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Leadership of GlobalResolve earns engineering professor humanitarian award

Arizona State University engineering professor in Ghana, one of 10 countries the GlobalResolve program he directs is involved in efforts to improve conditions for local communities. Courtesy photo.

Arizona State University engineering professor Mark Henderson in Ghana, one of 10 countries the GlobalResolve program he directs is involved in efforts to improve conditions for local communities. Courtesy photo.

 

Program enables ASU students and faculty to help communities in developing countries

Mark Henderson’s colleagues and students said he was true to form in accepting the Tempe Sister Cities organization’s Making a World of Difference Award  at the Tempe Center for the Arts on Oct. 9 for his humanitarian endeavors.

The Arizona State University engineering professor didn’t bask in the spotlight, but instead directed attention to people he has led and collaborated with in efforts to empower communities to improve their quality of life.

“The important thing is that this award is a chance for all of them to get recognition for the amazing work they are getting done through GlobalResolve, and I’m hoping that maybe this brings us more support and encourages more people to get involved with us,” said Henderson, who is on the faculty of the Polytechnic School, one of ASU’s Ira A. Fulton Schools of Engineering.

Henderson is the director of GlobalResolve, which he co-founded in 2006 with three fellow ASU faculty members, including engineering professor Brad Rogers, who became the program’s research and development director.

Projects in 10 countries

The group wanted to create opportunities to put the skills of the university’s engineering faculty and students to work helping communities in underdeveloped countries improve their living conditions.

Since then, GlobalResolve has gotten more than 500 students involved in such projects. Today, more than 200 students and 15 faculty members are participating each year in the social entrepreneurship and sustainability program.

They’re contributing annually to almost 50 projects in 10 countries that focus on upgrading communities’ infrastructure and resources for water, sanitation, energy, agriculture, health and education — and on boosting local economies.

Projects are in various stages of development in Ghana, Nicaragua, Mexico, Bolivia, Peru, Trinidad and Tobago, Nepal and Cambodia – and in Arizona (a solar energy project in the Navajo Nation).

World-changing goals

The other primary mission of GlobalResolve, Henderson said, “is to give our students opportunities for life-changing experiences that make them more globally aware, and empower them to feel they can change the world just as much as anyone else can.”

Students said the goal is being fulfilled, due in large part to Henderson’s role as mentor and motivator.

“Mark really cares about changing the world. He is an inspiration. He has boundless energy and he never runs out of passion,” said Kathleen Stefanik, a student in ASU’s Barrett, The Honors College pursuing a degree in industrial and organizational psychology.

With Henderson’s guidance and help from other faculty and resources at ASU, Stefanik became founder and chief executive officer of GAIA International, a nonprofit humanitarian aid organization that is currently developing crop-production methods to help farming communities in Peru increase their crop yields.

She said Henderson has been a role model, showing her what skills are needed to make her efforts successful.

“He is one of those extraordinary salt-of-the-earth people who can connect with people anywhere in the world, and he can make the connections that are necessary to keep projects going even in challenging situations,” she said.

Giving meaning to students’ work

Henderson “has this way of making people ambitious” about getting involved in solving difficult problems, said student Mentor Dida.

Dida earned a bachelor’s degree through the Polytechnic School program electronics engineering technology with a concentration in alternative energy engineering. He’s now pursuing a master’s degree in the school’s global technology and entrepreneurship program.

He has been involved in projects to raise public awareness about the need to alleviate poverty, including an effort to empower young people to fight poverty in Kosovo, his native country.

Dida said he was motivated in part by Henderson’s teaching and mentorship to embark on those endeavors.

“He does more than show you how to apply engineering principles to solving problems,” Dida said. “He makes you understand how getting involved in these kinds of things can give meaning to your life.”

Sense of accomplishment

GlobalResolve is helping students understand the benefit of the social entrepreneurship and cross-cultural experiences for both the educational value and the sense of accomplishment, said electrical systems major Michelle Marco.

