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Shreveport Reporter

Sunday, November 24, 2024

COES doctoral student leads through service

Katya Opel began planning her  college career in middle school. As a child, she knew she’d earn a  doctorate – even if she wasn’t quite sure what she would study. Her path  would become clear to her in high school when she interned with  Principal Engineering, Inc., a civil engineering firm in Mandeville.

Opel earned her second Louisiana Tech degree in May 2022 with her  Master of Science in Civil Engineering and is currently researching how  natural hazards like flooding affect residential buildings for her  doctoral studies. Opel has been conducting this research with her  advisor, Dr. Elizabeth Matthews (Assistant Professor of Civil  Engineering), since she was an undergraduate, and it has allowed her to  develop skills to solve problems that affect Louisiana.

“Growing  up in south Louisiana, I am no stranger to hurricanes and flooding and  the devastation they wreak,” Opel said. “After the 2019 tornado that hit  Ruston, I knew I needed to be a part of natural hazard mitigation and  restoration. Natural disasters have always been fascinating, and I have  always wanted to do more in those times of need. I never expected my  degree to be able to be integrated with natural disasters, but it has,  and I could not be more excited for my future. I plan to enter the  industry and would like to travel the world helping those in need  following natural disasters and also working on mitigation efforts to  prevent extreme devastation. In the future, I would like to return to  academia to work as a professor, providing education on resilient  construction, mitigation efforts, and disaster recovery.”

When she’s not studying how to build stronger, safer, and more  cost-effective infrastructure, Opel is providing leadership for  undergraduate students. In addition to providing leadership in her  research group, she is still actively involved in the student chapter of  the American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE), where she tries to  balance providing guidance to the undergraduate members and letting them  discover solutions on their own.

Over the last year, she worked tirelessly planning for Louisiana Tech  to host the American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE) Concrete Canoe  Competition+ for the first time. On top of scheduling competition  events, she and the ASCE Planning Committee worked to ensure that  facilities, housing, and meals were available for the more than 400  students and guests who attended, and the committee raised funds to  offset much of the cost.

Opel got plenty of leadership experience as an undergraduate,  becoming a paddler for the ASCE Concrete Canoe team her first year at  Louisiana Tech and serving as president of the chapter her senior year.  In her junior year, Louisiana Tech hosted the Deep South Regional  Conference, which she helped coordinate. She says the most significant  hurdle she had to overcome was the need to get perfect results. Her  advice to students who follow in her footsteps is to look past  perfection.

“The most important thing I learned as an undergraduate was that you  will never know everything. As engineers, we tend to focus on perfection  and need to know everything, especially for exams. Realistically, that  is impossible, and you will spend your whole career and life learning  new things daily. As a graduate student, I learned to put myself out  there; the worst someone can say is no. Apply for the position, submit  the research abstract to the conference, put in the bid to host an  international conference, and talk to the new person.”

Original source can be found here.

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