Automation Training and Education Advances
Automation Training and Education Advances
Learn through doing
Another company vigorously promoting educating the next generation of engineers and technicians is National Instruments ( www.ni.com). Ray Almgren, vice president of academic relations at the Austin, Texas-based instrumentation and automation supplier, is prominent during every NI Week user conference showing successes with products and accomplishments of programs designed to recruit, educate and motivate a new breed of engineers. Recently he has been promoting a concept called “project-based learning.”
The Buck Institute for Education ( BIE, www.bie.org ), a non-profit, research and development organization dedicated to improving the practice of teaching and the process of learning, defines standards-focused project-based learning as “a systematic teaching method that engages students in learning knowledge and skills through an extended inquiry process structured around complex, authentic questions and carefully designed products and tasks.” Projects can range from brief projects of one to two weeks based on a single subject, to year-long, interdisciplinary projects that involve community participation and adults outside the school.
People who are motivated and enthusiastic to learn, will learn. Project-based education is designed to provide an environment where teams of kids can get involved and enthusiastic about achieving something. To illustrate the power of motivation, I suggest the example of a young man I know who has a great love of country music. Even though his “intelligence level” is pretty far below normal, he has learned to use a computer to surf the Web to stream music and research. When I told him I was going to Texas once, he proceeded to list about 20 country musicians from Texas. I told him how impressed I was, and he replied, “I’m interested in this, so I study it.” There are many companies and people putting together ideas, technologies and products to help capture the imagination of the next generation and train and educate them in engineering and manufacturing. They hope to get them interested so they’ll learn.
Gary Mintchell , gmintchell@automationworld.com, is Editor in Chief of Automation World .
Invensys Operations Management
www.invensys.com
National Instruments
www.ni.com
The Buck Institute for Education, BIE
www.bie.org
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