Event Recap: WE16 Annual Conference

we16group2Last week, sixteen Dallas SWE members experienced SWE’s WE16 Annual Conference in Philadelphia, PA! A record-breaking 11,000+ registrants were in attendance at the conference’s professional development speaker sessions, career fair, and Saturday outreach event, Invent It, Build It. See the sections below to read more about our experiences at the conference! You can also view all of our photos at our Facebook album here.

The conference theme was, “LIfe’s Variable, SWE’s Your Constant.” Many of the attendees personally identified with that statement, as their involvement with and friends in SWE span multiple jobs, locales, and years! Read below for their personal reflections on the conference.

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Awards

Dallas SWE brought home four large professional section awards! Kudos to our FY16 leadership team and Awards Committee for securing every section award for which we applied: amazing!

  • Outreach Parent and Educator Program Award: for the third year in a row, we were recognized for the excellence of the adult sessions at our signature STEM Outreach event, Design Your World.
  • Outreach MOU Partnership Award: for our FY16 series of Design Your World events at SMU and UNT with support from Girl Scouts of North Texas.
  • Membership Recruitment Program Award: for our professional development and social program offerings, membership recruitment events with local companies and universities, and online communication best practices.
  • Motorola Foundation Multicultural Award: for the diversity of our membership in culture, age, career stage, and engineering discipline, and for program partnerships with other local diversity organizations like the National Society of Black Engineers and the Society of Hispanic Professional Engineers.

Dallas SWE member Stephanie Watts Butler, Ph.D from Texas Instruments received SWE’s Achievement Award, the highest honor SWE bestows each year. She gave a very insightful and inspirational keynote speech at Friday’s award banquet. You can find more about her in our October Member of the Month post.

Professional Development

Four of our members took the stage as speakers or panel moderators during the following WE16 professional development sessions:

  • Cherrie Fisher – Epic Careers in Big Data and Analytics
  • Nandika D’Souza, Ph.D – Strategies for TRUE Inclusion in Engineering: the World is in Your Workplace.
  • Kate Van Dellen – Confronting Workplace Sexism
  • Stephanie Watts Butler, Ph.D –  Stand out! How to Pitch Yourself and Own the Career Fair

SWE Governance Updates

Dallas SWE Leaders were also in attendance at each of the SWE business meetings (Membership, Town Hall, and Senate meetings) to ensure we have the latest available information on SWE’s Governance change initiatives. At a high level, the Regions have been instructed to create and approve a plan to dissolve their finances and leadership structure by the end of FY17 (June 2017), with the goal of implementing the approved plan during FY18. In FY18, we will no longer

For the great majority of our members, your relationship with SWE as a whole will remain unchanged. However, for your SWE section leaders, these changes will require us to make major changes to the ways we interact with SWE headquarters and how your interests are represented to the Society’s top leadership and governance bodies. We will also need to maintain closer, more frequent contact with our local collegiate sister sections to ensure they are getting the support they need to develop mentor relationships with professionals, enhance their professional development skills, and host successful events.

While not everyone was enthusiastic about the information shared at WE16, our section leadership team is optimistic that those in charge of planning and executing these changes have the best interest of SWE at heart and that our feedback is being heard and considered during this process. SWE has set up a special website to share documentation on these concerns. The information presented at WE16 should be available there soon. If you have questions or concerns on this topic, you may email us at dallas.swe@gmail.com or contact HQ directly at governance@swe.org.

WE17 Location Announcementaustinmosaic

Next year’s SWE Annual Conference (WE17)will be held in Austin, TX Oct 26-28, 2017! Mark your calendars now: this is so close to home we expect a big showing from our Lone Star State!!

Personal Reflections

Seeing all the awards that the Dallas SWE section won makes me want to get more involved at the local level. With the effort to sun-set Regions, reaching out to our local sister sections (both professional and collegiate) will be more important. I also got to participate in my first senate meeting. It was amazing and powerful to be part of the group that can impact organizational change.
~ Kate Van Dellen
I was impressed with the large attendance at this year’s conference, I think this is a testament to the quality of the sessions and opportunities at the career fair. I enjoyed being able to return as a recruiter for Texas Instruments and give back to the conference that taught me so much as a student! It was energizing to talk to students and professionals at various stages of life and to know that I had a connection (SWE) with each of them. Finally, the Awards banquet was very motivating and inspiring. It was yet another reminder of SWE’s legacy and the impact it’s had on so many people.
~ Amber Scheurer, Dallas SWE FY17 Secretary
As a first time SWE Annual Conference attendee, I was blown away by the incredible networking and career development opportunities at WE16. The seminars and key note speakers were very useful and relevant to me. Chevron’s Presentation on Data Analytics was eye-opening as I did not expect to see data analytics so widely used in the Oil & Gas Industry. I took advantage of the career connections sessions with a leadership coach, Barbara Taylor, who provided a unique perspective on the strategic networking, mentor programs, executive presence, communication etc.
~Shilpa Nagaraj, Counselor for Collin College SWE

