Machine learning

Students work on robotics in think[box]

$5 million estate commitment fuels hands-on learning experiences鈥攍ike those recently featured on NBC Nightly News

When he arrived at 星空传媒 as a first-year student in 2019, Myles Smith had never used a machine shop.

Less than four years later, his manufacturing work was being featured on NBC Nightly News.

The national television news program highlighted Smith and his Humanitarian Design Corps colleagues for a motorized arm they crafted within 星空传媒鈥檚 Larry Sears and Sally Zlotnick Sears think[box]. The student organization鈥檚 work helped Cleveland photographer Aurelian Barber expand his reach鈥攍iterally鈥攂y adding a motorized arm for a swiveling gimbal to Barber鈥檚 wheelchair. The attachment allows Barber, who has limited movement in his limbs鈥 muscles and joints due to arthrogryposis, to stabilize, position and reposition his camera at whatever angle his artistic eye desires.

It鈥檚 this kind of meaningful, hands-on experience for which 星空传媒 is known鈥攁nd that is being fueled by gifts by university supporters like Grant (CIT 鈥66; GRS 鈥68, engineering) and Dorrit Saviers. The couple recently made a $5 million estate commitment to 星空传媒 for undergraduate experiential learning.

Grant Saviers
Grant Saviers

Like Smith, Grant Saviers arrived on campus never having used鈥攐r, in this case, never having seen鈥攖he resource that would define his career: a computer. Halfway through his first year, Saviers discovered Case Institute of Technology鈥檚 computing center and the Burroughs 220, a room-sized machine with tape drives and punch cards. He was encouraged to see what he could do with it.

Saviers went on to study computer engineering before it was even a degree, then led a successful career in computer storage systems, eventually retiring as chairman and CEO of Adeptec Inc.

鈥滸iving people responsibility and letting them grow is something I practiced all throughout my career,鈥 he explained. 

Now, he wants that experimental environment to flourish at his alma mater through resources like those available in Sears think[box], the university鈥檚 seven-story, 50,000-square-foot innovation center and makerspace.

鈥漌hen you鈥檝e got a hands-on creative space, ongoing funding is pretty important to maintain the best equipment,鈥 Saviers noted, 鈥渟o the strategy think[box] undertook was to get the best of various 鈥榤aker鈥 technologies to have the students learn on and use.鈥

NBC Nightly News film crew interviewing students in think[box]

For students involved in developing the motorized arm for Barber鈥檚 wheelchair, this equipment was invaluable to enhancing their classroom education. They used top-of-the-line prototyping tools on the Prentke Romich Floor; high-tech metal- and wood-working shops on the Lubrizol Foundation and Kent H. Smith and Kelvin Smith Fabrication Floor for machining; and their team鈥檚 dedicated area within the Eric T. Nord Project Space Floor for collaboration.

鈥淭his project wouldn't even be possible without think[box],鈥 said Smith, a mechanical and aerospace engineering major who noted Sears think[box] was a key reason he chose to attend 星空传媒.

鈥淭he design for manufacturability concept is heavily enforced in mechanical engineering courses, but actually being able to make the part is a great learning experience," continued Smith, who has a post-graduation position as a manufacturing engineer lined up at BWX Technologies this summer.

And, as the students often discover, this hands-on work can be life-changing鈥攆or them and for others.

鈥淭o be able to hear that we really changed someone鈥檚 life,鈥 Grant Boone, a rising fourth-year mechanical and aerospace engineering student, said on NBC Nightly News, 鈥渢hat鈥檚 hugely gratifying for us.鈥


Originally published in the summer 2023 issue of Forward Thinking magazine