Monday 5 October 2020

NAVSEA Naval Engineering Education Consortium Brings Brothers with the ‘Best Minds’ and Shared Aspirations to NSWC Dahlgren Division

 “Sailors depend upon you to give them a ship with a technological edge. NEEC (Naval Engineering Education Consortium) will provide the best minds and training to give the Sailors the technological edge they rely on.”

Ten years later, the words of former U.S. Sen. Carl Levin – keynote speaker at the NEEC kick-off in 2010 – are ringing true at Naval Surface Warfare Center Dahlgren Division (NSWCDD) and being manifested at the University of Texas at Arlington through two brothers.

Alex Johnston, PhD student, and Cameron Johnston, sophomore, are among the ‘best minds’ in the NEEC, a Naval Sea Systems Command (NAVSEA) program that cultivates a world-class naval engineering workforce through student participation in project-based research conducted at colleges and universities.

Directed by how to become a computer engineer Warfare Center headquarters and implemented at 10 Divisions across the country, NEEC projects target the Navy’s most relevant technology needs.

“The NEEC program is important for the hiring, development, maintenance and sustainment of the technical knowledge base that is crucial to the execution of our undersea and surface warfare missions, which are critical to the Navy and the nation,” Naval Surface & Undersea Warfare Centers Executive Director Dr. Brett Seidle states in the third annual NEEC “Proceedings,” which highlights ongoing and future naval research projects for the Navy. “With over 50 grants awarded to U.S. universities, the NEEC program continues to seek and hire talented students in critical and specialized fields, which are particularly important in this world of rapidly changing technology.”

No comments:

Post a Comment

Etelix gives International Long-Distance voice administrations

Completely claimed auxiliary is a Miami, Florida-based global telecom transporter established in 2008 that gives telecom and innovation arra...