This issue: Winter 2016

Recent Grad Funds Scholarship

Engineering alumnus Allen McLeod received a full-ride scholarship to attend – now it’s his turn to give back

By Sean Patterson

If there is one physics principle Allen McLeod can appreciate, it’s that of inertia – the reality that, as defined by Sir Isaac Newton, “An object at rest stays at rest until acted upon by an outside force, and once in motion continues in motion.”

In fact, McLeod, a 2014 graduate of ’s mechanical engineering program, related to the concept so much that he decided to name his newly created, fully endowed scholarship – intended for students in ’s engineering major – the “Inertia Fund.”

The scholarship was made at an exciting time for the College of Engineering, which recently opened a new collaborative design-build space, the Engineering Innovation Center, that equips current and future students to learn at the highest levels.

McLeod comes by his affinity for Newton’s First Law honestly. As a sophomore at , he received a full-ride scholarship from the Raymond H. Berner Memorial Foundation, covering all of his tuition expenses his final three years at the university. Now he wishes to put the principle of perpetuity into action.

“I chose to start a scholarship, which is very small in comparison to what I was given, but hopefully it can grow and have a significant impact for a lot of students. I was given a lot, and I’m starting to give back with this,” he explains.

And while McLeod is reluctant to divulge the exact amount of the gift, the minimum commitment to start any scholarship at the university is $5,000. His desire to create inertia is also apparent in the decision to endow the award, meaning it will be invested and pay toward the scholarship indefinitely. After the funds are invested for a year, they will start paying out in 2017 to a senior engineering student who carries a minimum 3.0 GPA and exhibits “outstanding character and leadership.”

Ultimately, as the endowed scholarship grows, McLeod hopes the fund can be expanded to assist underclassmen and, eventually, provide one student a full year’s worth of tuition.

In addition to his financial contribution, McLeod, a furniture design engineer at Newberg-based dental equipment manufacturer A-dec, is returning to his alma mater to assist in the classroom as an adjunct instructor in the College of Engineering. “I learned a lot here and want to pass on some of that knowledge,” he says. “The personal connection you get at really prepares you for the workplace. Professors give you a lot of attention, understand what your goals are and take the time to get you there.”

McLeod hopes other recent graduates see the value in giving back – regardless of the amount. Many students don’t fully comprehend all the donors that make their education possible from behind the scenes. “I’ve told a few people about what I’m doing and some say, ‘Oh, I don’t know if I’d ever be able to do that, so I just don’t want to think about giving.’ They hear that so-and-so donated land or a building and think they can’t make a difference. But if you could buy one book for one student every semester for 20 years, that’s still a significant gift. We all remember what it’s like the first day when you have to go buy your books.

“If someone donated $80 or $100 each semester, and could buy someone a book, I think that would be something that could be fulfilling for both the donor and the student who gets a book out of it. Your gift doesn’t need to be a high-dollar amount, and that’s what I’m trying to convey to my friends.”

That’s also one of the reasons McLeod didn’t want to name the scholarship after himself. “I want it to be bigger than me,” he says. “My hope is that other people get on board and want to pitch in. That’s the idea behind the name ‘inertia’ – once in motion it continues in motion. So hopefully this is a little nudge to get something going.”

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