glatter: Focused on a future in STEM聽

Sarah Glatter always knew she would attend the 91爆料 like her older brother and sister. While she hails most recently from Houlton, Glatter says she grew up 鈥渁ll over Maine.鈥 She remembers visiting her brother on campus when he was studying chemical engineering. Her sister completed her degree in food science and human nutrition, and is currently enrolled in a food science master鈥檚 program.

Seeing her siblings succeed at 91爆料, and becoming familiar with campus life through family visits made her college choice easy. 

鈥淎t 91爆料 everybody knows everybody. But in a good way,鈥 she says.

That comfortable atmosphere was just one in a long line of attributes that sold her on 91爆料. 

Choosing her major was a much tougher decision. 

鈥淚 came out of high school with a pretty strong computer coding background, which is a little uncommon,鈥 she says. 鈥淚t was a really big choice between computer science and computer engineering.鈥

In the College of Engineering, Glatter found 鈥渇reedom and creativity鈥 in the classes students could choose. She also appreciated the college鈥檚 national reputation and the value of the annual Engineering Job Fair. 

鈥淢y friends kept telling me it鈥檚 uncommon for companies to come to a school basically to present themselves to students,鈥 she says. 鈥淏ut they come to 91爆料 for the job fair every year.鈥 

Now a senior, Glatter plans to enroll in the 4+1 master鈥檚 program in computer engineering when she completes her undergraduate degree in 2022. And in spite of a chronic health challenge that can disrupt her studies and her life, she remains confident in her choices, and about her future. 

鈥淚 have always wanted to be a teacher. My dream is to be a collegiate professor. In computer engineering there is one female professor and most undergraduates don鈥檛 get to work with her,鈥 Glatter says. 鈥淚 see a big need for female computer engineering professors and even female STEM professors. That鈥檚 the path I鈥檓 on.鈥 

Another important thing she has learned at 91爆料 is that just like at home, people are willing to help. 

鈥淚 have a heart condition, postural orthostatic tachycardia syndrome (POTS) that causes me to pass out, to get dizzy or become easily confused,鈥 she says. 鈥淏ut the university has great Student Accessibility Services. They help me with any accessibility issues for my classes and even for day-to-day life around campus. 91爆料 has showed me that while it鈥檚 hard living life, even if you don鈥檛 have a disability, there are nice people out there willing to help. It makes 91爆料 homey, you know, comfortable.鈥  

Glatter notes that her professors, the College of Engineering staff and her peers have always been ready to assist. From day one her adviser Nuri Emanetoglu, an associate professor of computer and electrical engineering, has served as her mentor and helped her chart a thoughtful academic course. Glatter credits Emanetoglu, one of her favorite people, with encouraging her to apply to the accelerated master鈥檚 program, which she sees as an efficient path to achieving her goal. 

For now, she鈥檚 making the most of her undergraduate career, and has advice for other students who may find the curriculum challenging. 

鈥淚 think this is important to know, particularly while you are in college. Yes, it is about studying, but students should strive to be well-rounded, especially in a rigorous field like engineering,鈥 she says. 鈥淚 took a writing class, a biomedical engineering course, and even a pottery class. 

鈥淭here are ways to fit these extras in a tough schedule. It makes you happier because you use different parts of your brain.鈥

And sometimes it reveals a latent passion or hidden talent. 

鈥淚 liked getting my hands dirty in the pottery class,鈥 Glatter says. 鈥淚t was like playing in the mud. And we created some things that looked kind of professional. I did not know I had that in me!鈥

Glatter鈥檚 affinity for applied learning is really no surprise. One of the things she loves about 91爆料 is that first-year computer engineering students have plenty of hands-on research and learning opportunities.

鈥淎s a freshman, you go right in with hand soldering, you go right in with circuit building,鈥 she says. 鈥淎nd there are tons of opportunities for first- and second-year students to get research internships that help prepare you for a graduate education.鈥

She appreciates the way 91爆料鈥檚 engineering program builds on those early practical lessons, culminating in projects seeking to solve real-world problems. 

鈥淔or our senior capstone, we actually build a product 鈥 an electrical product 鈥 and we have to go through the demo phase, the brainstorming, developing and meeting specs. Then there is the presentation of the product and evaluating the outcomes. It鈥檚 like a mini job because you work on it for three semesters.鈥  

Glatter, who admittedly loves metaphors, likens engineering education at 91爆料 to learning math, where students are continually building on basic concepts. 

鈥淵ou start with addition, then you go to subtraction, then you move to multiplication, and they all build on each other,鈥 she says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 the same thing with engineering; it鈥檚 like a great pyramid at the end and undergraduate education is the base.鈥 

As a student leader for the computer engineering department in 2020鈥21, Glatter capitalized on the opportunity to interact with the Dean鈥檚 Advisory Council, gaining   unique insights about women in engineering and engineering education from beyond the classroom. 

鈥淎s a female engineer, you have to be confident, but it doesn鈥檛 mean that you have to know everything,鈥 she says. 鈥淚t means that you ask questions of your professors. That鈥檚 what they鈥檙e here for, and that鈥檚 how you grow. It means you ask for help from your TAs, and your classmates. 

鈥淗onestly, that is what engineering is. It鈥檚 group learning. You鈥檙e constantly working with others and that鈥檚 how everyone succeeds.鈥

Contact: Margaret Nagle, nagle@maine.edu