Professor Schindall re-joined the MIT faculty in June of 2002 after a 35
year career in the defense, aerospace and telecommunications
industries. His research includes the invention and development of a
nanotube-enhanced ultracapacitor which holds the promise of being
superior to electrochemical batteries as a means of efficient
regenerative electrical energy storage, and he has also supervised
research on dynamic simulation and reliability analysis of complex
safety-critical systems. He has co-developed and taught a required
senior course in communication skills, including units on conceptual
thinking, giving presentations, how to be effective in industry,
cross-cultural skills, and engineering ethics, and he is developing a
course on engineering design. As co-director of the Bernard M. Gordon -
MIT Engineering Leadership Program, Dr. Schindall is actively engaged in
a program to enhance, expand, focus, and disseminate the teaching of
engineering design and leadership within the MIT School of Engineering.
Prior to joining MIT, Dr. Schindall was VP and Chief Technology Officer
of Loral Space and Communications (a manufacturer and operator of
commercial satellites), Sr. VP and Chief Engineer for Globalstar (a 48
satellite LEO mobile phone system), and President of Loral Conic (a
manufacturer of telemetry systems for missiles and satellites). Dr.
Schindall received his B.S., M.S. and Ph.D. degrees in Electrical
Engineering from MIT in 1963, 1964 and 1967. During his graduate years
he was lecturer and wrote the text for a 140 student introductory
electronics course, he received an award for excellence in teaching, and
he was chief engineer for WBCN, a commercial FM radio station.