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Commerce & Engineering students team up at new Queen’s Summer Innovation Institute

Issue: 
Principal Daniel Woolf, 6th from left, beside Glen Murray, Ontario's Minister of Training, Colleges and Universities, with Institute students.

Twenty Commerce and Engineering students are developing new ideas while learning organizational leadership skills at the Queen’s Summer Innovation Institute that launched May 9 in Kingston.

“We’ve encountered countless Queen’s students who excel at both Engineering and Commerce, yet find that they have to choose one program over the other when they apply to university,” says Kim Woodhouse, Dean of Engineering and Applied Science. “This program bridges the gap while building a solid foundation for unique leaders with both technical know-how and business savvy.”

This pilot program is a unique collaboration between the Faculty of Engineering and Applied Science and Queen’s School of Business aimed at developing innovators and entrepreneurs who can thrive in the rapidly changing, technology-driven business world.

“It’s clear that the ‘old way’ of doing business just doesn’t cut it anymore,” says Elspeth Murray, Associate Dean, MBA Programs, QSB. “Management teams need to make smart decisions based on a sound knowledge of both technology and business and be willing and able to take their ideas that one step further than the competition. Our goal is to give students the tools they need to do just that.” The pilot program kicked off with a two-week “boot camp,” an intensive session featuring workshops, seminars and talks led by business and technology experts from Queen’s and beyond.

The students then work in interdisciplinary teams throughout the summer on an innovative business or corporate project under the guidance of an expert mentor. Each student receives $7,000, and the teams have a chance to win up to $25,000 through a business competition that caps off the program.

“I see the Institute as a great opportunity to combine the valuable skill sets of the Commerce and Engineering faculties with existing opportunities to start a social entrepreneurship venture,” says participant Diana Menzies, a Civil Engineering student who worked with Engineers Without Borders last year to chair the Queen’s Global Innovation Conference.

To learn more, check out the Spring/Summer issue of The Complete Engineer.

With files from Queen's News Centre

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