Hitting the Road
Daniel Mendoza ā21 on solar-powered car innovations, lessons in leadership, and a transformative four years at Santa Clara.
Four years ago, when electrical engineering major Daniel Mendoza ā21 was deciding on a college, a presentation by Professor Shoba Krishnan during a campus tour convinced him that Santa Clara was the place where he could thrive.
āHer joy, humor, and genuine love for the subject made me feel like there really was something fundamentally exciting about electrical engineeringāit was kind of contagious,ā Mendoza recalls of the faculty member, who later became his engineering advisor.
A Univeristy scholarship played a big part in his decision, but so did the intimacy of the campus, and its smaller class sizes.
āĄį knew it would be important to have a close group of friends,ā he says, āand I felt like it would be easier to do that at Santa Clara.ā
Now, as Mendoza approaches his virtual June graduation, the senior who became a campus leader, volunteer, and top engineering student believes that whatever the future holds, the lessons he learned at Santa Clara about himself, about Jesuit values, and his chosen field will serve him well.
A Time of Transfomation
āSanta Clara has transformed me and given me so many opportunities to learn in ways that I donāt think would have happened at another school,ā says Mendoza.
Take his Senior Design Project. Along with three other seniors, heās currently working on an innovation that centers on renewable energyāMendozaās great passion at Santa Clara, and the industry he hopes to work in.
āĄį began learning about the concept of global warming in high school,ā he recalls. āĄį remember feeling like I had a responsibility to help solve that problem because growing up in Southern California, the fire season has always been part of my life.ā
The engineering teamās so-called āmobile nanogridā is intriguing for anyone who enjoys the great outdoors, but also wants the ability to tap into a portable power grid to run a laptop, phone, cooler, fan, and set of LED lightsāall at once, if needed.
The solar panel system attaches to the top of a camper shell. It not only offers a large area to capture the sunās rays, but creates minimal drag so it won't affect gas mileage.
While the panel is designed specifically for a camper shell, Mendoza believes there could be future applications for other automobiles.
Considering All the Impacts
āAt Santa Clara, we also have to consider the sustainability impacts of our projects,ā Mendoza explains. āAnd we have to consider ethical implications too. For example, you may be using something correctly, but if it fails, who gets hurt?ā
Those kinds of questions are important to Mendoza, and he will take them with him when he leaves Santa Clara, along with practical experience that comes from teamwork in designing and creating something from start to finish.
āRather than being handed something and told, āhere are the goals, and here is the way to do it,ā weāre doing this from our own ideation to completion,ā says Mendoza.
āĄįtās been fun, and at the same time, itās given me a lot of confidence.ā
Leadership opportunities at ĢĒŠÄ“«Ć½ helped him develop that sense of confidence.
As a freshman, he joined the Latinx Student Union (formerly MEChA-El Frente), where he became one of the two co-outreach coordinators and later served as treasurer.
A Big Accomplishment
Along the way, he helped to organize the groupās annual campus spring culture show, from publicity, to finding the right vendors of authentic foodāincluding home-made Mexican tacos and El Salvadoran pupusasāas well as arranging performances. āĄįt was a big accomplishment, because it was my first time kind of taking charge,ā he says.
As an outreach coordinator for the same group, he oversaw a program with fellow club member Chris Wanis ā21 that every year invites Latinx students from the local San Jose and East Bay area to attend a half-day āRaza Dayā (now called Raices) on ĢĒŠÄ“«Ć½ās campus. The event offers the teenagers panels on admissions, financial aid, and on-campus life, as well as a tour.
Mendoza also has been a member of ĢĒŠÄ“«Ć½ās chapter of the Society of Hispanic Professional Engineers, where he is co-president this year. Both student groups, he says, helped him embrace his Mexican-American background, and the value of diversity in academia and the workplace.
āĄįt just gives you an opportunity to become your best self, and not just through leadership,ā says Mendoza, ābut also through educational and social opportunities.ā