search

UMD     This Site






Elizabeth Childs, a graduating mechanical engineering student at the University of Maryland, has been selected as a Knight-Hennessy Scholar by Stanford University. She is one of 76 scholars selected for the 2021 cohort, from an applicant pool of more than 8,000.

“I thank God for this scholarship,” Childs said. “As a Knight-Hennessy scholar, I’ll have the autonomy I need to conduct research in my area of interest, which is the intersection between augmented reality and haptics.”

Childs, whose hometown is Suffolk, VA, is graduating this May with a bachelor’s degree in mechanical engineering. She is a Banneker Key Scholar, with a cumulative GPA of 3.98. Starting in the fall, she will pursue a Ph. D. in mechanical engineering at Stanford’s School of Engineering.

At UMD, she has worked with mechanical engineering professor Ryan Sochol and computer science professor Dinesh Manocha, among other faculty. Taking a course in bioinspired robotics helped shape her long-term research interests, she said.

“I really liked being able to see something and then create it,” Childs said. “In the class, groups were assigned to design and build four-legged robots that were based on some type of animal. Our group chose a newly-discovered flic-flac spider that can somersault through the air.”

As an undergraduate, Childs has mentored students in 3D printing research and helped develop a new 3D printing methodology. She published this work as a first author in the peer-reviewed Journal for Microelectromechanical Systems.

In addition, she has developed modular robots for explosive ordnance disposal for Cambodia, co-taught 3D printing to pre-professionals in Cambodia, and co-led science demonstrations in indigenous Ecuadorian schools.

Childs is the second UMD graduate to have been selected for the program; the first was Yousuf Khan (B.S. ’18), in 2019.

“Elizabeth set the bar high as an undergraduate, and we know she will go on to even greater accomplishments in the next stage of her academic career,” said Bala Balachandran, chair of the UMD Department of Mechanical Engineering. “We are all very excited about the news that she has been selected for the Knight-Hennessy. It’s a well-deserved recognition and we wish her continued success.”

The mechanical engineering department is part of the A. James Clark School of Engineering at UMD.



Related Articles:
MRC and MAGE Earn ARM Institute Endorsement
Alum Nitin Sanket wins Larry S. Davis Doctoral Dissertation Award
Microrobots soon could be seeing better, say UMD faculty in Science Robotics
These are tiny robots. And they are awesome.
IEEE Spectrum website features quadruped microrobot
Workshop honors alum Naomi Leonard
Alum Fumin Zhang elected to IEEE Fellow
UMD Team Wins IEEE IROS Best Paper Award in Agri-Robotics
Diving Deeper into Competition, and Recruitment
UMD-led Team Selected for DARPA Triage Challenge

May 6, 2021


«Previous Story  

 

 

Current Headlines

UMD Launches Institute Focused on Ethical AI Development

Remembering Rance Cleaveland (1961-2024)

Dinesh Manocha Inducted into IEEE VGTC Virtual Reality Academy

ECE Ph.D. Student Ayooluwa (“Ayo”) Ajiboye Recognized at APEC 2024

Balachandran, Cameron, Yu Receive 2024 MURI Award

UMD, Booz Allen Hamilton Announce Collaboration with MMEC

New Research Suggests Gossip “Not Always a Bad Thing”

Ingestible Capsule Technology Research on Front Cover of Journal

Governor’s Cabinet Meeting Features Peek into Southern Maryland Research and Collaboration

Celebrating the Impact of Black Maryland Engineers and Leaders

 
 
Back to top  
Home Clark School Home UMD Home