School of Engineering
Showing 1-77 of 77 Results
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Bruce Cahan
Lecturer, d.school
BioBruce Cahan is a Lecturer in Stanford University's Management Science and Engineering Department, a Lecturer at the Hasso Plattner Institute of Design (d.school), a Distinguished Scholar at Stanford's Human-Sciences and Technologies Advanced Research Institute's mediaX Program, and an active member of CodeX Fellow at Stanford’s Center for Legal Informatics. Bruce's course offerings at Stanford include Ethics of Finance and Financial Engineering (MS&E 148), Investing on the Buy Side of Wall Street (MS&E 449), Sustainable Banking (CEE 244A) and Redesigning Finance (d.school). As an Ashoka Fellow through Urban Logic, Bruce is creating the Space Commodities Exchange, GoodBank™(IO), an independent teaching bank for high-transparency, impacts-aware commercial bankers, and other projects.
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Scott Calvert
Sr. Associate Dean for Administration, School of Engineering
BioScott Calvert is responsible for school operations including finance, HR, IT, facilities, and research administration. He held a similar position at Stanford in the office of the vice provost for undergraduate education prior to joining the engineering team. Before coming to Stanford, Scott was a Navy fighter pilot for 21 years after receiving a commission through the NROTC program at Duke University where he earned a BSE in mechanical engineering. He made numerous deployments aboard aircraft carriers flying F-14s and F/A-18s, and between squadron assignments, he attended US Navy Test Pilot School on a cooperative program with the Naval Postgraduate School where he earned an MSAE in aeronautical engineering. In addition, he has an MBA from Columbia University.
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Deland Chan
Researcher, Civil and Environmental Engineering
Adjunct, Program on Urban StudiesBioDeland Chan is a researcher in the Department of Civil & Environmental Engineering, and a Lecturer in the Program on Urban Studies.
Areas of Focus: Urban sustainability; land use and transportation planning; participatory planning; human-centered design -
Edward Y. Chang
Adjunct Professor, Computer Science
BioEdward Chang, a pioneer working on data-centric parallel machine learning since 2005. He is an adjunct professor at Stanford CS department. He also serves as the CTO of AILLY.ai. Prior to his current posts, Ed was the president of HTC Healthcare BU (DeepQ) from 2012 to 2021. Between 2006 and 2012 he served as a director of research at Google, leading research and development in areas including scalable machine learning, indoor localization, Google Q&A, and recommendation systems. Between 1999 and 2006, Ed was a full professor of Electrical & Computer Engineering at the University of California, Santa Barbara. He joined UCSB in 1999 after receiving his MS in CS and PhD in EE degrees, both from Stanford University. He is a recipient of the NSF Career award, Google Innovation award, US$1M Tricorder XPRIZE (AI for disease diagnosis) award, and ACM SIGMM test-of-time award. Ed is a Fellow of ACM and IEEE for his contributions to scalable machine learning and healthcare.
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Benjamin Choi
Masters Student in Electrical Engineering, admitted Autumn 2019
Student Researcher, Electrical EngineeringBioResearch interests: smart cities, sustainable infrastructure
Other interests: plants, dogs, guitar
Website: https://benchoi.me -
Kirsti Copeland
Associate Dean of Student Affairs, School of Engineering - Student Affairs
Current Role at StanfordAssociate Dean, Student Affairs, School of Engineering
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Lori Cottle
Student Services Officer, Management Science and Engineering
Current Role at StanfordStudent Services Officer in the Department of Management Science and Engineering
Manages and directs student and academic services for 500 bachelor, master, and doctoral students, including degree progress, graduate student funding, graduate admission, course scheduling, commencement, graduate student orientation, and website content for admission and academics. Oversees graduate and undergraduate student policy compliance and procedures. Liaison between the students and the faculty, between the department and the School of Engineering, and between the department and central offices at Stanford.