Christopher Schmitz

Christopher Schmitz
Christopher Schmitz
  • Teaching Professor
(217) 300-0392
3066 Electrical and Computer Engineering Building

For More Information

Education

  • Ph.D. in Electrical Engineering at the University of Illinois, 2002.

Biography

Dr. Schmitz graduated valedictorian of Pana High School in 1988 and was a Bronze Tablet recipient upon receiving his BS in Electrical Engineering at the University of Illinois in 1993.  He received his MS in Electrical Engineering at the University of Illinois in 1996 in the area of fault-tolerant adaptive filtering.  Schmitz worked at TRW Space and Electronics Group in Hermosa Beach, California, in the area of satellite communication. He completed his Ph.D. in 2002 in interference cancellation in multi-user communications. Upon graduation, he joined Beckman Institute of the University of Illinois to develop and test signal processing and wireless communication algorithms for advanced hearing device designs.  Since 2005, Schmitz has also been active in the Electrical and Computer Engineering department performing course development work and teaching in the areas of digital signal processing and digital communications.  Since 2012, he serves the department as Chief Undergraduate Advisor and the course director for ECE110, Intro to Electronics. His website can be found at http://publish.illinois.edu/cdschmitz/.

Academic Positions

  • Teaching Professor, U of I, Electrical and Computer Engineering, 2021-present
  • Chief Undergraduate Advisor, U of I, Electrical and Computer Engineering, 2012-present

Teaching Statement

"Everything should be made as simple as possible, but not simpler." -- restatement of Einstein


Teaching is vital to the success of the University of Illinois. Students must be engaged in the course. Demonstrations and experiential learning provide a means to present complex ideas to students in intuitive ways.

Student Organizations

  • WaggleNet Undergraduate Research Team, 2017-present. First formed to specifically address the loss of pollinators, WaggleNet provides a student-operated startup environment for student-led engineering solutions.

Research Statement

My research interests are primarily two-fold: 1) Promoting substantial experiential learning for undergraduates at all levels of the curriculum and 2) improving engineering education through interactions with other educators throughout the College of Engineering.

Undergraduate Research Opportunities

I will entertain undergraduate proposals in the areas of signal processing, communications, and circuits at any level of study. I also have an undergraduate research group, WaggleNet, the members of which work to collect and process data from operational honeybee colonies to reduce bee-related problems. WaggleNet.org

Research Interests

  • Adaptive Signal Processing and Beamforming
  • Wireless Communication
  • Improving Education in STEM Disciplines

Research Areas

  • Adaptive signal processing
  • Audio, speech, music and auditory processing
  • Signal detection and estimation
  • Wireless communication systems

Articles in Conference Proceedings

Patents

Teaching Honors

  • 2025 ECE George Anner Excellence in Undergraduate Teaching Award (August 5, 2025)
  • 2025 Nominee for the ECE Ronald W. Pratt Outstanding Teaching Award (2025)
  • LIST OF TEACHERS RANKED AS EXCELLENT BY THEIR STUDENTS (nine times) (Spring 2024)
  • 2024 Nominee for the ECE Ronald W. Pratt Outstanding Teaching Award (2024)
  • 2023 Nominee for the ECE Ronald W. Pratt Outstanding Teaching Award (2023)

Public Service Honors

  • 2022 Engineering Council Outstanding Advisors List (April 25, 2022)

Recent Courses Taught

  • ECE 110 - Introduction to Electronics
  • ECE 145 - First-Year Design Laboratory
  • ECE 198 JS1 (ECE 198 JS2) - James Scholars Honors Course
  • ECE 199 - ECE 110 Merit Section
  • ECE 199 - ECE 120 Merit Section
  • ECE 199 - Undergraduate Open Seminar
  • ECE 200 - Seminar
  • ECE 210 - Analog Signal Processing
  • ECE 211 - Analog Circuits & Systems