FromLegos
toengine blocks
UC engineering co-op student innovates at Honda
Even as a toddler, Emma Vail was curious about how things worked.
“When I was younger, I liked building with Legos,” she said. “I grew up taking things apart, building things and doing puzzles. During preschool and kindergarten, I was always in the block area during free time.”
In high school, she joined the robotics club to pursue her interest in electronics.
“In my senior year of high school, I decided I would study mechanical engineering in college. There’s so much you can do with it. It’s one of the broadest engineering fields there is.”
The University of Cincinnati undergraduate still likes figuring out how to make things work better. She finished two co-op rotations for American Honda Motor Co., where she applied her skills to the manufacturing floor and its research and development center.
“I have always known subconsciously that I wanted to go into engineering. I think my parents and others around me knew before I could comprehend what engineering was,” she said.
UC College of Engineering and Applied Science student Emma Vail completed two co-op rotations for Honda Motor Co. Photo/Provided
Pioneering a century of co-op
Honda is just one of many corporate partners for UC’s co-op program, a system UC pioneered in which students divide their year between full-time classroom instruction and full-time employment at a company in their chosen field.
It’s a program that has been duplicated by many universities, but UC still does it better than most anyone. U.S. News & World Report ranks UC as a top five co-op university in its latest rankings.
UC’s colleges have connections with both Fortune 500 companies and newer startups around the country. And students who want an international experience can even work in co-op positions abroad.
“Honda has had a long and successful relationship with the University of Cincinnati, a school we utilize to recruit engineering and business students for our co-op/internship program and entry-level full-time positions,” said Daniela Evans, unit lead for college relations at American Honda.
Honda has been hiring co-ops for more than 30 years. During that time, more than 600 co-op graduates have been hired into full-time positions.
“UC students are a good choice for our co-op positions because the students’ coursework and programs directly align with the knowledge and skills our positions require,” she said.
Evans said Honda provides networking opportunities for co-ops to meet each other and build a career network.
“We see our co-ops as a critical talent pipeline for positions,” she said. “Additionally, co-ops can get real-world, hands-on experience by working on projects that are directly tied to their area of study and give them a sense of what they may be able to do as a full-time associate.”
Honda offers internship and co-op opportunities to students pursuing a variety of majors, from business management to information technology and accounting to marketing.
UC co-op student Emma Vail belongs to Bearcat Motorsports, which builds Formula One cars for competition against other schools. Photo/Andrew Higley/UC Marketing + Brand
Hands-on experience
And, of course, there are engineers like Vail, who grew up in an engineering household.
“My dad was a sales engineer who worked on the customer side of projects,” she said.
From her childhood interest in Legos, she worked with robotics in high school. She also played lots of sports growing up: gymnastics, tee-ball, soccer, lacrosse.
“If I was interested in something new, I would always try to do it and never cared that I may not be the best at it since I'd never done it before,” she said.
And she helped her dad with projects around the house.
“These ranged from building a raised garden to helping to repair the sailboat,” she said.
UC College of Engineering and Applied Science student Emma Vail worked two co-op rotations for Honda Motor Co. and is a member of UC's Bearcat Motorsports, which makes Formula One cars. Photo/Andrew Higley/UC Marketing + Brand
Vail jumped at the chance join an international automaker and spent her first co-op working at the Honda’s Anna Engine Plant about 100 miles north of UC in Anna, Ohio.
“My first rotation was very hands-on, working in manufacturing engineering and the production line,” she said.
She liked her experience so much that she applied to Honda for her second co-op, this time working at its research and development center in central Ohio. There she got hands-on experience in testing and development, analyzing and reviewing data for braking systems.
“We were studying the traction systems of cars, looking at stopping distances in different conditions like wet or icy surfaces,” she said.
Vail said sophisticated sensors can detect when a vehicle’s tire encounters slippery surfaces, allowing traction controls to improve braking distances under adverse weather conditions.
“I got to work on different projects, which made it interesting,” she said.
The best part of her experience was getting to collaborate with experts from different departments, she said.
“I don’t think I would like working on a project alone. I really liked the team aspect of the projects,” she said.
UC Professor Munir Nazzal is director of the Center for Smart, Sustainable and Resilient Infrastructure. He is working with Honda Motor Co. and the Ohio Department of Transportation to examine how autonomous vehicles can capture useful information about road conditions and hazards in real time. Photo/Andrew Higley/UC Marketing + Brand
Fast track to success
Innovation is a big driver at Honda, Evans said. The company partners with UC and other research institutions on a range of engineering and transportation projects.
UC Professor Munir Nazzal recently began working with Honda and the Ohio Department of Transportation on a pilot project to demonstrate how autonomous vehicles can collect and share valuable information about infrastructure such as potholes, faded lane markings and other road hazards.
“Honda has always believed in the power of dreams which directly ties to innovation,” Evans said. “We are introducing new products and technology at a faster rate than ever before and look to our co-ops and new hires to bring new and fresh ideas that will help us be a leader in our industry.”
Vail took advantage of some of the in-house classes that Honda offered employees. One welding class was a particularly useful skill to Vail as a member of Bearcat Motorsports. The student group designs, builds and tests Formula One style vehicles in competition with other colleges.
Students build the cars from the wheels up from a bare steel frame they design and assemble themselves. On a recent tour, Vail showed off one frame that she warned was still hot to the touch from recent welds. Around the corner was last year’s completed Formula One car painted in UC black and red with team stickers.
Next, Vail said she might pursue her next co-op in aerospace engineering.
“I think it's the mentality to always do your best no matter the situation,” she said. “Things aren't always going to work out perfectly, but as long as you give it your all — that's what matters.”
Additional credits
Photos: Andrew Higley, unless otherwise noted
Digital design: Kerry Overstake
UC Marketing + Communications
Become a Bearcat
Whether you’re a first-generation student or from a family of Bearcats, UC is proud to support you at every step along your journey. We want to make sure you succeed — and feel right at home.
Related Stories
Meet the young talent reshaping Cincinnati’s startup scene
October 28, 2025
Five University of Cincinnati students were honored for their impactful entrepreneurship on the Cincy Inno Under 25 list. We’ll explain what makes each student – and their startup – stand out.
UC Foundation reveals 2025 philanthropy winners
October 27, 2025
The University of Cincinnati Foundation recognized its Outstanding Philanthropic Volunteer Award honorees at the George Rieveschl Recognition Dinner on Oct. 23, 2025.
UC team unveils Wyandot Removal Trail across Ohio
October 24, 2025
Rebecca Wingo, an associate professor of history and director of the public history program in the University of Cincinnati’s College of Arts and Sciences, is featured in a WVXU story about new historical markers honoring the Wyandot people—the last Indigenous nation forcibly removed from Ohio.
Founders+Funders honors Greg Wolf and sports’ power to transform lives
October 23, 2025
Bearcat for Life Greg Wolf served as a champion for student-athletes and the greater UC community during his lifetime and continues to inspire, serve and change trajectories through his legacy.
Grad student Joey Yong found leadership, networking opportunities at UC
October 23, 2025
Joey Yong is a graduate student in the UC School of Information Technology's Master of Science in Information Technology (MSIT) program. As she nears graduation this December, the central Kentucky native looks back on the invaluable instruction, networking opportunities and leadership lessons she gained during her time at UC.
What will stroke care look like in 2050?
October 23, 2025
The University of Cincinnati’s Joseph Broderick recently authored an article in the journal Stroke reviewing the tremendous progress in stroke treatment since 1975; the predictions he made in 2003 about stroke prevention, treatment and recovery in 2025 and what actually happened; and predictions for stroke treatment in 2050.