Everything computes Engineering professor makes his mark in multiple ways By Kristin Copenhaver Tikkun olam — striving to improve and transform the world — is what drives Kenneth Chelst each day. Chelst, a longtime Wayne State University College of Engineering professor, rabbi, author and would-be comedian, is committed to bettering the world. "Part of my responsibility is to use my skills to do so," he says. "That's a large part of what drives me. I want to make an impact." While his captive audiences of students with "nowhere to go" are the primary beneficiaries of his comedic talents, Chelst's more bankable operations research skills have helped corporations save tens of millions of dollars, cities better serve constituents, and schools better educate students. Early in his 30-plus-year career, Chelst worked with the City of Detroit on a plan to better allocate police resources and cut average response time by more than 40 percent. He also partnered with friends and Wayne State alumni, such as Jim Anderson, Urban Science founder, president and CEO, to develop groundbreaking mathematical models that are still used as industry standard all around the world. He designed the Professional Engineering Management Master's Program (EMMP) at Wayne State in 1992, partnering with Ford Motor Company on large-scale projects with colossal potential impact, and leads capstone projects for undergraduate industrial and systems engineering students. "Our EMMP projects are some of the biggest projects of their kind in the world. And our undergraduates this year alone carried out remarkable studies for Henry Ford Health System and General Motors." The world-renowned operations research expert remains dedicated to public safety management, something he first worked on for his doctoral dissertation at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. He's a founding member of the International City Management Association (ICMA) Center for Public Safety Management, It's one of Chelst's other projects, however, that may result in his most long-term impact on the world. As chair of the Institute for Operations Research and the Management Sciences conference in 1994, Chelst was told that he needed to include a program for high school teachers. At the end of the conference, he realized there was nothing those teachers ■ • h■I , S: I, students' multistep math problem-solving skills, it presents practical problems such as how to help your parents pick a cell phone plan, how to choose a college or university, how to plan inventory for a hot item, how to create more nutritional diets and much more. Kenneth Chelst (left) worked with INSU professor Torn Edwards on outreach efforts at Seminario Cajon del Maipo in Chile. The Frankel Jewish Academy of Metro Detroit was one of the first to adopt the program (mindsetproject.org ), with more than 50 percent of Frankel seniors opting to take the course in its first year. Foreign countries interested in updating and enhancing their curricula and teacher outreach efforts are showing interest in adopting MINDSET, too. Chelst recently returned from his second trip to Chile to educate teachers and students on the merits of the curriculum. Chilean students study Chelst's innovative MINDSET method. which helps city managers respond to challenges cited by city police and fire chiefs. In 2009, Chelst published Exodus and Emancipation, a well-received book (pictured above) comparing the experience of the enslaved Israelites with that of African American slaves. He also has written a Kaddish pamphlet for a major metro Detroit funeral home and is working on a book for parents to share with their children at the Passover Seder. could take back with them to use in the classroom. The realization led to Chelst co-authoring a math activities workbook to help teach math in a more applied, realistic context. Then came a book. Then came another book. Mathematics Instruction Using Decision Science and Engineering Tools (MINDSET) is now the go-to final year curriculum for dozens of schools across the United States. Designed to enhance With his jokes successfully translating — "with only slight delay" — in Chile, it's his combined arsenal of skills and expertise in operations research that will undoubtedly have an immeasurable impact on the world. "Math has relevance in everything," Chelst says. "I want students to know about operations research as a field of study, and I want to change the way people look at the world." ■ Copenhaver is associate director of marketing for the College of Engineering. 5