 Advice that I have for future Purdue Engineering students is to have patience. There's so much to learn. Enjoy learning it and just keep your head up looking around for all those opportunities because at Purdue you'll find them. Regardless of your age, get a mentor. It is fundamental to our career, to our progression, to advise ideas, to improved outcomes by having a sounding board for the things that we do. My advice is to get involved. There are amazing opportunities here and it all starts with you taking that first step. Ask your professors questions during class and after class. Some of the conversations I had outside of class were the most formative for me in terms of understanding where I might go in my future career. Take advantage of all of it. The coursework, the classwork, it's important. Focus on it. Work on your grades. But don't forget to take the opportunity for student organizations, for extracurricular activities that are going to give you those extra opportunities and memories that will go with you for the rest of your life. Advice for current and future Purdue Engineering students would include, absolutely go out, get that internship, participate in cooperative education. Really is good to see what's going on in the outside world before you complete your education. Advice I would recommend is always try to get as much hands-on experience as possible. When you graduate and you start working on systems, really we want people that are comfortable working with hardware and you learn a lot when you develop hardware in terms of how to modify your engineering design principles in order to produce things that are manufacturable and can be much easier in order to solve the complex problems that we're asked to do. My advice to current and future Purdue students would be to seek out and say yes to new opportunities. Your coursework is very important, but you still should find new horizons and explore things that you might not be aware of because they might show you new chances and new things you didn't even know existed. One advice that I would give is to try to take advantage of other opportunities that are here at Purdue. In addition to the academic activities such as clubs, student organizations, I think those really serve to enrich the experience of students while they're here. Really also take the time to push your limits and get comfortable being uncomfortable because if you do that, you will never stop learning and you will go far in your career.