A team of pupils from Birches Head Academy in Stoke-on-Trent will be designing and 3D printing their own gadget for KMF’s 2015 Young Engineer of the Year (YEOTY) competition. KMF and Birches Head’s appointed sponsor, the engineering group Goodwin, donated a Makerbot Z18 3D printer to the school to help its pupils get to grips with the innovative technology and experiment for themselves.
The KMF competition is designed to tie in with the school’s STEM curriculum. After giving students the chance to revamp a fully-functioning race car last year, KMF has now challenged the 25 participating teams to design and 3D print a concept gadget. To encourage creativity and lateral thinking, no additional stipulations were imposed on the students, the only limitation being the capabilities of the printer.
“Birches Head Academy is starting to consolidate its portfolio of innovative engineering projects,” explained Roisin Maguire, head teacher of Birches Head Academy. “Last year, our pupils set up a radio station, a hyperlocal news website and a hack lab, not to mention they designed and modified a race car for KMF’s YEOTY competition.”
“We try to take the STEM curriculum out of the text books and transfer it to real world applications that develop our pupils’ practical skills. We know from experience that projects like KMF’s YEOTY competition capture our students’ imagination, while also growing their engineering, business and interpersonal skills.”
Currently, the Birches Head Academy students are working on outlining the concept for their gadget. The team has already submitted the idea, alongside some market research, a feasibility study and details of the manufacturing process.
The Birches Head Academy team is composed of seven students: Zakhir Hussain, Lewis Atherton, Yousaf Ahmed, Mohammed Abubakr, Charlotte Holdcroft, Mohammed Riaz and Katie Moayedi-Arazaour.
The next will be a Gadget Show meets Dragon’s Den event that will take place at the Britannia stadium on March 12, 2015. Selected teams will get a chance to exhibit their project in a stand and pitch it to a panel of judges, made up of local business people and industry bodies, such as the Royal Academy of Engineering. Final judging will take place on June 18, 2015. The project’s advocate, Jason Bradbury, of Channel 5’s The Gadget Show will make the final decision.