Fab Academy

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The Fab Academy provides instruction and supervises investigation of mechanisms, applications, and implications of digital fabrication.

Just as communications and computation went from analog to digital, resulting in PCs and the Internet, the digitization of fabrication is leading to personal fabricators that will allow anyone to make almost anything, anywhere. The development of digital fabrication is based on creating codes that don't just describe things, they are things, much as proteins are coded in molecular biology. This research roadmap is ultimately aiming at a Star Trek-style replicator, but prototype versions of these capabilities are already available in field "fab labs".

Fab labs began as an outreach project from MIT's Center for Bits and Atoms (CBA), and spread around the world. The Fab Academy was launched to provide access to advanced instruction for students in these labs exceeding the educational resources locally available to them. It links groups of students and instructors in fab labs, with online video collaboration and lectures by a global faculty. Unlike remote instruction from a central campus, the digital fabrication tools in a fab lab effectively allow the campus to come to the student, for distributed rather than distance education.

The Fab Academy offers Certificates on relevant technical topics, and a Diploma aimed at vocational and technical training for employment and investment (along with assistance to its graduates in those areas).These are accredited by the Fab Academy; it is anticipated that they will by followed by a Bachelor's degree to be offered under applicable regional accreditation, along with post-graduate study.

Fab Academy Certificates provide familiarity with technical options and capabilities, hands-on experience, and direction for further study. Each requires, and is evaluated by, developing and documenting projects. They are periodically renewed to reflect best practices. The Certificates typically require 1-2 weeks. They are combined in the Diploma, which is roughly comparable to completing MIT's rapid-prototyping course "How To Make (almost) Anything". Progress is evaluated by skills and projects rather than time or credits.

Following an initial trial in 2008, the Fab Academy accepted the first Diploma students in the Fall of 2009. Admission is limited by available space, and based on balancing the students' backgrounds, interests, and experience, as well as project portfolios. Fab Academy tuition is priced to cover the local costs of instruction, facilities, and materials, as well as global capacity. Where possible, support is sought for needs-based tuition assistance. The Fab Academy application is available here.

The Fab Academy is directed by Neil Gershenfeld, produced by Vicente Guallart and Sherry Lassiter, and coordinated by Tomas Diez. Fab Academy faculty who are leaders in their respective fields provide global video lectures, supervise academic content, and guide research. Hands-on instruction in the labs is provided by instructors who supervise and evaluate Certificates, develop and disseminate instructional material, and assist with projects.

The schedule for the Spring of 2011 will be:

   * boot camp (Jan 10-14)
   * digital fabrication principles and practices (Jan 19)
   * collaborative technical development, documentation, and project management (Jan 26)
   * computer-aided design, manufacturing, and modeling (Feb 2):
   * computer-controlled cutting (Feb 9)
   * electronics production (Feb 16)
   * computer-controlled machining (Feb 23)
   * electronics design (Mar 2)
   * 3D molding and casting (Mar 9)
   * embedded programming (Mar 16)
   * 3D scanning and printing (Mar 23)
   * interface and application programming (Mar 30)
   * input devices (Apr 6)
   * composites (Apr 13)
   * output devices (Apr 20)
   * embedded networking and communications (Apr 27)
   * machine design Wed (May 4)
   * digital fabrication applications and implications (May 11)
   * invention, intellectual property, and business models (May 18)
   * digital fabrication project development (May 25)
   * final project presentations (June 1)

Global lectures happen on Wednesdays at 9:00 on the US East Coast (ranging from 6:00 on the West Coast to 23:00 in Japan), with lab sections at the same time on Mondays and Fridays.