Graduating engineer named Mr. Bearcat

Mechanical engineering grad honored by Sigma Sigma

For nearly a century, honorary fraternity Sigma Sigma has honored one University of Cincinnati graduate each year with the title of Mr. Bearcat. This award is given to an individual who has displayed commitment to the university through academic success, leadership in diverse settings and significant contributions to UC. 

This year's recipient is Alex van Haaren.

Van Haaren is receiving his undergraduate degree in mechanical engineering with a minor in computer science from the College of Engineering and Applied Science (CEAS). Students in this college complete a five-year program in which they alternate between semesters of classroom instruction and real-world learning, working full time as a co-op in the engineering field. However, the rigors of his academic schedule did not bar him from making a campus-wide impact at UC. 

"All of van Haaren's academic success and consistent involvement is made more impressive by his continued Bearcat enthusiasm," said the Student Alumni Council, who nominated van Haaren. 

Within his five years, he has held many leadership positions including UC Student Government Executive Director of Career Services, Career Fair Coordinator, CEAS Tribunal President, undergraduate student government senator and more. Van Haaren never expected this to be his path at UC. Admittedly, he chose UC on a whim and came from a long line of engineers, so he chose to study engineering. 

"I arrived at the University of Cincinnati as an aspiring mechanical engineer with no idea of the journey I was about to embark on," said Alex van Haaren, Mr. Bearcat 2023. 

He hit the ground running at CEAS. In his first year, he became the Career Fair Coordinator for Tribunal, which acted as a catalyst for the rest of his UC journey. Leading the career fair and witnessing his peers' success motivated him to do more. 

Being selected for this award is truly an incredible feeling. To be amongst such a long history of distinguished individuals who have won Mr. Bearcat is exciting, yet humbling.

Alex van Haaren, 2023 Mr. Bearcat

Alex Van Haaren at the CEAS Expo 2023

Alex van Haaren at the 2023 CEAS EXPO. Photo/provided.

"I decided I was going to do all I could for my university and become the best leader and community servant I could be," he said. 

As the Career Fair Coordinator, van Haaren successfully coordinated and assisted with 10 biannual career fairs, hosting more than 300 companies and 3,000 students, leading to more than 500 jobs. Additionally, he created programming for international students to help them find co-ops. 

In his second year, he became a USG Senator and advocated for voter registration and the Aunt Flow free menstrual product program within the college. He mentored three students and found that mentorship was a passion of his. He took this into his third year, becoming the VP of Collegiate Affairs for CEAS Tribunal, where he collaborated with more than 60 organizations to promote inclusivity. He personally mentored 15 students. 

In his fourth year, van Haaren was the president of CEAS Tribunal and a prominent student leader in the college. Within that year, he restored the CEAS EXPO, a college-wide event to showcase the capstone projects of graduating seniors, something that had not happened since 2009. In its first year, there were 90 projects presented. In 2023, only the second year of the restored event, the numbers more than doubled with 200+ projects. 

In his fifth and final year as a Bearcat student, he dedicated his time to mentoring first-year students as part of Tribunal's internship program. His goal as a mentor was to pass on the knowledge he gained at CEAS to the incoming class. 

Van Haaren has certainly made a significant contribution to the University of Cincinnati, CEAS and the many students he mentored. 

"UC was the best choice I ever made, and I would not change it for the world," he said. 

Featured image at top: Alex van Haaren. Photo/provided. 

Related Stories

3171 Results
1

We love ‘Lucy’ — the AI avatar redefining UC tech transfer

July 17, 2024

In a visionary leap at the University of Cincinnati, the marriage of artificial intelligence and interactive technology has birthed "Lucy," a Smarthelp AI avatar poised to revolutionize how regional industries engage with UC's tech transfer initiatives.

2

NIS program opens new horizons for international student

July 17, 2024

In his pursuit of physics and a taste for research, Akash Khanikor ventured from his hometown in India's Assam to the University of Cincinnati, drawn by the promise of hands-on exploration early in his undergraduate career as a NEXT Innovation Scholar.

3

Camp aims to empower children, teens who stutter

July 17, 2024

A one-week, evidence-based program for children and teens who stutter at the University of Cincinnati will teach kids to communicate effectively, advocate for themselves and develop confidence about their communication abilities. Camp Dream. Speak. Live., which is coming to Cincinnati for the first time July 22-26, began in 2014 at the University of Texas at Austin. The Arthur M. Blank Center for Stuttering Education and Research at UT expects to serve more than 2,000 children at camps across the United States, Africa, Asia and Europe this year.

4

UC Blue Ash takes next step in major renovation project

July 17, 2024

Muntz Hall, the flagship building on the University of Cincinnati Blue Ash College campus, is in the next phase of a major renovation project that will dramatically transform the main entrance, enhance access to student support services and add new spaces for students to study or meet between classes.

7

Presidential challenge to UC: Join Ride Cincinnati to fight cancer

July 16, 2024

UC President Neville Pinto has again challenged every UC college and unit to send at least one rider to the September 14 Ride Cincinnati event to help fundraise for cancer research and cancer care. UC students ride free. Signup by July 31 for free UC-branded cycling jersey.

8

Building potential

July 16, 2024

Unexpected advice led to a new area of interest and growth for Andrew Matthews, leading him to the University of Cincinnati’s College of Engineering and Applied Science, construction management and cooperative education experiences at Turner Construction.

9

Students organize to shake up Parkinson's care model

July 15, 2024

University of Cincinnati student and Parkinson's Together founder Mallika Desai joined the Parkinson's Experience Podcast to discuss the nonprofit's origins and multidisciplinary mission to meet the needs of patients in their community.

10

New Carnegie classification focuses on leadership

July 15, 2024

Inside Higher Ed features the new Carnegie Elective Classification for Leadership for Public Purpose. The University of Cincinnati is among 25 schools with the designation. .Institutions in this classification are trying to take deliberate steps to foster leadership across campus that transcends parties and political positions and aligns with the well-being of society.