The Award Banquet was great: everyone was so kind and it felt wonderful to share the night with all in attendance. However, my biggest memory of WE16 was meeting SWElebrity Alma Kuppinger Forman, a SWE founder from Pennsylvania! I felt like the technological innovation we need most for conference is to clone ourselves so we can see all the fantastic talks going on simultaneously!
~ Stephanie Watts Butler, Ph.D, SWE Achievement Award recipient

As a veteran SWE Annual Conference attendee, I am always energized and inspired by seeing old friends, meeting new ones, and generally being surrounded by the best and brightest women engineers and mentors there are! WE16 was no exception. This year I was particularly inspired by the concern and attention being given to our Society’s Governance structure. In a time where society at large behaves poorly when confronted by conflict and controversy, SWE is a great example of an organization where differing voices are heard, acknowledged, and considered with respect and deliberate review. I look forward to being a part of SWE’s future: one reason I became a Life Member this year!
~Shelley Stracener, Dallas SWE FY17 President

Being the only female in male-dominated industries for many years makes it hard sometimes to have the sense of belonging in spite of your achievements. Attending the SWE conference this year gave me the opportunity, for the first time in my career, to get to know accomplished women in technical and leadership roles similar to mine. Although I love my career, the one thing I missed was having the support of women who share my same experiences and ambition.  Each one had their unique perspective and were all willing to share, connect and support one another. This conference  made me more proud to be part of an international women engineers community.
~ Amani Maurice

I love attending SWE conferences as it allows me to spend a few days focusing on my own professional development. Many of the sessions cover more basic material that serve as excellent reminders, but every so often you learn something totally new. One such session was “Teamwork 101: How to Play Nice with your Teammates and Create Better Results”. In that session, I learned that an absence of trust is the foundation of a dysfunctional team. To build up that trust, the leader of the team must be the first to demonstrate vulnerability. Another way in which teams struggle is when there is a lack of commitment from those at the table. On this point I learned one of my new favorite phrases: “There is a difference between buy-in and consensus.”. Everyone doesn’t have to agree, but everyone must buy-in to the decision. The takeaways from this session are extremely applicable to my work in cross-functional teams and put me on a path to success.
~Pam Duffy, Dallas SWE FY17 Section Representative

I wish all our section membership could have been at Celebrate SWE with us to see Dallas SWE winning four section awards. We all know Dallas SWE is awesome and the awards recognize how special a team we have. It is a testimony to the great leadership team and committees we had in place in FY16, Thank you to all the members who made this possible! I volunteered at the WE16 Information Desk and received a substantial discount on conference registration. Anyone wanting to reduce their attendance costs should consider volunteering at WE17. There are lots of volunteer opportunities and it is a great way to connect with other attendees.
~ Barbara Read, Dallas SWE FY17 Section Representative

With an aim of bridging communication between immigrant and non-immigrant engineers, I presented a workshop focused on the central human need for people and their contributions to be accepted. We examined the impact of socialization during teen years on the 6 Hoffstede dimensions. I also supervised the Undergraduate Rapid Fire Sessions. Other than that I attended workshops, my favorite of which was on male advocates and importance and pragmatism of being politically savvy while raising gender-based issues at meetings.  From a Dallas SWE perspective, having transitioned out of managing the Design Your World conferences, it was validating to see the significant national impact the effort has made validated through recognition for our Dallas section.
~ Nandika D’Souza, Dallas SWE FY17 Executive Vice President 
 Since the end of WE15, I waited anxiously for WE16 in Philadelphia and it did not disappoint! Other than the conference being in such a fun and historic city, it was jammed packed with sessions and I enjoyed several, with topics ranging from leadership to conflict management to technical talks to personal and professional development to SWE business. As usual, catching up with SWEsters from various sections, regions, and even my alma maters is a blast. WE16 proved to be another amazing opportunity to recharge and get motivated to be a better version of myself, professionally, personally, and in SWE! Until WE17 in Austin, TX…
~ Zaineb Ahmad, Dallas SWE FY17 VP of Membership

USAA Collaboration Spaces Tour and “Navigating Your Career” Panel

usaa-01When:
Tuesday, November 15, 2016
6:00 – 8:00 PM

Where: USAA Offices

7300 Parkwood Blvd, Plano TX 75024

 

This month, USAA will be hosting Dallas SWE at their offices in Plano. Attendees will network over food and drinks, participate in the panel discussion “Navigating Your Career”, and tour the USAA Collaboration Spaces.