Marco came to Henderson to get involved and ended up starting the GlobalResolve student club. She’s now the club’s president.

She, along with Polytechnic School lecturer Gerry Polesky, is helping lead a project to improve living conditions in an orphanage in Peru, including building a greenhouse garden.

“You learn an array of hands-on engineering skills through GlobalResolve – leadership, teamwork, problem solving and creativity,” Marco said.

More than that, she adds, “You get to use those skills to help people. There is no feeling like knowing you have had a direct positive impact on people’s lives.”

She said Henderson is especially deserving of the Tempe Sister Cities award for his contribution to demonstrating that engineering is at its core a humanitarian enterprise.

Boosting humanitarian engineering

GlobalResolve’s progress has been a factor in enabling establishment of a humanitarian engineering program  in the Polytechnic School. As of this year, students can major in traditional areas of engineering with a concentration in humanitarian engineering.

He is helping lead the new program with other engineering faculty members Brad Rogers, Kiril Hristovski, Nathan Johnson, Benjamin Ruddell and B. Ramakrishna.

Henderson describes the budding field as engineering that aims specifically to provide the technological solutions and other means to help struggling communities meet their basic needs and lift themselves out of poverty.

It’s also about engineers — collaborating with experts in other fields — finding solutions tailored to the cultural and sociological environments of specific communities.

Combining expertise from many fields

That’s why Henderson and his engineering faculty colleagues are working to form more multidisciplinary GlobalResolve project teams.

“We need more than engineers’ viewpoints. We need English majors and journalists, cultural anthropologists, liberal arts and nursing students and business students, in fact students from all majors, to mix with engineering students,” he said.

“We welcome participation by all faculty members as well, and have had great help in the areas of design and sustainability, for example, from John Takamura and Nalini Chhetri,” he added. Takamura is an associate professor in The Design School in ASU’s Herberger Institute for Design and the Arts. Chhetri is a senior sustainability scientist and climate change science manager with ASU’s Global Institute of Sustainability.

GlobalResolve leaders are already working on a new initiative to establish the Alliance for Global Impact. The plans is to create a network of universities that can take on humanitarian engineering challenges, mixing and matching the necessary expertise and resources from among the network’s members to tackle particular projects.

The alliance will work with the Peace Corps to identify regions and communities in need throughout the world.

Instilling commitment

“We would like to see thousands of students be exposed to developing countries so they could see all the opportunities that exist for them throughout the world,” said Rogers, the director of research and development for GlobalResolve.

Through his broad presence at ASU, Henderson may be in a position to draw in a more diverse contingent of students. In addition to his post at the Polytechnic School, he is an associate dean for the Barrett, The Honors College, a faculty affiliate for the School of Public Affairs and a senior sustainability scientist for ASU’s Global Institute of Sustainability.

Rogers has little doubt Henderson will continue to drive the growth of GlobalResolve.

“I can’t think of anyone more dedicated,” he said, “and Mark connects with students as well as anyone I’ve ever seen. He truly wants to motivate them to love learning like he does.”

Rogers said that as an increasing number of students work on GlobalResolve projects, “more of them are telling us ‘I think I’ve found my calling. I found what I want to do with my life.’ This is happening all the time now, and lot of that is because of the commitment Mark is instilling in them.”

Media Contact
Joe Kullman, [email protected]
480-965-8122
Ira A. Fulton Schools of Engineering

About The Author

Joe Kullman

Joe Kullman is a science writer for the Ira A. Fulton Schools of Engineering. Before joining Arizona State University in 2006, Joe worked as a reporter, writer and editor for newspapers and magazines dating back to the dawn of the age of the personal computer. He began his career while earning degrees in journalism and philosophy from Kent State University in Ohio. Media Contact: [email protected] | 480-965-8122 | Ira A. Fulton Schools of Engineering Communications

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