Comments on: Sedat Serdengecti /in-memoriam Harvey Mudd Remembers Tue, 09 Dec 2025 20:21:40 +0000 hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 By: Greg Felton /in-memoriam/sedat-serdengecti/comment-page-3/#comment-214 Mon, 02 May 2016 21:17:28 +0000 http://www.hmc.edu/remembering-sedat-serdengecti/?page_id=2#comment-214 After years of no contact, I had a wonderful reunion with Sedat when I was on campus just a few months before I learned of his passing. He was working away on the 4th floor of Sprague on something that he’d found of interest, the equations behind single-tower suspension bridges. As always, he had pages filled with print so neat it could have been done by a computer printer. I hope that, as a part of a memorial display, you will capture some of those sheets from his desk and show the world his brilliant mind and discipline right up to the end.

During my conversation with him, I mentioned that I still have a couple of cards I saved from a Trivial Pursuit game that the College once published. The front of the card said “What’s the 0-0-0 Club?” The answer on the back? “The group of students (note, not just one) that got zeros on the first three quizzes in Sedat’s class.” He had a great laugh and joyous smile. He was TOUGH but so inspirational, smart, and in the end striving to be the best he could for himself and all of us. What a great man!

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By: Mike van Driel /in-memoriam/sedat-serdengecti/comment-page-3/#comment-213 Sun, 20 Mar 2016 09:57:38 +0000 http://www.hmc.edu/remembering-sedat-serdengecti/?page_id=2#comment-213 I have never had the privilege of knowing a tougher, more disciplined engineering professor than Prof Sedat, I read the news about his passing with a heavy heart. He was amongst the handful of the engineering professors at Mudd that had the most direct influence on me, he was my advisor in the last years of the Fifth Year program back in the late ’90s and I will never forget him, ever. He could motivate you with a single look (everyone who had him as an instructor knows what I am talking about), and that same look made you want to be a better student and engineer. I really got to know him personally my senior year while I was doing an engineering internship at Shiley on a mass transfer device used during cardiac surgery called an oxygenator, I remembering talking to him late into the evening some nights after the internship to see if we could create a predictive model for it (and I did later, based on his insight/advice), I’ve built my entire engineering career on some of those discussions. He was so very wise, and so versatile, he could talk about anything, his spirit encompasses all that was good about my memories of the time I spent at Mudd – the frustration, the realization, the knowledge, the “ah HA!” moments of discovery and understanding, and most of all the compassion. He constantly reminded me that it is not only important to be a good engineer but to be a good person and a responsible part of society as an engineer, to and enjoy it. I think of him often, and I’ll miss him so very much. My deepest sympathies for his family’s loss, but speaking on behalf of so many of the students whose lives he touched, I can promise that he’ll never be forgotten.

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By: eric johnson /in-memoriam/sedat-serdengecti/comment-page-3/#comment-212 Mon, 11 May 2015 21:44:46 +0000 http://www.hmc.edu/remembering-sedat-serdengecti/?page_id=2#comment-212 As one of the founding members of the Association of Sedat Survivors (hi Cliff), it must mean something when so many years later I still clearly remember just how tough Sadat’s classes were. Talk about preparation for the real world. And in the end, very useful and applicable material for my engineering career.

Thanks Professor Serdengecti, you made difference.

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By: Ross A. Watkins /in-memoriam/sedat-serdengecti/comment-page-2/#comment-211 Sat, 14 Feb 2015 22:59:09 +0000 http://www.hmc.edu/remembering-sedat-serdengecti/?page_id=2#comment-211 Sedat had an amazing presentation style, right down to his blackboard writing and drawings–always clearly readable to me from wherever I happened to be in the lecture hall. As part of a lecture one day he tossed off a circle and continued. It was so perfect that, after he had left the lecture hall, at least six of us rushed the blackboard to measure it. The one-foot circle was accurate to one-half a chalk-width!

Thanks to his uncompromising standards, I always overbuild, erring on the side of safety. Thank you, Sedat; we keep you alive in our memories.

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By: Cliff Sedlund /in-memoriam/sedat-serdengecti/comment-page-2/#comment-210 Sun, 25 Jan 2015 04:29:52 +0000 http://www.hmc.edu/remembering-sedat-serdengecti/?page_id=2#comment-210 Professor Serdengecti’s Advanced Systems Engineering (E101/102) was such an ordeal that at the end of it Eric Johnson and I started a new (and short-lived) engineering society, the Association of Sedat Survivors. But that was all in fun because as tough as the class was at some point Sedat’s methodical teaching method eventually got through to me and things clicked so that the class became one of my favorites and control systems became my favorite subject. I remain a control systems engineer to this day.

