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With health care workers at the front lines of the coronavirus pandemic, the demand for personal protective equipment is at an all-time high. To address this challenge, students at Camdenton High School are using 3D printers to help produce hundreds of face shields for health care workers at Lake Regional Hospital in Osage Beach, Missouri. The printers were provided by nearby Camdenton Middle School, which received them as part of a $16-million grant from the MU College of Education’s eMINTS National Center.
“To see the face shields being used by medical professionalsis encouraging and the reaction has been super positive,” said Zane Foulk, asenior at Camdenton High School and member of the Camdenton For Inspiration andRecognition of Science and Technology (FIRST) Robotics team. “We have beenmaking roughly 40 face shields a day and will keep going until we run out ofmaterial or the hospitals get what they need.”
As COVID-19 continues to spread, what started as a simple ask from Lake Regional Hospital for 150 face shields quickly snowballed into additional requests from first responders, dentist offices and even U.S. troops serving overseas in Afghanistan.
“Our small, good intention turned into something muchlarger,” said Sherry Comer, who coaches the Camdenton LASER 3284 FIRST Roboticsteam and serves as the school district’s after-school director. “It’s been acollaborative effort, and the students were eager to jump at an opportunity tohelp the community.”
The grant project, which started in 2018, trains middleschool teachers to incorporate technology, such as 3D printing, into theirclassrooms. Michelle Kendrick, program coordinator for eMINTS, EnhancingMissouri’s Instructional Networked Teaching Strategies, collaborated with JohannesStrobel, a professor in the College of Education, to partner with 27 middleschools throughout rural Missouri and Kansas.
“We are teaching students that they are not just consumersof new technologies, but they can use it to produce something that is helpfuland can save lives,” Strobel said. “This is a time to organize and mobilize ourresources to support the health care workers in our communities.”
Strobel has been working with 16 3D printers in the Collegeof Education to prototype new designs and produce face shields locally for MUHealth Care, Boone Hospital and nursing homes. He and Kendrick are working withthe Department of Education to share the 3D printing experiences in Camdentonwith other eMINTS partner middle schools throughout rural Missouri and Kansas.Printers for the project were provided by Kansas City Audio-Visual.
In addition, Kendrick and Strobel are developing curriculumfor middle school teachers that highlight the coronavirus pandemic response inrelation to its impact on science, technology, engineering and math (STEM), aswell as skills like problem-solving, teamwork and empathy.
“By tying this health crisis into the students’ curriculum,they are able to see that the work they are doing with 3D printers is having animmediate and direct impact on a real-world situation,” Kendrick said. “Inaddition to sparking interest in science and making schoolwork more engaging,we hope this experience teaches young students about empathy by asking them toconsider the needs of health care workers and the sacrifices they have made toprotect us all.”