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Passion for Cars Steers Graduating Senior into Mechanical Engineering

December 11, 2018
This Saturday, mechanical engineering major Vanessa Andrade will participate in the university’s second fall commencement ceremony.
This Saturday, mechanical engineering major Vanessa Andrade will participate in the university’s second fall commencement ceremony at The Art Kamangar Center at the historic Merced Theatre downtown.

Growing up in San Juan Bautista, Vanessa Andrade loved hanging out with her father and his collection of cars and tractors.

She spent hours in the “barn” or shop, helping change the oil in cars, playing with tools and tinkering with her grandfather’s old Allis-Chalmers tractor. So perhaps it’s no surprise that this UC Merced senior — and Chancellor’s Scholar — found her academic calling in mechanical engineering.

On Dec. 15, Andrade will participate in the university’s fall commencement ceremony. She next plans to pursue a master’s degree in mechanical engineering.

While she’s still weighing her initial career path after college, Andrade eventually hopes to follow the passion that took root in childhood.

“I’ve always been interested in cars,” she said. “My career goal would be to get into the automotive industry and design cars.”

Growing up, Andrade loved playing with tools and tinkering with her grandfather’s old Allis-Chalmers tractor.
Growing up, Andrade loved playing with tools and tinkering with her grandfather’s old Allis-Chalmers tractor.

Andrade was about 10 years old when she first started helping her dad, Greg, in the family shop. He works in manufacturing engineering, which she acknowledges as an influence on her path.

“If he wasn’t in engineering, I probably wouldn’t have known what it was,” Andrade said.

Academically, she excelled at math — even working as a tutor in high school — and her father and mother both encouraged her to take science and physics classes. But she wasn’t sure of her college plans until she was introduced to UC Merced and took a tour of the campus.

“This school is really what sold me,” Andrade said. “And I knew there were a lot of opportunities for internships here.”

She came to UC Merced as a first-year student in 2014; she first planned to study computer science. That lasted just one semester.

“It wasn’t for me,” Andrade said. Mechanical engineering was the perfect fit.

She wanted to pursue an engineering discipline that was expansive and flexible. Many industries — from automotive to food processing — need engineers who can design, develop and create everything from small parts to large systems.

Andrade was named a Chancellor's Scholar for her exemplary work in the classroom and her parents were right by her side.
Andrade was named a Chancellor's Scholar for her exemplary work in the classroom and her parents were right by her side to celebrate her achievement.
Andrade felt at home in the major and in classes with many other women.
“I feel like we almost don’t even think about it anymore,” she said of the number of female engineering classmates.
Throughout her semesters at UC Merced, Andrade found friends and supportive classmates along with helpful professors. She also took advantage of various internships and other opportunities.
In an Engineering Service Learning class, she worked on a project to design a more efficient way to pump water to cattle on campus land leased to ranchers. The goal was to swap a diesel-powered pump with one powered by solar panels.
“That was a good introduction into the real-world engineering design process,” Andrade said.

I feel like there is a strong connection between the students and the professors. I love UC Merced — I wouldn’t have gone to another school.

Vanessa Andrade