School of Chemical Sciences   |   College of Liberal Arts & Sciences  |   College of Engineering

 

William S. Hammack

William S. Hammack

Contact Information:
e-mail:
phone: (217) 244-4146
fax: (217) 333-5052

203 Roger Adams Lab
MC-712, Box C-3
600 S. Mathews Ave.
Urbana, IL 61801

Professor
B.S., Michigan Technological University, 1984
M.S., University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, 1986
Ph.D, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, 1988

TEACHING THE PUBLIC ABOUT ENGINEERING

Bill Hammack focuses on explaining engineering and technology to the general public. His goal is to enhance "engineering awareness" and to add a human face to the engineering enterprise. He does this through several venues: (1) via commentaries on public radio, (2) by teaching an innovative course to students who are not majoring in science and engineering, (3) through public speaking, and (4) through books and magazine articles.

PUBLIC RADIO PROGRAM

Every week for the last couple of years Hammack has produced an essay focusing on common articles found in everyday life. In this program, called Engineering & Life, he's described how the invention of Velcro was inspired by a walk in the woods that left an engineer's socks covered with burrs. Hammack has discussed the origins of the typewriter and of potholes, as well as the amazing career of Leon Theremin, who in the 1920s invented an early electronic instrument that would eventually inspire the development of the synthesizer, and who was later kidnapped by the KGB. Another piece described the story of Spam the canned meat, not the electronic variety.

His talks lasting just two or three minutes, are distributed across the state by Illinois Public Radio, and can be heard in Urbana-Champaign on Tuesdays. They are broadcast on WILL AM 580 at 7:20 and 9:20 in the morning. The radio pieces are available nationally at his web site.

TEACHING NON-MAJORS ABOUT ENGINEERING

His course, The Hidden World of Engineering, is taught every semester to a diverse mix of students majoring in commerce, architecture, photography, history, and graphic arts. This popular course gives students an appreciation for engineering and for how engineers think. It is taught in a unique way that lets the students work in teams and actually do engineering

PUBLIC SPEAKING

Professor Hammack uses the stories he has gathered to speak to the public about engineering. For example, he recently gave a keynote address to the top 100 Graduating Seniors of the University of Illinois, talked to a local service club about engineering, and helped kick off the opening of the Women in Engineering Summer camp. His speeches may be read at his web site