How one student’s experience is helping to shape renewable energy education

In the midst of the complicated landscape of energy, economics, and environmental policy, third-year Mechanical Engineering and Applied Mechanics (MEAM) student Ngaatendwe Manyika is helping to develop a new course for the next generation of engineers building renewable energy sources.  

This summer, with the guidance of practice assistant professor in Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering Lorena Grundy and support from Penn’s Environmental Innovations Initiative (EII), Manyika built small wind turbines that generate clean power, documenting each step. Her work, facilitated by Penn Sustainability and funded through EII’s Integrating Sustainability Across the Curriculum (ISAC) program and Penn School of Engineering and Applied Science‘s Academic Innovation Fund, will serve as a pilot for Grundy’s upcoming course, Renewable Energy Technologies Lab, to be offered in Fall 2026.

While testing the turbines, Manyika recalls a group of kids who called the test rig a “windmill.” That moment, she says reminded her that modern machines often have deep roots. She says in building wind turbines the approach is a way of solving the challenge of renewable energy generation in new ways.

Lorena Grundy of the School od Engineering and Applied Science is part of EII’s Integrating Sustainability Across the Curriculum (ISAC), who, over the summer, worked with rising third year in Mechanical Engineering Ngaatendwe Malike to map out a new course on developing renewable energy technologies that will be offered next year.

Read the full article at Penn Today