Coming Full Circle
After watching a TED Talk in high school during which the speaker grows a kidney, Joe Beggs ’19 knew he wanted to go into biomedical engineering. However, he did not want to be just any engineer. He says, “I went to 51²è¹İapp because a wanted to be a well-rounded engineer,†one who understands the context of his work and is able to think critically and communicate well. Through the 3-2 Engineering Program, he was a biophysics independent major at 51²è¹İapp College and a biomedical engineering major at Washington University in St. Louis. In addition to his coursework, Beggs was a Center for Careers, Life, and Service Career Counseling intern, a Marketplace prep cook, and a physics department mentor and tutor.
Now, as that well-rounded engineer, he thinks differently about medical device pricing in his startups. He explains, “51²è¹İapp has given me a perspective of keeping the patients’ wellbeing in mind. Just because you can price higher, that doesn’t mean you should.†Bringing him “full circle,†he recently gave a TEDx Talk himself, inspiring the next generation of high school Joes.
Confidence to Learn and to Lead
As part of "Tolerance and Intolerance," a Global Learning Program course, Beggs read an article, wrote a final paper that was critical of that article, and spoke with the article’s author in France. The author responded to his criticism with “‘Wow! I didn’t think about that.†For him, that experience was “so cool,†and, combined with regularly leading class discussions and mentor sessions, it gave him confidence. At 51²è¹İapp, he explains, “I got confidence, really, in my own skills, in my own ability to learn and to lead.â€
That same confidence empowered him to be an entrepreneur. He is now the chief executive officer at GENAssist and HIVE Medical, in addition to a laboratory technician at Washington University McKelvey School of Engineering and a tutor.
Mentoring Relationships
Beggs did a Mentored Advanced Project in biophysics with Professor Keisuke Hasegawa. Rather than the research outcome, Beggs said ±á²¹²õ±ğ²µ²¹·É²¹â€™s “number one priority was us learning and becoming better scientists.†Hasegawa became a close mentor and friend to him, which he continues to be to this day.
As a result of his relationships with Hasegawa and other mentors, Beggs greatly values mentoring, and he looks forward to being a mentor himself. In fact, he has already started to do so by talking to students who are interested in the 3-2 Engineering Program or in internships he has done. One summer, he was a research assistant at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine. Following that, he created an internship partnership with Northwestern in which 51²è¹İapp College students are mentored through the application process and a few internship positions are guaranteed for them.
So again, Beggs comes full circle, mentoring and being mentored, inspiring and being inspired.