HSET Day shows nuts and bolts of robots, sciences

By Lana Sweeten-Shults
GCU News Bureau

After being released on bail, Ann Dercover disappears! Fortunately, investigators were carefully monitoring her network activity before she skipped town.

“We believe Ann may have communicated with her boyfriend, Mr. X, before she left,” said the police chief. “The packet capture may contain clues to her whereabouts.”

Cybersecurity event specialist Eric Roberts takes students through a digital forensics activity. Their mission: to decode emails and try and nab a suspected robber. (Photo by Lana Sweeten-Shults)

It’s up to you, the department’s ace forensic investigator, to bring this reprobate, Ann Dercover, to justice – and to custody. The department is counting on you!

Such was the scene Wednesday in the Grand Canyon University Technology Building, where cybersecurity event specialist Eric Roberts laid out the mission for the high school students in the audience – one they chose to accept.

It was just one of the presentations in the University’s academic arsenal that GCU students and faculty unfurled for the popular Health Sciences, Engineering and Technology Day, presented by the Marketing Department’s ground event planning team.

More than 950 students from 50 schools also toured engineering, nursing, DNA and cadaver labs; meandered through exhibitor booths; and listened to speakers extol the wonders of everything from "Google Hacking" to "Why Is There a Robot in my Operating Room?"

Biomedical engineering associate professor David Kwartowitz conducts the "Why Is There a Robot in my Operating Room?" session. (Photo by Travis Neely)

Via some gingerly executed computer hacking, Roberts challenged students to unravel Ann’s email address, her email password, her boyfriend’s email address and the items Ann told her boyfriend to bring with him to their rendezvous.

Roberts launched into some of the tools forensic detectives use, such as Wireshark, what he called a “packet sniffer” – a program that targets packets of data transmitted over the internet (it can unravel coded emails, for example).

“A hacker, on open wifi, can see pretty much everything you’re doing,” said Roberts, who advised the class to use a VPN, or virtual private network, to secure their data.

Using Wireshark, Roberts and the students in the audience were able to uncover Ann Dercover’s email address, her boyfriend’s email and messages, such as: Meet me and “bring your fake passport.”

Crime solved. Forensic investigator saves the day.

GCU biology major Dylan Nigh (right) talks to high school students about his research, "Antibiotic Presence in Locally Sold Meat." (Photo by Lana Sweeten-Shults)

Just outside the digital forensics session, in the hallway, GCU technology students manned poster presentations of various projects. Biology major Dylan Nigh was busy talking to students about a project he's working on, “Antibiotic Presence in Locally Sold Meat.”

Across campus in the Engineering Building, electrical engineering technology instructor Ed Koeneman led a session dubbed “The Robots are Coming!”

He showed video of some amazing robot accomplishments: robots riding on bicycles, mimicking the movement of dogs, doing back flips and gingerly turning doorknobs.

The robot turning a doorknob: “That’s a milestone,” Koeneman said.

Then he showed an eerily human-looking robot called Sophia, who he said was made a citizen of Saudi Arabia, likely to give the project a publicity push.

“Do robots deserve citizenship? Do they have character? They gave her all the rights a normal human would have," he said. “You, as robotics designers of the future, you can program robots to do something special. But robots have their place. There are ethical considerations you’ll have to wrestle with.”

Melanie Mize, an administrator at Glendale Christian Academy, attended HSET Day – and the “The Robots are Coming!” session -- with juniors and seniors from her school who expressed an interest in engineering and pre-med.

“It (events like HSET Day) encourages them to have an open mind to all the beautiful things to learn out there,” Mize said of exploring different careers.

A popular area was GCU HOSA-Future Health Care Professionals' suture station. (Photo by Travis Neely)

GCU senior marketing event planner Cara Jorgensen said introducing high schoolers to STEM careers is a focus for the University, which has put a lot of emphasis on STEM in the last few years.

“The goal for GCU is to showcase the Health Sciences, Engineering and Technology programs. It is an opportunity for us to show all the different lab spaces we have to offer, for current GCU students to display their research through a poster display, and for GCU faculty in the programs to interact with prospective students,” Jorgensen said.

Ana Acuna and Jiana Serrano, both sophomores at Bisbee High School, were in the Technology Building for the Exercise Showcase. It was where two pre-physical therapy majors, sophomore Payton Greer and senior Natasha Opoku, showed them equipment used for exercise tests, such as the spacey, egg-shaped Bod Pod, which measures body mass; a machine that measures pulse wave velocity (the stiffness of one’s arteries); and a machine that measures VO2 max, or how much oxygen a person is pushing out and breathing in.

“A lot of Olympic athletes go through testing like this to see where they are (healthwise),” said Opoku.

The equipment can be found in GCU’s Health Intelligence and Programming Clinic, which was started by the campus’ Student Wellness and Health Association.

Acuna said her favorite part of HSET Day was touring the cadaver lab.

“My favorite was that and the booth where we did stitches,” Serrano said of the GCU HOSA-Future Health Professionals’ popular suture station. She said attending HSET Day was a boon for her because “I want to go into the medical field.”

High school students put together magnetically held-together modular robots out of Cubelets at the Grand Canyon University Robotics Club's booth. (Photo by Travis Neely)

Ninth-grader Mariana Soto made it to campus from Nogales High School. About 11 students from her school made the trip.

Her favorite area, of course: the cadaver lab.

“I want to be a pediatrician,” she said as she waited in line at the suture station, one of many booths outside that featured activities such as the Plyo Olympics (a plyometrics challenge) and magnetic Cubelets at the Robotics Club booth, where students could put together modular robots.

Athletic training major Yasmine Dorsey, a senior, helped man the hydration and heat illness booth.

“We’re teaching people how to properly hydrate themselves, not only in the summer but the winter months,” she said as she shared the knowledge she has learned in her time at the University.

Daija Rogers (second from right) shows HSET Day attendees some of the items she and fellow mechanical engineering majors have made in GCU's labs, including 3D-printed rocks and a catapult made of laser-cut wood pieces. (Photo by Travis Neely)

GCU’s chapter of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers displayed 3D-printed rocks and a laser-cut wood catapult to high school students along with circuits and a 3D-printed T.Rex.

Junior mechanical engineering major Daija Rogers said the club wanted to show high schoolers all the neat things GCU’s mechanical engineering students are doing in the University’s labs.

She didn’t know how to use power tools before coming to GCU. “I don’t have a background, but I can go in there and ask, ‘Hey, can I use this?’”

Nick Gee, also a junior mechanical engineering major, said it’s what he loves about GCU: seeing what’s written on paper come to fruition in the labs – not just theory, but application.

“I’ll say, ‘OK. That works! I’m glad we have the shops and 3D printers. I can say, ‘Hey, can I do this?’ The answer: ‘Yeah.’”

No forensic investigation required.

You can reach GCU senior writer Lana Sweeten-Shults at [email protected] or at 602-639-7901.

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