Close

Future electrical engineer pursues Olympic dreams

May 16, 2019

Bruce Hicks has his eyes on Paris. The 2024 Summer Olympic Games, that is. This Florida Polytechnic University sophomore has been successfully competing in archery competitions across the state for more than five years. Now, he divides his energy between his goal of completing a bachelor’s degree in electrical engineering and the dream of becoming an Olympic athlete.

“During my senior year at Apopka High School I was training 40 hours a week. I was really invested in competing with the school’s team,” said Hicks, from Eustis, Florida. “I realized I didn’t want it to stop.”

Hicks decided that he was not only going to continue in the sport, but he was going to step up his game and compete all the way to the Olympics. He understands there is no easy path to that goal, so this summer he’ll be training with his bow and arrow seven days a week, at the same time he’ll takes two classes at Florida Poly and work as an admissions student worker.

“I’ve always been the kind of person that when I do something, I go head first and I do it fully,” said Hicks, who also founded the Florida Poly Archery Club.

His passion for archery began in his freshman year in high school when a new archery team was announced. Hicks tried it, loved it, and pursued it. Over the years, he has collected a variety of medals through local and statewide competitions, most of them gold.

“I thrive in competition,” he said. “I’m a fierce competitor.”

He also brings that competitive approach to campus. In his first year at Florida Poly, Hicks helped develop a product called Combat Innovation, an automated tourniquet that identifies when a soldier has been shot and responds in real time, reducing the chance of them bleeding out. The project was one of the winners at the Catapult Launch Night Pitch entrepreneurship competition last March after impressing local industry leaders.

Hicks said the discipline, resilience and perseverance he’s learned in the sport of archery has enabled him to be successful at Florida Poly thus far.

“There is a saying in archery that every shot is your first one and it always counts,” said Hicks. “It’s the same approach I use in my classes at Florida Poly, where so often you have to analyze different situations to solve a problem. So many things can affect your shot – or your project – but the trick is to persevere through your lows, figure out what happened, and do what you can to improve it.”

Contact:
Lydia Guzman
Assistant Director of Communications
863-874-8557

Session Details

This session will demonstrate that practical risk management is for everyone, regardless of a formal program. Attendees will learn actionable and simple strategies that are easy to implement, enabling them to start immediately by focusing on their top risks to build greater operational resilience and ensure the sustained success of their auxiliary enterprises.

Presenter Profile

Michelle Powell serves as the pioneering Risk Manager at Florida Polytechnic University, the state’s sole 100% STEM-dedicated institution. Having been with the university for nearly 11 years, Michelle transitioned from a leadership role in Admissions in October 2023 to establish and evolve the risk management function from the ground up. In this solo capacity, Michelle builds robust frameworks for our dynamic, young university, overseeing our insurance portfolio, consulting on third-party and event risks, and developing critical campus-wide training programs. Michelle has obtained the Committee of Sponsoring Organizations (COSO) Enterprise Risk Management certificate and the Associate in Risk Management (ARM) and Construction Risk and Insurance Specialist (CRIS) designations. Her distinct background in mathematics and engineering, combined with extensive higher education leadership, brings an analytical and strategic approach enhancing the institution’s resilience.