During that class, one night before a midterm I pulled an all-nighter helping produce an issue of the Muddraker (which back in those days involved scissors and a lot of tape). As I rolled into bed around dawn I set my alarm clock for the mid-morning exam–or so I thought. I woke up a bit after the exam had finished, and rushed down to Sedat’s office to inquire about a make-up exam. “My alarm clock didn’t go off,” I said. His only response was “Better get a new alarm clock” and no offers for any way to make up the test. Well, after the test was graded, he decided that everyone had done so poorly that he would offer everyone a re-test opportunity at some fractional credit–thus saving my grade for the semester. So as tough and cold as his response seemed to me at the time, I think the real motivation behind it was a sense of fairness to the entire class.

Thank you, Professor Serdengecti.

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By: Ben Wiseman /in-memoriam/sedat-serdengecti/comment-page-2/#comment-209 Sat, 24 Jan 2015 02:21:24 +0000 http://www.hmc.edu/remembering-sedat-serdengecti/?page_id=2#comment-209 Like many I recall the challenges of Sedat’s classes. He always challenged his students by showing them concepts he found interesting. The drive to excellence and learn beyond the text was frustrating but also invigorating. But, I will also fondly remember his almost childish laugh when I would finally grasp a concept I had struggled over. Thanks to Sedat, I still have an understanding of non-linear systems that eludes most of my colleagues.
I had the honor of Sedat as my Clinic team’s advisor not once but twice. In group meetings, he would sit back (often enjoying his pipe) while we debated how to solve problems or some logistical challenge. Then he would smile and offer a question or suggestion to the team. It wasn’t important to him whether we used his ideas, but rather that he could help us learn along the way. He truly understood that in Clinic the means (learning, teamwork) were more important than the ends (the project deliverable).
He was an exemplary mentor and coach. The model of a sharp intellect who could guide and teach without ego. He will be greatly missed.

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By: Tony Li /in-memoriam/sedat-serdengecti/comment-page-2/#comment-208 Sat, 24 Jan 2015 00:50:55 +0000 http://www.hmc.edu/remembering-sedat-serdengecti/?page_id=2#comment-208 Like many others, I was a victim of Sedat’s high standards. I remember getting a 14/100 on a final, and being very thankful that I got that. The high score was an 18.

While I deeply value the knowledge that I gained in his class, I treasure even more his commitment to high standards. As he used to say, civil engineers do not get partial credit if only a part of the bridge stays up. In this time of declining standards and grade inflation, Sedat has been a continuing inspiration to strive for perfection, to hold others to the same high standards, and to never accept anything else than excellence.

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By: Linda Miller /in-memoriam/sedat-serdengecti/comment-page-2/#comment-207 Thu, 22 Jan 2015 20:07:09 +0000 http://www.hmc.edu/remembering-sedat-serdengecti/?page_id=2#comment-207 Sedat was a very tough professor. I remember the average score on his first test was 0. Even though he was tough in class, he was very nice in person. I always enjoyed talking to him. RIP Sedat

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By: Donald Remer /in-memoriam/sedat-serdengecti/comment-page-2/#comment-206 Tue, 20 Jan 2015 22:09:40 +0000 http://www.hmc.edu/remembering-sedat-serdengecti/?page_id=2#comment-206 It was a pleasure being a colleague of Sedat for many years. I still remember many of our conversations outside of Sprague Library while Sedat would be enjoying his pipe.

One of my fondest memories of Sedat is reviewing some of his lecture notes for the experimental engineering course. His handwriting was a very beautiful script that he did in ink. I found his notes very helpful as I prepared my lecture notes for this course.

We will really miss you.

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By: Jim Rosenberg /in-memoriam/sedat-serdengecti/comment-page-2/#comment-205 Mon, 19 Jan 2015 21:04:09 +0000 http://www.hmc.edu/remembering-sedat-serdengecti/?page_id=2#comment-205 I served on the Engineering faculty at HMC with Sedat from 1992 to 2001. I have many fond memories, but the one that I think captures Sedat and his relationship with his students the best came from a semester in which he offered his advanced course in control systems.

It was a small class of students (six or eight, mostly seniors, including Beston Barnett and Bill Earner, as I recall), who really wanted to take a class from Sedat before they graduated. After the midterm exam, which had a mean score well below 50%, the students, as a class, complained to Sedat that the exam wasn’t hard enough.

As usual, Sedat was driving the class very hard, but the students goaded him into pushing them even harder. I got to hear this ongoing push-me/pull-you saga from both Sedat and the students all through the semester, and to watch this fun and wonderful challenge evolve.

At the end of the semester, Sedat gave the class a final exam that was truly remarkable … I might have been able to complete it with several days’ time and a small library. The students, however, performed quite well on it. I had to explain to the students how extraordinary a learning experience they had just had — one in which they had achieved a level of knowledge and proficiency in a topic that exceeded nearly all of the faculty’s. Equally important, though, was how much this class inspired and energized Sedat. Nothing made Sedat happier than students really learning and striving to live up to their full potentials.

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