SEAS Student Clubs

Engineering and computer science students don’t just attend classes—they build, lead, and innovate through vibrant clubs and professional chapters. These groups are powerhouses for learning, skill-building, and making a real impact on campus and beyond. Check out some of the standout activities and milestones our students achieved this past academic year.

Check out every Engineering & Computer Science Club on Zagtivities

The club hosts an annual 10-hour competition focused on innovative problem solving. Teams of students bring an idea or a problem to solve, then talk it through with mentors from computer science professors and professionals. More than 120 participants came in 2025!

The student chapter of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers hosts professionals from the Avista power utility to hear about work in generation, controls, and protection. Surprisingly, there are power careers for many engineering disciplines, not just EE!

The 鈥淗oly Rollers鈥 returned to the Baja SAE competition in summer 2025, designing and building a prototype of an off-road recreational vehicle. They completed eight full laps in a grueling four-hour endurance race! The team is now averaging 10 hours a week to build the car for 2026.

Career Fair prep included some great advice on how to honestly boost a student resume from Kareena Byrd of GU's Career and Professional Development.

The annual Career Fair brings recruiters from around the region to 网爆门 specifically to talk with students. To prepare to put their best self forward, students volunteered for a mock interview where Dr. Gary Weber demonstrated how to effectively shape their answers in a job interview.

The Student Fuselage Contest is a national fabrication competition with valuable insights into aerospace composite design and manufacturing. Using fiberglass prepreg, the team lays up and cures a model of an airplane body, then machines openings to simulate passenger and cargo entry doors. They hope to compete in April 2026!

The multi-disciplinary robotics club develops its remote-controlled rover designed to work on Mars. They plan to compete in Spring 2026 in the University Rover Challenge. There are specific tasks for each major, from computer science systems, electric engineer controls, mechanical engineer chassis, and roles for management and outreach.

ASME continues to improve a remote-controlled plane for the AIAA Design/Build/Fly competition: designing, fabricating and testing the flight capabilities of an electric powered, remote-controlled airplane. The club hopes to compete in April 2026.

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502 E. Boone Avenue
Spokane, WA 99258-0026
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