Event Schedule entrepreneurship.asu.edu/makersummit

Event Schedule
entrepreneurship.asu.edu/makersummit
WELCOME TO THE CLUB...
If you are like us…
You are pretty excited to be attending
the Higher Education Maker Summit
hosted by Arizona State University on
October 23rd and 24th;
And you want to spread the word so
that more makers, leaders in higher
education and other awesome people
attend to share best practices and big
ideas.
The following is the Program for this
year’s Higher Education Maker Summit.
2
Thursday
Time
October 23, 2014
Activity
8:00
Registration and Networking Breakfast
110
9:00
Opening Session
101, 103
9:00
Welcome Remarks
Mitzi Montoya, Vice President and University Dean of
Entrepreneurship & Innovation, Arizona State University
9:05
Hello from our Sponsor, Intel
9:07
Summit Overview
Audrey Iffert-Saleem, Executive Director of Entrepreneurship &
Innovation Initiatives, Arizona State University
9:10 – 9:30
Morning Keynote
Dale Dougherty, Founder and CEO of Maker
Media, Inc.
9:30 – 9:40
Break
9:40 - 10:50
Breakout Sessions I
Managing Makerspaces
Staff training, volunteer coordination, machine maintenance,
special events, K-12 outreach programs, fundraising
presentations, oh my! Managing a makerspace is a complex
task and at times can feel overwhelming. Learn how to run a
makerspace from experts and participate in a discussion on
effective management techniques. Bring your laptop to play
along as we recreate an online organizational system
from scratch.
Moderator: Janet Auer, Advisor, Education & Corporate
Programs, Chevron Corporation
3
Location
101, 103
Thursday (continued)
Time
Activity
October 23, 2014
Location
Panelists:
• Gene Sherman, Founder/CEO, VOCADEMY,
The Makerspace
• Ian Charnas, Manager, Think[Box],
Case Western Reserve University
• Mathew Chandler, A² Fab Lab Director,
University of Florida
• Sha Xin Wei, Professor and Director, School of Arts,
Media and Engineering, Herberger Institute for Design
and the Arts and Founding Director of the Topological
Media Lab, Arizona State University
Fellows Lead Revolution On-campus
A cohort of Fellows working with the NSF-funded Epicenter
is leading a quiet revolution on campuses across the country.
Fellows are tasked with assessing their campus innovation
ecosystem and proposing a set of strategic actions to expand
opportunities for peers on campus. In doing so, Fellows have
learned that simple innovation spaces with creative programs
and vibrant culture have served as a draw for student makers.
Come hear about strategies to generate excitement for
creating and making on campus, as well as how to tap student
engagement to ensure success.
Moderator: Humera Fasihuddin, Leader, University Innovation
Fellows, Epicenter and VentureWell (formerly National
Collegiate Inventors and Innovators Alliance)
Panelists:
• Jorge Sanchez, Undergraduate Technology Entrepreneurship
and Management Student, Arizona State University
• Ryan Phillips, Undergraduate Engineering Student,
University of Oklahoma
• Corey Brugh, Graduate Chemical Engineering Student,
Colorado School of Mines
• Mary Wilcox, Undergraduate Mechanical Engineering Student,
Arizona State University
4
102
Thursday (continued)
Time
Activity
October 23, 2014
Location
From Consumer to Creator:
Integrating Making into Existing Curricula
Empower your students to become producers of things,
not just consumers of things, through infusing making into
existing curricula. The ability to make almost anything opens
up enormous possibilities and enables students to conduct
research and create inventions that truly change lives. Join
leaders in maker education for a discussion on how to
effectively embed making into your unique programs and
courses.
