Waubonsee Community College

The new shop class, getting started with 3D printing, Arduino, and wearable tech, Joan Horvath, Rich Cameron ; foreword by Coco Kaleel, Mosa Kaleel, and Nancy Kaleel

Label
The new shop class, getting started with 3D printing, Arduino, and wearable tech, Joan Horvath, Rich Cameron ; foreword by Coco Kaleel, Mosa Kaleel, and Nancy Kaleel
Language
eng
Illustrations
illustrations
Index
index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
The new shop class
Oclc number
910292918
Responsibility statement
Joan Horvath, Rich Cameron ; foreword by Coco Kaleel, Mosa Kaleel, and Nancy Kaleel
Series statement
Technology in action
Sub title
getting started with 3D printing, Arduino, and wearable tech
Summary
The New Shop Class connects the worlds of the maker and hacker with that of the scientist and engineer. If you are a parent or educator or a budding maker yourself, and you feel overwhelmed with all of the possible technologies, this book will get you started with clear discussions of what open source technologies like 3D printers, Arduinos, robots and wearable tech can really do in the right hands. Written by real "rocket scientist" Joan Horvath, author of Mastering 3D Printing, and 3D printing expert Rich Cameron (AKA whosawhatsis), The New Shop Class is a friendly, down-to-earth chat about how hands-on making things can lead to a science career. Get practical suggestions about how to use technologies like 3D printing, Arduino, and simple electronics Learn how to stay a step ahead of the young makers in your life and how to encourage them in maker activities Discover how engineers and scientists got their start, and how their mindsets mirror that of the maker. Leaern what scientists and makers can learn from each other, and why breaking things is as important as making things. See what makes a makerspace work well, and case studies of making at school. -- Back cover
Table Of Contents
The technologies -- 21st century shop teacher -- Arduino, Raspberry Pi, and programming physical things -- 3D printing -- Robots, drones, and other things that move -- Applications and communities -- What's a makerspace (or hackerspace)? -- Citizen science and open source labs -- Cosplay, wearable tech, and the internet of things -- Circuits and programming for kids -- Open source mindset and community -- Creating female makers -- Making at a community college and beyond -- How scientists get started -- Becoming a scientist -- How do scientists think? -- What do scientists do all day? -- Tying it all together -- Learning by iterating -- Learning science by making -- What scientists can learn from makers -- Appendix : links
Classification
Content
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