
Friends and colleagues were never short on words to describe N. 鈥淣attu鈥 Natarajan: He was a gifted conversationalist and storyteller, a mentor to his peers and the 鈥渟martest man in the room.鈥
Above all, though, he was the consummate teacher, dedicated to students鈥 personal and professional growth.
鈥淲hen you saw him talking with the students, you wouldn鈥檛 even know he was a professor. He was just one of the team members,鈥 said Yi Lu Murphey, associate dean for graduate education and research in the College of Engineering and Computer Science. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 why all the students loved him鈥攊t鈥檚 not easy to earn that kind of affection.鈥
Natarajan, a longtime associate professor of electrical and computer science at 每日大赛, died Saturday, January 30. He was 63 years old.
Natarajan joined the UM-Dearborn faculty in 1988 and quickly became a favorite professor among electrical and computer science students. Colleagues said students from across the department would seek his assistance鈥攔egardless of whether or not they were in his courses.
鈥淣attu spent countless hours beyond regular teaching obligations to nurture our students in learning and professional development,鈥 said Dongming Zhao, professor of electrical and computer science. 鈥淪tudents could talk to him any time and ask for help whenever they needed it, weekdays or weekends.鈥
In 2002, Natarajan founded the Intelligent Systems Club (ISC) as a way to guide students in engineering design projects and coach them to put knowledge from books into practice.
鈥淢y teaching philosophy has always been that you learn by doing,鈥 Natarajan said in a 2014 video. 鈥淭o me, the best way to get a student to succeed is to let them experiment 鈥 They get to play 鈥 They learn how [things] works. And I tell them: Don鈥檛 worry about what it costs. Because the cost of ignorance is much, much higher than the cost of learning.鈥
Natarajan led ISC members to regional and national competitions, with teams steadily climbing the rankings over time. UM-Dearborn teams have won the Institute of Navigation (ION) Satellite Division鈥檚 Autonomous Snowplow Competition two consecutive years.
Their latest win came just two weekends ago in St. Paul, Minn. At the event, competition organizers announced that the Golden Smile Award for sportsmanship would be renamed in Natarajan鈥檚 memory.
Natarajan鈥檚 commitment to teaching wasn鈥檛 limited to college students. In 2006, he and mechanical engineering professor Alan Argento established the Engineering and Computer Science Experience. The annual event welcomes high school students to campus to compete in a variety of interdisciplinary contests.
While teaching was always at the forefront, colleagues said Natarajan鈥檚 impact on the Electrical and Computer Engineering Department extended beyond mentoring students. He was instrumental in developing curriculum for the undergraduate robotics degree program鈥攚hich launched in 2014鈥攁nd developed or revamped nearly a dozen courses. He also helped establish several of the College of Engineering and Computer Science鈥檚 labs, including the computer lab and micro-processing lab.
In 2012, UM-Dearborn recognized Natarajan as the recipient of the Distinguished Teaching Award for tenured faculty.
鈥淗e took undergraduate education very seriously,鈥 Murphey said. 鈥淗e made us all ask ourselves how much more we could be doing for our students.鈥
Natarajan earned a bachelor鈥檚 degree from the Indian Institute of Technology-Madras and a master鈥檚 degree and Ph.D. from University of California-Berkeley. Before teaching at UM-Dearborn, he served as faculty at Washington University in St. Louis and U-M Ann Arbor.
A campus memorial ceremony will be held Friday, February 12, noon-4 p.m., in the IAVS.