How an act of generosity is accelerating student excellence

Distinguished engineer Professor David Eager has had a remarkable career. Now, with a singular gift, he’s paving the way forward for the future generation.

David Eager

It’s what academics and teachers do every day of their lives. We give to younger people; we share our knowledge and wisdom with them.

Professor David Eager

UTS Professor David Eager became acquainted with risk at a young age. The son of a production engineer, he spent his spare time tinkering in the garage or exploring the bushland behind his childhood home.   
 
“I had my own saw and hammer and all these dangerous tools that Dad let me build things with,” says David, a UTS graduate and a Professor of Risk Management and Injury Prevention and of Mechanical and Mechatronic Engineering. 
 
David’s belief in the importance of risk-taking sits at the foundation of his career. As one of Australia’s leading playground engineers, he’s helped thousands of kids become more resilient and physically capable by engaging with play-based risk.   
 
But playground visitors aren’t the only young lives David is shaping. The benefactor of the new Professor David Eager Medal in Engineering, he’s encouraging UTS students to take a different kind of risk: to push themselves beyond their comfort zones in pursuit of engineering excellence.  
 
The Professor David Eager Medal in Engineering is a $50,000 gift that recognises outstanding academic achievement in mechanical and mechatronic engineering. Every year, one undergraduate student will receive a medal and a $5,000 prize.  
 
For David, who has nurtured hundreds of engineering students over more than 30 years at UTS, the medal embodies what it means to be a teacher shaping the next generation. It’s also a reflection of the enduring support he received during his own UTS student days.  
 
Now, he’s paying it forward.  

 “It’s what academics and teachers do every day of their lives. We give to younger people; we share our knowledge and wisdom with them,” he says. 

 

The medal is an incentive for students to strive to achieve. Competition is good. Some people say we shouldn’t push our kids too much, but you don’t grow unless you take a risk and move outside your comfort zone.

Professor David Eager

With his gift, David has joined an inspiring UTS staff giving community. By supporting student excellence through philanthropy, he and hundreds of his colleagues are opening doors to opportunity that make a real difference to students, both now and into the future. 
 
Establishing the prize is something of a full-circle moment. As a UTS Engineering graduate and a long-term staff member, David is an example of how UTS can become the launching pad for a truly remarkable career.  
 
Now, he’s giving back through the institution that means so much to him.  
 
“I owe so much to UTS. It has been so good to me,” he says.  
 
“It has made me what I am.”  
 
 

Share

Related articles

Explore more articles from the 2025 Donor Impact Report

A partnership with NSW Health is poised to expand the Indigenous genetic counselling workforce and increase community access to culturally safe care.

Philanthropic generosity can remove barriers to success for students from low SES backgrounds.

A collaboration between UTS Law, tech company Neota Logic, and supported by law firm Wotton Kearney, is opening the door to justice for people and communities across Australia.

For Mohammad Sakhvidi, a civil engineering UTS graduate, the UTS Humanitarian Scholarship became both a launchpad to success and an opportunity to give back.

Contact us

If you’d like to learn more about how you can make a difference, please get in touch.

UTS Advancement
Postal address: PO Box 123, Broadway NSW 2007
Street address: Building 1, Level 20, 15 Broadway, Ultimo
Email: advancement@uts.edu.au
Phone: +61 2 9514 9861