Home | People-Openings | Teaching | Research-Publications | Outreach | Facilities | Resources
» [10 Apr 2019] » Dr. Xiaomeng Gao receives the Best Young Professional Paper Award at WAMICON2019
» [01 Feb 2019] » DART Lab to Advance to Phase 3 of the DARPA SPAR Program
» [23 May 2018] » Songjie Defended his PhD Degree
» [20 Jan 2018] » DART Lab to Advance to Phase 2 of the DARPA SPAR Program
» [07 Mar 2017] » DART Lab Awarded NSF STTR Phase II Project on Developing a Radar-based Wearable Heart Health Monitoring Device
» [08 Nov 2016] » DART Lab to Participate in DARPA SPAR program
In recent years, progress in computing, additive manufacturing, robotics, easy to use micro-controllers, and a generally open and willing-to-share community sparked a global resurgence of interest in hacking, tinkering, and creating things, referred by many as the Maker Movement. The Maker movement enables access to the latest technologies by the general mass and is truly democratizing innovation on a national and global scale. The many successful start-up companies and the jobs they have created are true testimonials to its potential economical impacts.
The Maker movement also has exciting and vast implications for the world of STEM education. The vast amount of tools and services made available by the community means that even young students can now build fairly sophisticated designs with reasonable effort and time. Besides the technical skills they learn along the way, it is often a tremendously inspirational experience for them to pursue a STEM related field in the future.
We have initiated an effort in the ECE Department to participate in the annual Bay Area Maker Faire and showcase the students’ designs from a variety of project courses. The Maker Faire is the flagship event in the Maker community, where makers come together to showcase their creations and exchange ideas. The Bay Area Maker Faire in San Mateo, California, is the biggest of all Maker Faires and has an attendance of approximately 130,000 people each year. A significant portion of them are young students in the 6-15 age group, whom we hope to attract and inspire. Exhibiting at the Maker Faire offers an invaluable outreach and education opportunity to reach a large targeted population and an even broader audience through media coverage. Our participation has also served as a bridge to connect with the industry as major industry players, such as Intel, AutoDesk, and Nvidia, and a host of early-stage start-ups have also created a significant presence at Maker Faire in recent years.