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NSF grant of about $300,000 to support Roane State’s mechatronics program

Posted at 1:14 pm August 26, 2019
By Owen Driskill Leave a Comment

National Science Foundation Mechatronics Grant

Roane State mechatronics program director Gordon Williams, right, works with students at the college’s Clinton Higher Education and Workforce Training Facility. The mechatronics program prepares students for careers in advanced manufacturing. For more information, visit roanestate.edu/mechatronics or contact Williams at (865) 354-3000, ext. 4899, or [email protected]. (Photo by Roane State)

 

By Bob Fowler, Roane State staff writer

Roane State Community College has been awarded a three-year grant to make sure the community college’s mechatronics students have a well-rounded technical education to benefit themselves and their future employers.

The National Science Foundation’s Advanced Technological Education grant is for $299,793. It runs through June 30, 2022.

“A great team got this project off the ground and will keep it moving forward to benefit students,” said Shelley Esquivel, the community college’s grants specialist who submitted the proposal to NSF.

The “Co-Req Mech” project will improve the preparation and increase the program completion of students in the mechatronics program to meet industry needs by integrating assignments and activities in general education courses that directly relate to the concepts taught in the mechatronics program.

Local employers in partnership with Roane State will provide oversight in curriculum development to combine math applications with mechatronics and evaluate the project’s success.

The new approach is expected to “significantly enhance mechatronics education and training at Roane State” and will be a model for other colleges and universities, according to a summary of the project.

“This project will likely increase the degree completion rate of first-generation students for whom math and general education courses often pose a major hurdle to degree attainment,” the summary states.

While the project can be applied to other fields of study, Roane State opted to “address the mechatronics program first due to the high prevalence of industry demand for technically-skilled and business-oriented technicians who possess sufficient knowledge, skills, and abilities such as critical thinking, applied knowledge, and complex problem-solving skills,” it continues.

Expected broader impacts of the new initiative should include “a strengthening of the partnership between academia and industry in Roane State’s service area, improving faculty instruction and expertise, and improving undergraduate mechatronics education in this rural area to better serve industry needs,” according to the summary.

Roane State’s mechatronics program prepares students for careers in advanced manufacturing. For more information, visit roanestate.edu/mechatronics or contact program director Gordon Williams at (865) 354-3000, ext. 4899, or [email protected].

Remember, eligible adults can now attend Roane State tuition-free with the new Reconnect grant. Learn more at www.roanestate.edu/reconnect.

This story and photo were submitted by Owen Driskill.

More information will be added as it becomes available.

You can contact John Huotari, owner and publisher of Oak Ridge Today, at (865) 951-9692 or [email protected].

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Filed Under: College, Education, Front Page News, Top Stories Tagged With: Advanced Technological Education, Gordon Williams, mechatronics, National Science Foundation, NSF, Roane State, Roane State Community College, Shelley Esquivel

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