Connect with us

News

Eng’g team bags 1st place in UP quiz bee

Published

on

     THE UST Civil Engineering team 1 placed 1st among 120 teams from 60 schools nationwide at the National Civil Engineering Quiz Contest sponsored by the UP Diliman ACES held last September 8 at the GT-Toyota Asian Center Auditorium, UP Diliman, Quezon City.

     Fifth year students Paul Marion Demapelis and Kristoffer Dave Tabong, who received P60,000 cash and medals, snatched the crown from last year’s champion, Mapua Institute of Technology, who placed 3rd after the University of the Philippines-Los Baños this year.

     Finishing 4th place last year, Coach Engineer Rajeev Abdullah says the experience and exposure to other quiz contests inside and outside the university made them top this year’s contest.

     “I think that it was a game of experience and another factor is the team’s drive to win the game,” Abdullah said. The last time that UST topped the UP Diliman-sponsored quiz contest was in 1996 and 1997.

     The team did not have any official training, “What’s interesting is they were able to emerge victorious with very minimal supervision, so I’ve been saying this to everyone, ‘it’s all them,’” he added.

     Demapelis and Tabong, Civil Engineering’s top 1 and 2 in the Dean’s List, want to leave a legacy as champions to the University before graduating.

     Another UST Team competed and took the 6th place with John Jerome Sy, Kenneth Endaya, and Ricci Ryan Rojo as members.

     “The most challenging part is the Environmental Engineering since UP focused more on this topic than we did,” said Rojo, one of the Team 2 members.

     Faculty of Engineering Dean Josefin S. de Alban Jr. congratulated both teams and plans to give them recognition during the faculty’s annual Testimonial Ceremony.

     “For those who are yet to come, they must be very conscious of their role to inspire people who are following [in] their footsteps,” said Dean de Alban on the winners.

     Dean de Alban, furthermore, stressed out the importance of congratulating the ones who did not succeed and said, “The University must give them all the inspiration.”

By Charry Fatima D. Garcia

+ posts

Comments

comments

Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

News

test

Published

on

test

aug 2 2022

+ posts

Comments

comments

Continue Reading

News

Thomasian innovation bested others in the Metro

A mere escape from summer boredom hailed two Engineering Thomasians victorious in the recent Manila Bay Cleanup competition, launched by the Metropolitan Manila Development Authority (MMDA) in April.

Published

on

 

     A mere escape from summer boredom hailed two Engineering Thomasians victorious in the recent Manila Bay Cleanup competition, launched by the Metropolitan Manila Development Authority (MMDA) in April.

     Fourth year Electronics Communication Engineering (ECE) students John Beljoe Abao and Ariel Manalaysay had outclassed seven other competing schools with their giant dustpan-like entry, which, according to them is based on simple logic and imagination, and practically out of the boredom during the vacation.

     “Nung summer walang magawa, and opportunity din naman ‘yon,” Abao said, referring to the contest.

     With the theme “Innovative Engineering Solutions to the Manila Bay Garbage Problem,” the contest encouraged student participants to devise creative contraptions that may eventually be improved and produced by the MMDA.

     “It (the prototype) is V-shaped and it has a hole in the middle where a concrete storage is placed,” Abao said.

     With big waves in the bay, floating debris and trash will be swept into the chute and into the tank, “just merely collecting the trash into the bin.”

Competition

     The Thomasian duo took three days of brainstorming, a day to formulate the concept paper, and only a span of two hours to construct the model. But despite the short amount of time, they were “confident” about their prototype.

     “One down, one down,” Abao said when asked what did they feel when they saw other participants’ prototype. According to the duo, the edge of their prototype compared to others’ was the “feasibility to implement because of its simplicity.”

     The prototype brought to the defense is made up of only cardboard, masking tape, and illustration board while other participants’ proposals were more technical and even made use of mathematical computations.

     The real inspiration behind the innovation, according to Abao, is the fulfillment of seeing his idea being implemented to help improve the Manila Bay.

     “Kuha lang ng kuha. When the opportunity comes, grab without hesitation,” Abao and Manalaysay said, advising the Thomasian community to be ready when opportunity knocks.

     According to an article in Inquirer, Department of Public Works and Highway (DPWH) Assistant Secretary Maria Catalina Cabral said that in choosing the winning design they looked for “innovation and engineering.”

     “The concept is doable. We saw there was potential for this to be built and developed. MMDA and DOST will make more studies to develop and make more improvements on this proposal,” Cabral added in the said article.

     The duo received P25,000 cash prize along with Certificate of Recognition.

     Other participating schools included Ateneo de Manila University, University of the Philippines-Diliman, Manuel L. Quezon University and Mapua Institute of Technology.

By Mia Mallari and Romhelyn Benipayo
Photo courtesy of John Beljoe Abao

 

+ posts

Comments

comments

Continue Reading

Big News Row 3

UP is only PH school in Times Higher Education rankings

UST last appeared in the list in 2008, when it ranked in the top 500 along with La Salle.

Published

on

The University of the Philippines was the only Philippine university that made it in this year’s Times Higher Education world university ranking.

 

UP earned a spot in the 800+ bracket after getting a score of 13.5 based from the following indicators: teaching, research, citations, international outlook and industry income.

 

The University of Santo Tomas, Ateneo de Manila University and De La Salle University did not make the cut.

 

UST last appeared in the list in 2008, when it ranked in the top 500 along with La Salle.

 

United Kingdom’s University of Oxford topped this year’s list.

 

In the 2010 Asian rankings, UST shared the 101st spot with Japan’s Tokyo University of Agriculture and Technology and Thailand’s Prince of Songkla University. Meanwhile, Ateneo, UP and La Salle ranked 58th, 78th, and 106th, respectively.

 

Earlier this year, UST and La Salle made it in the 701+ bracket in the Quacquarelli Symonds (QS) world university rankings. State-run UP led the Philippine universities after bagging the 374th spot while Ateneo remained in the 501st to 550th bracket.

 

The Times Higher Education World University Rankings was first published in 2004 in collaboration with QS. In 2010, the annual publication partnered with mass media firm Thomson Reuters.

+ posts

Comments

comments

Continue Reading

Trending

Copyright © 2017 Zox News Theme. Theme by MVP Themes, powered by WordPress.