AMES, IA (06/01/2015)(readMedia)-- Iowa Gov. Terry Branstad and the Iowa Department of Transportation selected students of the Iowa State University Associated General Contractors (AGC) chapter to receive the Group Governor's Volunteer Award. They will be honored at a recognition ceremony June 8 at Southeast Polk High School in Pleasant Hill, Iowa.

The following local students are among several Iowa State engineering students selected by Iowa Gov. Terry Branstad and the Iowa Department of Transportation to receive the Group Governor's Volunteer Award.

Nicholas O'Brien of Moline and Marcelious Wyatt of Rock Island.

Andy Reynolds, a spring 2015 construction engineering graduate, is the outgoing president of ISU's AGC chapter and facilitated the group's community service projects in the 2013-2014 academic year. "It is an honor to receive this award not only for the acknowledgement of our service efforts, but also for the advancement of the people and organizations we serve," Reynolds said.

Since 2012, the ISU's AGC chapter has partnered with Appalachian Service Project to rebuild houses in flood-damaged Johnson City, Tennessee. In the last several years, ISU-AGC also rebuilt homes in Joplin, Missouri; Moore, Oklahoma; the Mississippi Gulf Coast; and Cedar Rapids, Iowa. Throughout the years, hundreds of students have spent spring break and thanksgiving break applying teamwork and construction engineering solutions to rebuilding some of America's devastated communities.

A video recap of the group's most recent trip can be seen on YouTube.

When they don't road-trip to building sites, ISU-AGC students contribute to local community organizations, such as the Mary Greeley Medical Center, Boys & Girls Club of Story County and Ames Community School District. "We have been fortunate to have, year after year, generous, committed and energetic students involved with this organization," Reynolds said. "Service is at the core of ISU-AGC."

The Governor's Volunteer Awards program was created in 1982 with inaugural awards presented in 1983. The program has grown from being only available to state agencies to its present function of providing all Iowa nonprofit, charitable and government organizations with a non-competitive, easy and low-cost way to honor local volunteers with a prestigious state-level recognition award. The program is coordinated by the Iowa Commission on Volunteer Service, which is responsible for planning, development and improvement of the awards nomination process, guidelines and procedures.

AMES, IA (12/08/2014)(readMedia)-- The College of Engineering at Iowa State has named James Dewey Boddie, Jr., of Bettendorf, Iowa, the outstanding senior for fall 2014. Boddie, Jr. will graduate with a degree in Software Engineering during the university's commencement held December 20.

Each academic department nominates one senior to receive this honor. Outstanding seniors represent some of the best and brightest students in their program and boast impressive achievements.

Boddie has completed internships at Maverick Software Consulting, HERE: a Nokia company and VSI Aerospace. During these experiences, Boddie built his professional portfolio in various ways, including performing iPad testing for Thompson Reuters, worked within Nokia's autonomous vehicle team and helped develop an educational flight simulator known as DAVinCI Flight. He also served as teaching assistant, tutor and proctor.

On campus, Boddie was also active in educational outreach; he served as mentor and facilitator for first LEGO League Team and is developing an educational USS Battleship Iowa game for the naval vessel's museum. He was also selected for many scholarships during his time at Iowa State.

Boddie will be working for software engineer for IBM.