Institute Honors Rainwater with Title of Fellow

Institute Honors Rainwater with Title of Fellow
Photo Submitted

Professor Chase Rainwater, department head of industrial engineering, was awarded the title of fellow from the Institute of Industrial and Systems Engineers (IISE). This honor recognizes outstanding leaders of the profession who have made significant, nationally recognized contributions to industrial and systems engineering. A fellow is the highest classification of membership in the institute.

Rainwater is a graduate of the U of A Department of Industrial Engineering, receiving his bachelor's degree in 2004. He earned his doctoral degree from the Department of Industrial and Systems Engineering at the University of Florida in 2009. He joined the U of A Department of Industrial Engineering as assistant professor the same year.

He teaches multiple courses in computing, as well as courses in optimization, probability and statistics. Rainwater's commitment to students is exceptional. He spends countless hours helping students understand the material in his courses. He also provides mentorship to students in both the undergraduate and graduate programs, which includes working with undergraduate research students, senior capstone teams and the Google-sponsored applied machine learning intensive.

He and University Professor Manuel Rossetti led an innovative change to the computing offerings in the department's undergraduate program. This effort resulted in a two-semester computing sequence designed specifically for sophomore-level industrial engineering students. The courses present core programming and computing concepts in the context of fundamental industrial engineering problems.  The duo was recognized internationally with the 2021 Innovations in Education Competition from IISE.

Rainwater's research interests include supply chain logistics, security and food safety. His work has been supported by the National Science Foundation, U.S. Department of Transportation, U.S. Department of Homeland Security and U.S. Department of Education, as well as multiple national labs, nonprofit organizations and companies.  

He was a 2018 program chair of the IISE Annual Conference and Expo, served as president of the IISE Operations Research Division in 2018 and was a member of the IISE Board of Trustees Scholarship Committee from 2017-2020. He has served as the director of the J.B. Hunt Innovation Center of Excellence since its creation and is also the co-director of the Arkansas Security Research and Education Institute.

Contacts

Tamara O. Ellenbecker, website developer
Department of Industrial Engineering
479-575-3157, tellenbe@uark.edu

Jennifer P. Cook, director of communications
College of Engineering
479-575-5697, jpc022@uark.edu

Headlines

Affairs of the Heart

Find out how biomedical engineering professor Morten Jensen is developing innovative devices to produce better outcomes in cardiovascular medicine.

Students, Faculty and Alumni Kick Off Centennial Year of School of Law

Founded April 14, 1924, the School of Law faculty, students and alumni started the celebration of its centennial year with a Founders Day event and will continue with more commemorative events this coming fall.

Yearly Academic Award Winners, Ambassadors Recognized by Bumpers College

Schyler Angell, Lexi Dilbeck, Cason Frisby, Tanner Austin King, Anna Brooke Mathis, Carrie Ortel, Lucy Scholma, Kadence Trosper and student ambassadors were honored at the college's annual reception.

World Premiere of 'Cries from the Cotton Field' Slated for May 8

Cries from the Cotton Field chronicles the journey of 19th century Italian immigrants from northern Italy to the Arkansas Delta and ultimately to Tontitown. It will premier at 6 p.m. May 8 in Springdale Har-Ber High School.

Fay Jones School's Earth Day Event Spotlights Sustainable Materials and Projects

"One day doesn't seem like a lot, but one day can empower individuals and groups, energize them to work for change and innovate for transformative solutions," professor Jennifer Webb said of the students' design work.

News Daily