What participants say …
Hoopla Rack, third place and $4,000, 2008 Schoofs Prize for Creativity; third place and $700, Tong Prototype Prize; and Younkle Best Presentation Award “Through the whole process, I actually began to see my design turn into a prototype, and now my prototype might actually become a patented reality. By the end, I was so happy that I had chosen to take a chance on myself and do something that brought my engineering and hooping life together.” —Danielle McIntosh “I thought of this product two years ago—I wrote it down and kind of forgot about it for awhile. And I realized that if I didn’t do it, I’d always regret it, so I just decided to pursue it. The competition is a great outlet for anyone interested in innovation and development. The experience gives you the tools to develop the idea and the confidence to continue.” —Daniel Gartenberg Innovators in the news …
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The Schoofs Prize for Creativity
Summary of the 2003 Competition
A computer-based imaging system that enables researchers to evaluate conditions when a vapor and a liquid flow together through a pipeline took top honors and $10,000 in the Schoofs Prize for Creativity, an annual innovation competition held on the UW-Madison campus. Chemical engineering senior Katie Plzak developed the system."The AB-1," a full-suspension bicycle frame for serious mountain-bike racers, demonstrated a shock-absorbing system for the rear wheel. The invention and prototype, designed and built by mechanical engineering senior Aaron Bland, won first place and $2,500 in the Tong Prototype Prize competition. Bland's invention also tied for fourth place in the Schoofs Prize for Creativity. The winners were chosen from a field of 15 ideas and inventions, including a tent that enabled its occupants to sleep under the stars and a solar-powered smoke detector, exhibited and displayed during Innovation Day, held Feb. 10 on the UW-Madison College of Engineering campus. Both competitions award cash prizes to those whose ideas are judged most creative, novel, innovative and likely to succeed in the marketplace.
Other winners include: Schoofs Prize for Creativity
Tong Prototype Prize
The competitions are sponsored by the UW Technology Enterprise Cooperative. The Schoofs Prize for Creativity is funded by Richard J. Schoofs, who received a bachelor of science degree in chemical engineering in 1953 from UW-Madison. The Tong Prototype Prizes and grants are sponsored by the Tong Family Foundation, including COE alumnus Peter P. Tong, who received his master of science degree in electrical and computer engineering in 1965. |
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The college thanks Richard Schoofs (BSChE `53), chairman of Schoofs Inc., for his creativity and generosity in sponsoring the annual Schoofs Prize for Creativity. The Tong Prize is made possible by a generous gift from the Tong Family Foundation (UW-Madison alumni Peter and Janet Tong).
An activity of the UW-Technology Enterprise Cooperative. Copyright 2008 The Board of Regents of the University of Wisconsin System Content by innovation@engr.wisc.edu Date last modified: Monday, 23-Jun-2003 16:10:00 CDT Date created: 23-Feb-2003 |