 

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Event Recap: Ericsson Technology Center

Dallas SWE had our October Professional Development meeting at Ericsson Technology Center in Plano. The evening was hosted by Cara Hale, Senior Requiter, Talent Acquisition. Two groups visited the Technology Innovation Lab and experienced the future of a connected world. First Ron Smith connected the visitors to mobile phone data capability history from 1G (1979) to 2G (1991) to 3G (2001) to the current 4G (2009) network, then finally providing a glimpse of what will be available through Ericsson’s innovations on the upcoming 5G network. From a text message to a photograph sent to watching a Netflix movie, he provided insight into what network responsiveness enables. In the first demo Sham Hamee provided an example of a virtual reality viewing device so that everyone in the room could be transported to a room. As the person wearing the device viewed the remote location, everyone at the Plano location were able to see the remote location on the TV screens. Then, Suhel Patel showed an example of traffic sensors capturing data in 4 cities so that both the real time connection to traffic patterns, signal events, and paths could be optimized. Finally, Ron described a flow-through water quality monitoring system that could be positioned at remote sites to provide real-time information on water speed and contaminants. Multiple sensors could be placed along a single waterway to help pinpoint potential problems. By programming the system to go to sleep between data collection and transmission cycles, two AA batteries can last for 10 years. A future where energy, cell phone coverage, and other ancillary services are enabled through real-time sensor networks is very exciting!

After all attendees experienced the Technology Center, we went to the meeting room to work on our personal branding with Cara Hale. We were able to distinguish between creating a 2 minute elevator speech and a phrase or graphic that reflected our values and where we could impact. The successful evening led to much discussion among attendees.

Community Service with SHPE / NSBE – Nov 19

november-19-2016On Saturday, November 19 from 9:00am to 11:30am, we will partner with the Dallas / Fort Worth sections of the National Society of Black Engineers (NSBE) and the Society of Hispanic Professional Engineers (SHPE) to serve our local communities! Volunteers from all three engineering diversity organizations will help sort materials at two Habitat for Humanity ReStore warehouse locations

There is a limit of 25 volunteers at each location, so claim your spot! If your plans change before the event, please let us knows so we can make space for someone else.

There will be a lunch afterwards sponsored by Axxess at Tacos and Tequila that is open to all! Click the button below for more information and to register. Feel free to share the event flyer (right) as well!

Eventbrite - Habitat for Humanity - SHPE/SWE/NSBE

Event Recap: Collin College visit to Emerson

Shilpa Nagaraj, Dallas SWE member and Counselor to the Collin College SWE section, shared some information with us about a recent visit of Collin College students to Emerson Process Management in McKinney.

The students had a tour of the facility including the flow lab, materials lab and 3D printer lab. They also enjoyed a great panel discussion chaired by Nadine Brown, Director of Marketing and Business Development regarding several interesting topics for students. Other panel members included Chantel Bailey (Project Manager), Rebecca Hawkins (Project Engineer) and Shilpa Nagaraj (Senior Design Engineer).

The discussion addressed topics including:

  • Introduction and background of each panel member
  • Positive and negative aspects of being a female engineer
  • What advice would you give to your younger self
  • Upcoming job trends and new technologies
  • Social media profiles for job seekers
  • Importance of soft skills for engineers
  • Learning is a journey not a destination!

Thanks to Emerson and our Dallas SWE members who support our sister SWE sections at local colleges!

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Member of the Month: Stephanie Watts Butler

We’re starting a new member appreciation initiative this year: Dallas SWE Member of the Month! With this program we hope to recognize some of our non-officer members whose technical contributions, leadership accomplishments, or SWE volunteer service are particularly noteworthy. If you would like to nominate a Dallas SWE member for his/her contributions, please email us.

This month, we would like to recognized Stephanie Watts Butler, Ph.D, P.E.! At WE16 in Philadelphia this month, she will accept the SWE Achievement Award, the highest honor given by the Society of Women Engineers. Congratulations, Stephanie!

Stephanie Watts Butler, Ph.D., P.E., has produced innovations in the semiconductor industry in the areas of control, process and package development, R&D management, and new product development. She currently is the Technology Innovation Architect in Texas Instruments’ High Voltage Power Solutions business unit, driving new technology innovations from concept to revenue by leading partnerships with TI’s technology organizations, manufacturing sites, universities, and product development teams. The result is amazing power semiconductors that enable TI’s customers to make smaller, lighter, and more energy efficient products. Dr. Butler has authored more than 40 papers and 16 U.S. patents. She is a Fellow of AVS and a Senior Member of IEEE and AIChE. SWE has honored Dr. Butler with the 2016 Achievement Award, and the Dallas Business Journal selected her as a 2015 Woman in Technology.  She serves on the TxGCP Champion Board  and UT Austin Department of Chemical Engineering Advisory Council.

stephanie-butlerMy involvement with SWE began as a freshman in college. SWE was a supportive environment to develop my leadership and community service skills as part of a technical community. As a working professional, SWE continues to be a supportive environment for each new generation of engineers entering the workforce, while also providing opportunities to keep leadership and service skills fine-tuned throughout my career. The Dallas SWE section is an active community with different opportunities to easily network with people from a broad range of industries and even academia. I’m learning from individuals and situations that I would be unable to experience if I only focused on organizations within my industry. I’m also proud of the work the section does to introduce girls (and boys) to the exciting world of STEM and produce the next generation of innovators.

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