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Aero engineering takes off this fall at 麻豆区

Wed, Sep 24, 2025

Starting this fall, an aerospace engineering concentration is now being offered at 麻豆区. The addition adds strength to an already nationally respected engineering program, which recently rose to its highest ranking ever (#38) on U.S. News & World Report鈥檚 best undergraduate engineering programs list. 
 
Since the program was officially announced last fall, it鈥檚 drawn a lot of interest from both incoming and current students.

An unique opportunity

鈥淚 was looking at other smaller Christian schools and a lot of them didn鈥檛 have engineering in general, and I specifically wanted to go into aerospace,鈥 said Kyle Chakery 鈥29, a first-year student from Grand Prairie, Texas. 鈥淪o, Calvin鈥檚 program drew me in and knowing it was the first year was really exciting.鈥 
 
鈥淚 think it鈥檚 the first Christian college to have an aero program,鈥 said Juan Moon 鈥27, a junior who grew up in South Korea and Thailand. 鈥淭ying aerospace engineering and Christian values together is so valuable when you go into industry because it helps set your heart posture to appropriately focus on the right things.鈥

A seasoned first-year program

While the program is in its infancy, aerospace engineering majors at Calvin are encouraged that the professors they are learning from have vast industry experience. Ken Visser spent a decade working at NASA and Boeing, including helping design the Boeing 767-400ER. His groundbreaking contributions to the field of aerodynamics led to him being honored as an Associate Fellow of the AIAA earlier this year. While Visser assumes a leading role in launching the new aerospace engineering program, he is part of a team of faculty colleagues with aerospace experience, including鈥Matt Heun, who worked with NASA鈥檚 Jet Propulsion Laboratory before teaching at Calvin, and鈥Fred Haan, whose specialty is experimental aerodynamics, to name a couple.鈥

鈥淚 am excited about learning aero here because the profs who are part of the aero program have a lot of experience up their sleeves. They鈥檝e been everywhere, done everything,鈥 said Ava Ibrahim, a sophomore from Whitinsville, Massachusetts. 鈥淭he education I am going to get is going to be valuable, which is a solid foundation.鈥

Christ-centered values add value

But students say it鈥檚 more than just being prepared with all the technical skills.

鈥淭here are a lot of profs here who I believe are overqualified based on what they鈥檝e achieved in industry, but they are here because they found God was calling them to be here in the first place and I feel that鈥檚 a gift for the students,鈥 said Moon. 鈥淭hey teach more than just technical things. Yes, the profs are qualified to teach those aspects, but they go beyond to relate these technical aspects to Christian values, showing us how to live in industry guided by what you believe in.鈥

Passionate professors, caring mentors

What the students in the aero program find most valuable is something common to all disciplines at Calvin鈥攑rofessors who are passionate about their field and committed to personally knowing each of their students.

鈥淚 really appreciate the passion of the professors that I have. They care a lot about the material and it鈥檚 easy to follow along with lectures when you can tell they have a passion in what they are doing and a lot of real world experience to share with the class,鈥 said Michael Liggett, a junior from Rockford, Michigan.

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Professors and students in Calvin's aerospace engineering program.

鈥淥n my visit to campus last year, I got to have a one-on-one visit with Ken Visser, and we chatted for 20-30 minutes, and he was amazing to talk to. We talked about planes, some of the Apollo missions, and it was really exciting. You could see the passion he has for aerospace. I love that he has a major passion for exploration, design, creativity, and critical thinking,鈥 said Chakery. 鈥淣ow, as a student, I feel the professors are very easy to talk to, specifically Visser, and I鈥檓 not afraid to ask questions if I鈥檓 confused.鈥

Going beyond aero helps other skills take off

Beyond the proximity to professors who serve as both industry experts and mentors, students in Calvin鈥檚 aero program also see the immense value of a liberal arts education.

鈥淚 think a lot of engineering requires good written and verbal communication, and I know that the liberal arts education I鈥檓 getting at Calvin will be most helpful in those areas: reading, writing, and speaking,鈥 said Ibrahim. 鈥淪o, it鈥檚 been so good to have an oral rhetoric class for engineers.鈥

Ibrahim is also grateful for the opportunity to take sociology and psychology classes. 鈥淟earning the way people around you think is really helpful and I think some people would miss out on having that knowledge, how to integrate into society without a liberal arts education.鈥

鈥淚t [a liberal arts education] just expands your broadness of thought. You get a wider scope of what there is out there theologically and philosophically, which I think is unique and important in understanding engineering design as well,鈥 said Chakery. 鈥淲e talk about moral norms in engineering design which means stuff has to be up to code morally, ethically, and physically, because some of the stuff you build will have an impact on other people, so you would have to build that with a broad scope in mind.鈥

Learn more about the aerospace engineering program at Calvin.

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