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Awards and Honors

Two alumni elected to National Academy of Engineering

Jim Goodnight and Greg Washington are recognized for their outstanding contributions to engineering. The NC State alumni will be inducted into the prestigious organization Oct. 1.

The NC State Belltower against a blue sky, with flowering trees in the foreground

Jim Goodnight and Greg Washington share a passion for education and a bold commitment to innovation. As NC State alumni, they also share a vision for inspiring the next generation through leadership and service.

Now the men share an even rarer distinction. On Feb. 7, both were elected by their peers to membership in the National Academy of Engineering, a scientific body advancing technology and engineering in service to the nation.

Membership is among the highest honors accorded an engineer. The body has just 2,420 U.S. members and a scant 319 international members. The new class of 124 members will be inducted at a ceremony Oct. 1 during the academy’s annual meeting in Washington, D.C.

Jim Goodnight: Innovation for Good

Goodnight is one of NC State’s most accomplished graduates. During his sophomore year on campus in the mid-1960s, the applied mathematics major took the only computing course available at the time — offered by the statistics department. That experience sparked an interest in the emerging field of computer software that eventually led Goodnight to co-found SAS, an industry leader in analytics software based in Cary, North Carolina.

After completing his math degree, Goodnight earned both a master’s and doctorate in statistics at NC State and served on faculty in the Department of Statistics from 1972 to 1976. His wife, Ann, is a 1968 graduate of NC State’s College of Humanities and Social Sciences.

In a 2015 alumni spotlight, Goodnight recalled that he and three other students developed and initially ran SAS as a business inside the university.

“The [statistics] department wanted us to stay close by so that we could still help them with their consulting questions. So we moved right across the street from Nelson Hall,” he said. “We moved because we had run out of space and couldn’t grow. We had our first user group meeting in Florida in 1976, and the enthusiasm of our users was a big encouragement for us to go ahead and strike out on our own.”

Jim Goodnight at a White House Council on Jobs and Competitiveness meeting at the Park Alumni Center in 2011.
Jim Goodnight at a White House Council on Jobs and Competitiveness meeting at the Park Alumni Center in 2011.

The venture paid off, thanks in large part to Goodnight’s ability to attract and retain top talent — including many NC State graduates — with industry-leading benefits and a focus on a creating a healthy workplace environment. In 2021, SAS reported revenue of $3.2 billion, a year-over-year increase of 5.2% despite the unprecedented economic challenges posed by the COVID-19 pandemic.

“As we always have, we remain committed to using data, analytics and AI for good, driving progress for our environment and society at large,” Goodnight said in the company’s annual report.

Goodnight’s commitment to innovation for good is evident through his longstanding support for NC State. SAS Hall, home to the university’s mathematics and statistics programs since 2009, is a brick-and-mortar testament to the impact of that support. But it’s his investment in people that may be his most enduring legacy.

Jim and Ann Goodnight support more than 250 North Carolina students each year through the Goodnight Scholarships, offered to both first-year and transfer students studying the STEM disciplines — science, technology, engineering and math. In addition to covering tuition, fees and other expenses for up to four years, the scholarship offers a number of programs promoting professional and personal growth.

The Goodnights have also donated to numerous centers, programs and scholarship opportunities across campus and have endowed 28 named faculty positions, a deanship and a program to invest in early-career faculty. Last year, they created the Goodnight Doctoral Fellows for Ph.D. candidates in STEM and education.

Greg Washington: Change Agent

Washington, a three-time NC State graduate, is at the forefront of a new wave in academia — engineers who are presidents, provosts or deans at universities and colleges across the country.

In 2020 he was named president of George Mason University in Fairfax, Virginia. It’s a unique position for a scholar like Washington: Only 14% of presidents at doctorate-granting universities possess an engineering degree, according to the American Council on Education; fewer than 8% are African American, according to Inside Higher Education.

“We live in a time when technology is changing at an astounding pace, when external resource development is critical to the campus’s survival, when issues like [information technology] and commercialization are a big part of that and when developing strong partnerships with industry is essential,” Washington says. “All of these are drivers that call for engineers to be academic leaders.

“This is where universities, especially those with large think programs, are putting their resources and positions.”

Gregory Washington on the campus of George Mason University.
Gregory Washington, president of George Mason University, is a proud Wolfpack alumnus.

Washington studied mechanical engineering at NC State, earning a Bachelor of Science in 1989, a master’s degree in 1991 and a Ph.D. in 1994. His academic career includes research on lightweight antennae, self-driving vehicles and smart materials. His wife, Nicole, is a 1994 graduate of NC State’s College of Education.

As an undergraduate, Washington and fellow students unhappy with the coverage of African American issues started the Nubian Message. NC State’s weekly African American publication recently celebrated the 25th anniversary of its first edition.

The discussions on racial equity Washington helped launch as a student more than three decades ago — when NC State first opened the Augustus Witherspoon Student Union that contains the African American Cultural Center, the Nubian Message and other student organizations — are still ongoing.

After earning his Ph.D., Washington interviewed with several private companies before deciding to accept a position as an assistant professor of mechanical engineering at Ohio State in Columbus. After nearly a decade on the Ohio State faculty, during which he led the Institute for Sustainable Energy and the Environment, Washington had some thoughts on how to improve the Buckeye State’s biggest engineering program. He shared them with his dean. Two weeks later, he was named the associate dean of research, paving his way into the upper levels of administration, including a stint as Ohio State’s interim dean of the College of Engineering.

In 2011, he was named the dean of the Henry Samueli School of Engineering at UC Irvine, becoming the first African American engineering dean in the University of California system. When George Mason began looking for a new president in late 2019, Washington’s background and experience as an academic leader was exactly what the school was looking for.

Greg and Nicole Washington have enthusiastically supported NC State’s colleges of sciences, education and engineering over the years. In 2022 they endowed the Washington Scholarship to provide merit- and need-based scholarships for students pursuing an undergraduate degree in the College of Education or the College of Engineering, with preference for students who have a commitment to working with the Black community.

Outstanding Contributions

The National Academy of Engineering is part of the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine. It honors those who have made outstanding contributions to “engineering research, practice, or education” and to “the pioneering of new and developing fields of technology, making major advancements in traditional fields of engineering, or developing/implementing innovative approaches to engineering education.”

This post was originally published in NC State News.