Impact Award, Fall 2018
Tyrine Jamella Pangan
Tyrine Pangan’s family moved to the United States from the Philippines, their native country in Southeast Asia, when she was a child. She recalls hearing stories as she grew up about how education brought people out of poverty.
“My parents made a lot of sacrifices to earn their college degrees and that enabled my family to have a better life,” Pangan says.
The educational opportunities Pangan was provided have motivated her “to use my privilege to help others and to give back to the community,” she says.
IMPACT Awards recognize graduating students in Arizona State University’s Ira A. Fulton Schools of Engineering who have contributed to the betterment of fellow students and to communities beyond the university.
Pangan’s efforts fulfilled those criteria in exceptional fashion.
Through the Fulton Schools’ GlobalResolve organization, she joined projects to help people in developing countries gain access to basic resources such as energy and clean water — work that took her to the African country of Kenya twice.
With another Fulton Schools group, SolarSPELL, Pangan traveled to the Pacific islands of Tonga and Vanuatu to help train U.S. Peace Corps volunteers to use a solar-powered learning library tool in their classrooms.
Study-abroad programs broadened her international educational endeavors with trips to Paris, Berlin and Brussels.
As an undergraduate research assistant to Fulton Schools Associate Professor Shawn Jordan, Pangan helped to develop engineering curriculum for young students in Navajo Nation schools.
She worked at summer STEAM Machine camps where Navajo youngsters built rudimentary chain-reaction machines as a way to learn basic science, technology, engineering, art and math skills.
Though it all, Pangan says she learned that bringing technologies into underserved communities is not a surefire solution for societal challenges.
“You need to work directly with the communities and invest time in learning what their needs really are,” she says.
On ASU’s Polytechnic campus, Pangan was a Fulton Ambassador and a Barrett Honors Devil. Both groups gave campus tours and shared their university experiences with prospective ASU students and their parents.
She also was a Fulton Summer Academy camp counselor — helping to teach basic computer science concepts and robotics to students in the fourth, fifth and and sixth grades — and a field trip guide for students in a National Transportation Institute summer camp.
All the community outreach, teaching, mentoring and research has changed Pagan’s initial plans to seek a software engineering or computer engineering job in industry after graduation.
That array of experiences “inspired a passion” for a different career direction, she says. Next year, Pangan will begin studies for a doctoral degree in engineering education.
More exceptional graduates from Fall 2018

Michaela Starkey
Outstanding Graduate

Richard Mortensen
Outstanding Graduate

Ioana Raluca Mihalcescu
Outstanding Graduate

Thu Hoang
Outstanding Graduate

Tremayne Holland
Impact Award

Katelyn Kline
Impact Award

Kathryn White
Outstanding Graduate

Ian Cervantes
Outstanding Graduate

Sylvia Faszczewski
Outstanding Graduate

Philip Sitterle
Outstanding Graduate

Raveena John
Outstanding Graduate

Derrick Gilbert
Outstanding Graduate

George “Jeff” Heinzelman
Outstanding Graduate

Julia Liu
Outstanding Graduate

Zoë Wright
Outstanding Graduate

Daniel Travis
Outstanding Graduate

Nathanael Zuniga
Impact Award

Trae Waggoner
Impact Award

Philip Thomas
Outstanding Graduate

Matt W. Davis
Impact Award

Eric Mannix
Outstanding Graduate

Danh Truong
Convocation Speaker

Jacob (Jake) Chapman
Impact Award

Janice Wallace
Outstanding Graduate

Karthik Subramaniam Pushpavanam
Dean's Dissertation Award

Luke Oldham
Outstanding Graduate

Suhang Wang
Dean's Dissertation Award

Nicholas Akkerman
Outstanding Graduate

Francisco Brown-Muñoz
Impact Award

Jayden Booth
Impact Award

Molly Baker
Impact Award