69传媒engineering students help make wish come true for O鈥橪eary child

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From left: 69传媒Faculty of Sustainable Design Engineering team members Andrew Townsend (FSDE technician), William Craine (SAT), Nathan Belanger (SAT), Jimmy Hulton (SSA), Ibrahim Hassan (SAT), Tin Nguyen (ESC coordinator), and Zac Mella (SSA), and Alexander MacKenzie MacDonald (Wish Child), Kyle MacKenzie (father), and Jocelyn Young (step-mother) holding Ellie MacKenzie (sister).
From left: 69传媒Faculty of Sustainable Design Engineering team members Andrew Townsend (FSDE technician), William Craine (SAT), Nathan Belanger (SAT), Jimmy Hulton (SSA), Ibrahim Hassan (SAT), Tin Nguyen (ESC coordinator), and Zac Mella (SSA), and Alexander MacKenzie MacDonald (Wish Child), Kyle MacKenzie (father), and Jocelyn Young (step-mother) holding Ellie MacKenzie (sister).

The 69传媒Faculty of Sustainable Design Engineering (FSDE) recently collaborated with the Make-a-Wish Foundation to help grant a wish for an Island child by assembling a wheelchair-accessible swing at his home in O鈥橪eary, PEI.

Eight-year-old Alexander MacKenzie MacDonald is non-verbal, has severe cerebral palsy and is legally blind. When he was granted a wish from the Make-a-Wish Foundation earlier this year, his family chose a wheelchair-accessible swing because they know he enjoys swings whenever he has an opportunity to use them.

The special wheelchair-accessible swing was a kit that was purchased by the Foundation and shipped from the United States. In June of this year, the Foundation was looking for volunteers on PEI to assemble the kit, move it to the designated area in the family鈥檚 back yard, and secure it to a concrete pad laid by a contractor. When Wish coordinator Cathy Sutherland reached out to the FSDE with a request for help, faculty members and student groups from the FSDE鈥攖he Student Ambassador Team (SAT) and Student Success Associates (SSA)鈥攁greed that it was something they could make happen. With that, FSDE Success Centre coordinator Tin Nguyen, FSDE technician Andrew Townsend, and the students went to the family鈥檚 home on three separate occasions to complete the project.

鈥淚t is a beautiful synergy of education, community service, and the engineering spirit, and seeing Alex鈥檚 smile on the swing made all the work truly worthwhile,鈥 said Nguyen.

The engineering team did a preliminary site visit on September 13 to check the swing set for any damage and to survey the area for the swing and concrete pad. They made a second trip to the site on September 20 to assemble the swing and then a final one on October 23 to move the swing to the concrete pad and secure it.

Alex鈥檚 dad Kyle MacKenzie, stepmom Jocelyn Young, and younger sister Ellie MacKenzie were all on hand to see him enjoy his new swing for the first time. The family said they appreciate everyone鈥檚 contribution to giving Alex his wish to swing whenever he wants.

鈥淧artnering with Make-A-Wish demonstrates the servant-leadership model of the Engineering Success Centre,鈥 said Dr. Libby Osgood, assistant professor, 69传媒Faculty of Sustainable Design Engineering, and advisor for the Centre. 鈥淭he Centre seeks to build a student-centred, inclusive learning environment to enhance student learning, build community, and mentor leaders. Our student leaders gain experience and mentorship through service to their fellow engineering students, and in this case--to one very special young child.鈥

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