Kansas Engineer - Fall 2021

Page 40

ALUMNI NEWS

Alumnus Honors Professor with Gift to KU Department of Chemical & Petroleum Engineering

Z

ack Holland didn’t know he wanted to be a petroleum engineer. But an opportunity to study the subject at the University of Kansas on scholarship sent him down that path. Holland’s experience inspired him give back to KU with a $600,000 gift honoring influential professor Don Green in the Department of Chemical & Petroleum Engineering. Holland grew up in Sublette, and his father worked as a lease operator in the Hugoton gas field in the southwestern part of the state. Some local industry organizations offered scholarships for students who wanted to study petroleum engineering, and Holland was chosen as a recipient. He decided on KU, the only petroleum engineering program in the state. “That this started because there happened to be scholarships available says a lot about the power of scholarships and how they can change the trajectory of the choices in your life,” Holland said. He graduated with distinction from KU in 1996, earning a bachelor’s degree in petroleum engineering. He began a successful career in the field, which led him from Liberal, Kansas, to Tulsa, Oklahoma, to Oklahoma City, and finally to Denver. He now lives in Englewood, Colorado, with his wife, Melissa, and their three daughters. Green made a powerful first impression: He taught Holland’s Introduction to Engineering class. He even managed to make classes like heat transfer interesting, according

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by Joel Mathis to Holland. “He was an energetic and engaging teacher,” Holland said. “He does plenty of academic research, but he’s a teacher at heart.” Green, who retired in 2009 after 45 years of teaching at KU, won KU’s Honor for the Outstanding Progressive Educator (or H.O.P.E.) Award in 1988 and was a finalist seven more times. (H.O.P.E. is the only KU award for teaching excellence bestowed exclusively by students.) He received the School of Engineering Gould Award for Outstanding Teaching five times and in 2001 received the Chancellors Club Teaching Award. He is also a 2015 recipient the School of Engineering’s Distinguished Engineering Service Award, the highest honor bestowed by the school. Green said part of his recipe for success as an educator was to treat students with respect, as if they were junior colleagues. “I always conveyed to them that ‘I am on your side’ and I wanted them to succeed,” Green said. “Having students like Zack succeed both as a student and then later in his chosen career path is one of the most rewarding aspects of being a professor.” Holland’s gift elevates a fellowship previously established in Green’s name that was initiated and funded mainly by former students. That fellowship is now the Don W. Green Chemical & Petroleum Engineering Professorship. The fund may also be used to support undergraduate

Zack and Melissa Holland donated $600,000 to honor influential professor Don Green in the Department of Chemical & Petroleum Engineering.

research and teaching fellowships as well as graduate student fellowships. Susan Williams, the KU chemical and petroleum engineering department chair, is excited about the opportunities the professorship will provide. “Don Green’s passion for teaching and love for the students is inspirational, and he has been a great mentor and example of what it means to be an educator,” Williams said. “This gift recognizes our faculty’s commitment to teaching and strengthens the department and the School of Engineering. We are tremendously grateful to Zack and Melissa for their support.” Arvin Agah, dean of the KU School of Engineering, said that Green’s influence will carry forward a legacy of teaching excellence. “Zack and Melissa’s generosity advances the School of Engineering as a leader in research and teaching. We deeply appreciate all they have done for KU Engineering,” Agah said. “It is extremely fitting that this gift honors such an influential and beloved faculty member as Don Green. He has helped generations of KU Engineering students succeed in the classroom and beyond, and Zack is a prime example of that.”


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Articles inside

Donor and Industry Recognition

34min
pages 43-52

Recent Graduate Advisory Board Aims to Strengthen Relationships with Alumni

2min
pages 41-42

Gift to KU Department of Chemical & Petroleum Engineering Honors Professor

3min
page 40

KU Engineering Launches Career Accelerator Lecture Series

1min
page 39

Alumni Profiles

2min
page 38

KU Bioengineering Program Awarded Grant to Expand Opportunities for Underrepresented Students

3min
page 37

Haskell Indian Nations University KU Engineering Partner to Develop ‘Center for Justice’

4min
pages 33-34

Civil Engineering Master’s Student Lands Prestigious Fellowship

2min
page 31

KU Leading Program to Bring Teachers into Research Labs Design Education to Draw Diverse Scholars to Engineering

4min
pages 35-36

Student Achievements

2min
page 32

Engineering Student Earns Prestigious Astronaut Scholarship

3min
page 30

KU Engineering Achieves Record Highs in Degrees Awarded

1min
page 29

‘DeepRacer’ Competition Sharpens Programming Coding Skills

2min
page 28

KU Engineering Professors Wins Prestigious Fellowship for Bridge Lifespan Research

2min
page 23

Bumper Scooter Redesign Creates Opportunities for Toddler

4min
pages 26-27

Farokhi Receives National Recognition for Career Achievement

3min
page 24

Faculty Achievements

1min
page 25

Blunt Named Finalist for A.F. Harvey Engineering Research Prize

3min
page 22

Study: Constructed Wetlands Offer Best Protection for Agricultural Runoff

3min
pages 20-21

KU Working to Advance Gas Separation with Green Materials

4min
pages 18-19

Researchers Will Develop Green Technology to Recycle Refrigerants That Drive Climate Change

4min
pages 16-17

KU Awarded Grant to Study Transportation Needs for Underrepresented Youth in KC Metro

3min
pages 14-15

Sutley Named Associate Dean for Diversity, Equity Inclusion & Belonging

3min
pages 7-8

At-Home COVID-19 Test Developed at KU Moves Toward Production

2min
pages 9-10

KU Engineering Partners with Kansas Community to Test Energy-Efficient Materials

3min
page 11

Celebrating 50 Years of Diversity & Women’s Programs

5min
pages 5-6

KU Research Aims to Help People With Cognitive Impairments Use Automated Driving Systems

4min
pages 12-13
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