Moderator: Vahid Motevalli, Associate Dean for Research &
Innovation, Professor of Mechanical Engineering, College of
Engineering, Tennessee Technological University
Panelists:
• Margot Vigeant, Associate Dean of Engineering/Professor
Chemical Engineering, Bucknell University
• Jeffrey Duerk, Dean, Case School of Engineering,
Case Western Reserve University
• S. K. Ramesh, Dean, College of Engineering and Computer
Science, California State University, Northridge
• Rick Anderson, Director of Virtual Worlds, Rutgers University
TechShop Workshop: Laser Cutter
PRE-REGISTRATION REQUIRED
Limited to 10 participants
TechShop Workshop: Vinyl Cutter
PRE-REGISTRATION REQUIRED
Limited to 10 participants
TechShop Workshop: Plasma Cutter
PRE-REGISTRATION REQUIRED
Limited to 10 participants
10:50 – 11:00
5
Break
http://bit.ly/ZStwMI
http://bit.ly/ZStwMI
http://bit.ly/ZStwMI
130
Thursday (continued)
Time
11:00 – 12:10
Activity
October 23, 2014
Plenary Session Sponsored by National Instruments
Location
101, 103
Bridging the Gap between Industry Standard
Tools and the Makerspace
In order for students to be prepared to work in industry or
pursue an entrepreneurial career, students need access to
industry standard tools used in professional workplaces. In
the past, the adoption of these tools has been cumbersome
for many reasons including cost and affordability, access
and support availability; however, there are several on-going
initiatives aimed at removing these obstacles that will greatly
benefit makers. Join this panel of visionary leaders from both
industry and academia to discuss how they are breaking down
barriers to help makers gain access to these industry standard
tools.
Moderator: Jessica Stape, Academic Account Manager,
National Instruments
Panelists:
• Mark Hatch, CEO and Co-Founder of TechShop
• Mitzi Montoya, Vice President and University Dean of
Entrepreneurship & Innovation, Arizona State University
• Clint Cole, Founder and CTO of Digilent
• Sam Kristoff, Founder of LabVIEW Hacker
12:10 – 1:00
Lunch
12:30 – 1:00
Optional Tour of TechShop Chandler
Meet in front
lobby of TechShop
6
12:30 – 1:00
Optional conversation with White House Office of
Science and Technology Policy (OSTP)
1:00 – 1:05
Travel time
101, 103
Thursday (continued)
Time
Activity
October 23, 2014
1:05 – 1:25
White House Keynote
Tom Kalil, Deputy Director for Policy for the White House Office
of Science and Technology Policy and Senior Advisor for
Science, Technology and Innovation for the National Economic
Council
1:25 – 1:30
Introduction to MAKEx Talks
1:30 – 2:50
MAKEx Talks
1:30 – 1:50
Micah Lande, Assistant Professor, Polytechnic School, Ira A.
Fulton Schools of Engineering, Arizona State University
1:50 – 2:10
Joey Hudy, 17-year-old named one of the world’s 10 smartest
kids by Business Insider, and youngest Intern at Intel
Corporation
Location
101, 103
101, 103
2:10 – 2:30
Sylvia Libow Martinez, Co-author of Invent to Learn: Making,
Tinkering, and Engineering in the Classroom
2:30 – 2:50
Kai Kight, Classical Violinist and Innovative Composer (inspires
professionals to reach their full creative potential by reimagining
and reinventing their resources at hand)
2:50 – 3:00
Break
3:00 – 4:10
Breakout Sessions II
Eradicating Exclusivity: Engaging Women and
Underrepresented Groups
Currently the maker movement is perceived by many to be
homogenous, a club that does not always seem welcoming
to many women and underrepresented groups. How do we
diversify the makeup of makers? Join leaders from Intel in a
thought-provoking discussion about ways to engage more
women and underrepresented groups in the maker movement.
