
Grand Challenges Scholar, Spring 2025
Rohan Nair
A fast-paced campus educational experience within an equally vibrant urban center helped to draw Rohan Nair to Arizona State University.
Nair says he saw that as an environment offering “a vast range of opportunities to explore, including specialized research labs, a student organization for every interest and a vast network of current students and alumni.”
His choice of major areas of study had similarly appealing motivations.
“Technological innovation is transforming every industry, and having the versatility to adapt and thrive in this dynamic landscape is invaluable,” Nair says, who minored in economics. “Computer science offers me the ability to explore a diverse range of career paths, while equipping me with skills to make an impact across any field I choose.”
He took advantage of a varied selection of educational and career-preparation opportunities at ASU. This included the Grand Challenges Scholars Program, or GCSP, Engineering Projects in Community, the Interplanetary Initiative, and Global Resolve.
Nair collaborated with the ASU Enterprise Development Office and presented his work for the GCSP session of the Master’s Opportunity for Research In Engineering, or MORE, and Fulton Undergraduate Research Experience Symposium.
Beyond his academic efforts, Nair also actively pursued practical industry experience through three industry internships and community service-oriented experiences, which he says “significantly enhanced my technical skills and professional development.”
Among them was a project for Global Resolve, the international service-learning programs at ASU’s Barrett, the Honors College, focusing on projects that positively impact communities in need throughout the world. In that effort, Nair participated in work to alleviate a water crisis in the Sonoran Desert that was presenting multiple challenges for southern Arizona and the city of Hermosillo, Sonora in Mexico.
“This program had a strong emphasis on cultural collaboration. We didn’t just implement solutions, but worked closely with community members to ensure our work was truly meeting their needs,” Nair says.
“This experience fundamentally shaped how I view my role as a computer scientist, not just as a technologist but as someone who can create inclusive solutions to real-world problems,” he adds.
The project reflects what Nair found particularly valuable about the thrust of education in the Fulton Schools.
“The first thing that comes to mind is collaboration. At the Fulton Schools, I’ve seen students from different engineering disciplines come together to tackle ambitious projects,” he says. “The culture here doesn’t just encourage teamwork, it thrives on it. The vast majority of innovations I have witnessed have come from group projects.”
After graduation, Nair, who minored in economics, will work as a tech consultant at ZS Associates, a global management and technology firm.
“My long-term aspiration is to bridge the gap between technical teams and business strategy by leading transformative technology initiatives,” he says. “With my computer science foundation, I want to not only understand how systems work at a code level, but design how they can drive real value.”
Read about other exceptional graduates of the Fulton Schools’ spring 2025 class here.