Mini-Grants Lead to Major Ideas

Innovation is what keeps ³ÉÈËӰƬ moving forward. So, it isn’t too much of a stretch to take the slogan of the new online class developed by UAF’s College of Engineering and Mines, ‘If you can engineer in ³ÉÈËӰƬ, you can engineer anywhere,’ and apply it to ‘innovation’.

Makerspace ³ÉÈËӰƬ ES100L is a one-credit face to face laboratory course in which first-year ³ÉÈËӰƬ learn technical skills like programming, digital fabrication, and using Raspberry Pi computers before working in teams to complete a semester-length creative design of their choosing. The teams work all the way from ideation, to proposal submission, to design and development, and finally to fabrication.  

This first student cohort used the and mini-grant funding provided by Center ICE to develop addressing a suite of issues. The presentations happening on Dec. 7-9, 2022 will be lively and informative.  An of one of the projects presented at a similar event last spring shows a robotic snow plow with little to no human interaction.

Please RSVP to attend by clicking on thisor using the QR code on the flier.  If you aren't able to attend in person, webinars will be set up for each presentation and you are welcome to join in.  You can register for a calendar invite with the links on the form, or find the links below: 

Dec 7 -

Dec 8 -

Dec 9 -

Engineering ³ÉÈËӰƬ and Makerspace ³ÉÈËӰƬ are two separate courses developed by CEM that have similar course numbers, but neither course is a prerequisite or corequisite for the other.  Engineering ³ÉÈËӰƬ provides a theoretical and contextual framework, while Makerspace ³ÉÈËӰƬ provides hands-on design experience. At the moment, Makerspace ³ÉÈËӰƬ is only available to ³ÉÈËӰƬ on location at the Fairbanks campus. 

For more information on the mini-grants, please contact Tate Barhaug at tlbarhaug@alaska.edu.