In the Classroom with: Julian Rimoli

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AE Professor Julian Rimoli Inspires the Next Gen

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Tiffany Davis, BSAE '16,  credits Dr. Rimoli  with  “kick-starting my career as a ‘helluva engineer.’”

The bright, 21-year-old, who will start working full-time for the Boeing Company this fall, makes a good case for her high praise.

Davis was a sophomore in Rimoli’s statics class when she surprised herself by landing a much-coveted structural analysis internship at the Boeing Company. She asked Rimoli to help her prepare by giving her some research to do before the internship began.

Rimoli voluntarily mentored Davis (and another student) for several months, giving them books on advanced materials, and problems to solve. He met with them every week to discuss their progress.

Those weekly meetings with Rimoli paid off. By the time she reached Boeing's doorstep, Davis had already mastered  the concepts the company wanted to teach her during the first weeks of her internship, saving money that would have been spent on training. It also allowed Davis to jump into some serious engineering problems from day one.

“I am so very fortunate and grateful that Professor Rimoli advised me in research related to advanced structural analysis and finite element analysis,” Davis said.

“This enabled me to be in an excellent position when I took an internship with Boeing in Huntsville.”  

That mentorship gave Davis an edge that continued to pay dividends after the intersnship ended.  Boeing invited her back for another internship in 2015 and offered a full-time job in its prestigious Engineering Career Foundation Program after she graduated.  Davis was one of only 44 engineers to have been chosen for this honor -- from a pool of more than 4,000 applicants.

“I attribute a lot of my professional success to Professor Rimoli’s ambition to not just be a phenomenal researcher but also an outstanding teacher,” said Davis. “Professor Rimoli has even inspired me to consider getting a Ph.D. later on. I am excited for what the future holds!”

 

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AE Professor Julian Rimoli inspires next gen aerospace engineers

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When he was a child, Julian Rimoli shared a dream with many other kids who grew up watching space missions: he wanted to be an astronaut.

"People thought I was crazy because I was in Argentina — in a small town," said Rimoli,  laughing.

But it was no joke.

Rimoli put his dreams to work, earning an aeronautics engineering degree at Argentina's Universidad Nacional de La Plata before coming to the U.S to earn a master's and doctoral degree from Caltech. Prior to accepting a faculty position at GT-AE in 2011, he spent two years as a post-doc at MIT's  Department of Aeronautics and Astronautics.  

Becoming an astronaut is no longer on his wish list, but Rimoli is not complaining...

"I really like this place," Rimoli said of  the Daniel Guggenheim School of Aerospace Engineering.

"I haven't been able to find another place with the level of energy we have on this campus. The students are very active, and they always have ideas and want to participate in research. The faculty is the same — lots of people are willing to collaborate all the time.

Classroom Strategies 

In the five years that he has been at GT-AE, Rimoli has excelled as a teacher, receiving both the Lockheed Dean's Award for Excellence in Teaching  and the Goizueta Junior Faculty Professorship.

In the classroom, he says, it's important to reconstruct the process and build on the story. 

"Each lecture has its own story," he said. "I spend a lot of time thinking on the concept of how something comes to be the way it is."

Of his statics class (COE 2001), Rimoli said it was as important for students to gain an intuition about the subject as it is for them to gain technical knowledge. He is frustrated - and a little inspired - when he fails to convey both.

"When I perceive that students are not understanding, I think about how to fix it the next time I teach it," he said. "But at that moment, I try to come up with new ways of explaining, and try different examples or angles.

And it's okay, he tells his students, if they don't understand everything in class. 

"In the classroom, you get the big picture and, hopefully, you get a good set of notes to help you study. But at the end of the day, there's no way around studying."

Reaching Students

Rimoli is excited by the exchange of energy in his classes - whether he's teaching undergraduates or doctoral students. 

"The moment I walk into the classroom, I get energy. I give them energy, and they give me energy back," he said.

"It always helps if the students are engaged, and it takes time to build a relationship with the class. The classroom dynamic is not the same the first week of class as it is at the end of the semester."

Rimoli said the excitement level varies according to what he is teaching. 

"When I teach an advanced graduate level class, what excites me is that it really forces me to learn," he said.

"I have to prepare for these smart Ph.D. students who are going to ask tough questions. I want to — as much as possible — know the answer or be ready to think about the answer on the spot. It's a very stimulating intellectual challenge.

When teaching statics, an undergraduate course, Rimoli faces a different set of challenges.

"What I enjoy is the challenge of how to teach what, to me, is obvious," he said. "I have to put myself in the mindset of the students, and try to remember where I was [at their age].

He also has to be mindful about actively expressing the commitment he has to his students. Rimoli said that students are really good at reading the commitment of the faculty. 

"I think students appreciate the commitment," he said. "They may or may not like your teaching style, but if you are committed, they will respect it."

Rimoli's commitment shows. When he was teaching his students about trusses, he took the time to create "Truss Me! — an app that employs a video game format to coach students to think intuitively about truss behavior.

His commitment has had an impact that goes far beyond his classroom.

Released in 2014, Truss Me! has had 120,000 downloads in more than 140 countries, including 36,000 downloads from educational institutions.  

The app has gained a popular following here at Tech, but, Rimoli observes, the most important feedback he's received for his efforts has had nothing to do with it.

"The best reward is on the last day of class when a student shakes your hand and says, "I enjoyed your class."

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School of Aerospace Engineering

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  • Created By: Kathleen Moore
  • Workflow Status: Published
  • Created On: Jul 26, 2016 - 8:11am
  • Last Updated: Oct 7, 2016 - 11:22pm