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COOKEVILLE, Tenn. (Oct. 4, 2004) – David H. Huddleston recently
returned to his alma mater, Tennessee Tech University, to accept an appointment
as chairperson of the Civil and Environmental Engineering Department.
Huddleston, who received his bachelor’s degree in engineering science
from TTU in 1977, built an industry career and served on the faculty at
Mississippi State University for thirteen years before returning to Cookeville.
He said leading Tennessee Tech’s CEE Department offers him a chance
to work with faculty members, administrators and staff who are known for
quality work.
“All of the components are in place to enable the department to
respond to the anticipated needs of the civil engineering profession in
the next decade,” said Huddleston. “Primarily through undergraduate
education, dedicated faculty and energetic and capable students, who have
access to great facilities, have established a CEE department with an
excellent reputation within industry and competing graduate programs.”
To complement the strong undergraduate program, CEE must increase the
educational opportunities available through research and graduate study,
Huddleston said. Though this will require increased emphasis on research
and graduate education, Huddleston’s support of post bachelor’s
degree education will not come at the expense of the undergraduate program.
“We must be responsive to changes in licensing and industry that
will occur in the next 10-15 years that will result in a more significant
role for graduate education and research,” he said. “As we
provide enhanced opportunities at the graduate level, it’s imperative
that we use the growing research and graduate program to strengthen the
undergraduate educational experience.”
After graduating from TTU, Huddleston earned a master’s degree
at Virginia Tech. He returned to Tennessee as a manufacturing/quality
control engineer for TRW’s Ross Gear Division. Before turning to
higher education, his industry positions included serving as an engineering
analyst for Pan Am World Services and Sverdrup Technology Inc.’s
AEDC Group in Tullahoma.
Huddleston earned his doctorate from the University of Tennessee in 1989.
He joined the Mississippi State faculty as a research engineer with MSU’s
National Science Foundation Engineering Research Center for Computational
Field Simulation in 1991, then moved into MSU’s Department of Civil
Engineering in 1995.
At Mississippi State, Huddleston took on several university service roles,
including serving as a faculty senate member and advising Tau Beta Pi.
He also was a member of a task force that led MSU to adopt a personal
computer ownership policy for students in the College of Engineering.
At Mississippi State, Huddleston twice received the Hearin-Hess Distinguished
Professor Award from the College of Engineering.
His research interests lie in computational fluid dynamics, computational
design, water resources engineering, fluid mechanics and applied aerodynamics.
He and a colleague currently have a permanent, interactive exhibit, “How
Wings Work,” in the “How Things Fly” Gallery of the
Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum.
Huddleston began his new position on Aug. 1. Roy Loutzenheiser, associate
dean of undergraduate affairs for the College of Engineering, had held
the interim position.
Huddleston and his wife, Christy, have two sons, ages 24 and 21.
--Karen Lykins
This information posted 4 October 2004
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