Fab Lab

What’s a FabLab@School?

A FabLab is a low-cost digital workshop equipped with laser-cutters, routers, 3D scanners, 3D milling machines, and programming tools, where you can “make almost anything.” There are over 150 FabLabs around the world, open to local inventors, small businesses, and garage entrepreneurs.The FabLab concept was created by Prof. Neil Gershenfeld at MIT. Despite the potential impact of FabLabs in education, they are mostly focused on adults, entrepreneurship, and product design. The FabLab@School, created by Prof. Paulo Blikstein at Stanford University is a new type of digital fabrication lab especially designed for schools and children, with several special characteristics.

https://tltl.stanford.edu/projects/fablabschool

Room 20 @ Virginia Technology Centre

“Room 20″ is our affectionate nickname for Torgersen 3080, the home of the VT Center for Innovation in Learning. The nickname pays tribute to MIT’s famous “Building 20,” the “magical incubator” of many of the 20th century’s greatest technological innovations.

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https://blogs.lt.vt.edu/cil/room-3080/

Centre for Innovation in Learning  http://www.lt.vt.edu/CIL/

Virginia Tech’s Center for Innovation in Learning (CIL) seeks to stimulate, support, and assess innovative approaches to augmenting the human intellect by means of information and communication technologies. CIL programs focus on what John Seely Brown and others have called the “edge” of traditional practices and approaches. Such “edge” endeavors, and those who pursue them, share some important characteristics:

  1. Their work is nimble and has the potential to scale.
  2. Their work is differentiated from core practices.
  3. Their work is intensely aspirational, motivated by an unusually strong sense of mission and purpose. Those who work at the edge “are truly out to ‘change the world’ and will settle for nothing less” (Brown et al., “Three Ways to Distinguish an Edge from a Fringe,” Harvard Business Review, March 10, 2010. Online: http://blogs.hbr.org/bigshift/2010/03/three-ways-to-distinguish-an-e.html).

This third characteristic is the most important of all. Only this kind of intensity, born of a desire to lead within a “symbolic” frame (Bolman & Deal, 1997), can bring about cultural transformation and the “leapfrog” innovations that are truly breathtaking.