A Framework for Teaching the Fundamentals of Additive Manufacturing and Enabling Rapid Innovation
Jamison Go, A. John Hart

TL;DR
This paper describes a comprehensive 15-week graduate course at MIT that teaches additive manufacturing fundamentals through technical lectures, hands-on labs, and multidisciplinary projects, fostering rapid innovation.
Contribution
It introduces a structured educational framework combining technical analysis, practical labs, and creative projects to teach additive manufacturing at advanced levels.
Findings
Students gained hands-on experience with AM machines.
Projects included designing high-strength structures and prototype printing of diverse materials.
The course emphasizes multidisciplinary integration in AM education.
Abstract
The importance of additive manufacturing (AM) to the future of product design and manufacturing systems demands educational programs tailored to embrace its fundamental principles and its innovative potential. Moreover, the breadth and depth of AM spans several traditional disciplines, presenting a challenge to instructors yet giving the opportunity to integrate knowledge via creative and challenging projects. This paper presents our approach to teaching AM at the graduate and advanced undergraduate level, in the form of a 15-week course developed and taught at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. The lectures begin with in-depth technical analysis of the major AM processes. In lab sessions, students operate and characterize desktop AM machines, and work in teams to design and fabricate a bridge having maximum strength per unit weight while conforming to geometric constraints. To…
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