7
101, 103
Thursday (continued)
Time
Activity
October 23, 2014
Location
Moderator: Renee Wittemyer, Director of Social Impact, Intel
Panelists:
• Chevy Humphrey, President and CEO,
Arizona Science Center
• Ted Wells, Strategy Officer, STEMconnector
• Lisa Regalla, Interim Executive Director,
Maker Education Initiative
• Sabestine Hernandez, Coordinator, Intel Computer Clubhouse,
Pascua Yaqui Tribe
Promoting Making at the High School Level
and Beyond
What do a jacket, a set of paintings, a wood sculpture, and a
series of photos have to do with a student’s success in life?
Maybe everything. That’s because making these pieces requires
skills for modern learners -- namely, critical thinking, problem
solving, creativity, innovation, and persistence. Integrating making
into the K-12 curriculum is essential, as it allows students to
develop, deepen and master these modern skills before they
graduate. Attend this session to participate in a design-thinking
exercise structured around making at the K-12 level, to hear
about existing K-12 programs centered on design, making
and entrepreneurship and to learn how to connect with higher
education institutions to empower the next generation of makers.
130
Workshop lead by: Lisa Yokana, Art Teacher, Scarsdale High
School; Artist and Curriculum Designer
8
The Maker as Public Artist
How can maker spaces and inventive maker approaches to
technology enhance public art and make it more interactive?
This panel will explore how making can enhance and enliven
contemporary public art and how a history of a do-it-yourself/
make-it-yourself attitude has long been pervasive in American
Culture, promoting movements and subcultures such as
Burning Man, High Desert Test Sites, Fresh Kills Landfill energy
projects, the Grey Area Foundation for the Arts and the
Women’s Environmental Arts Initiatives.
102
Thursday (continued)
Time
Activity
October 23, 2014
Location
Moderator: Mary Neubauer, Professor and Area Coordinator,
Sculpture, School of Art-Herberger Institute for Design and the
Arts, Arizona State University
Panelists:
• Waldo Evan Jespersen, Art Graduate Student-Sculpture,
Arizona State University
• Jacob Sterenberg, Senior Production and Digital Manager,
Bollinger Atelier
• Cindy Ornstein, Collaborator for the Southwest Maker Fest
and the City of Mesa’s Arts and Culture Director
• Maria Salenger, AIA, Architect-Artist, colab studio + Jones
Studio
• Thad Trubakoff, Art Graduate Student-Wood,
Arizona State University
TechShop Workshop: Laser Cutter
PRE-REGISTRATION REQUIRED
Limited to 10 participants
TechShop Workshop: Vinyl Cutter
PRE-REGISTRATION REQUIRED
Limited to 10 participants
TechShop Workshop: Plasma Cutter
PRE-REGISTRATION REQUIRED
Limited to 10 participants
4:10 – 4:15
Travel Time
4:15 – 4:30
Closing Keynote
http://bit.ly/ZStwMI
http://bit.ly/ZStwMI
http://bit.ly/ZStwMI
101, 103
Mark Hatch, CEO and Co-Founder of TechShop
4:30 – 5:00
Travel Time to Mixer/Expo
5:00 – 7:00
Community Maker Mixer / Expo – with special
performance by Kai Kight, Classical Violinist and Innovative
Composer and guest speaker from Local Motors, James Earle,
lead engineer who worked on their 3D-printed car project.
9
Chandler
Center for
the Arts
Friday
Time
10
October 24, 2014
Activity
Location
8:00
Registration and Networking Breakfast
110
9:00 – 10:20
Opening Session
101, 103
9:00
Welcome Remarks
Paul Johnson, Dean of the Ira. A Fulton Schools of Engineering
Arizona State University
9:10 – 9:20
Hello from Tim McNulty, Associate Vice President for
Government Relations, Carnegie Mellon
9:20 – 9:30
Remarks from Nathan Kahl, American Society
for Engineering Education’s Managing Director for
Communications and Society Advancement
9:30 – 10:00
Morning Keynote:
Sunand Bhattacharya, Global Education Strategist, Autodesk
Education
10:00 – 10:40
MAKEx Talks
10:00 – 10:20
Bettina Chen, Founder of Roominate and Co-Founder of
Maykah Inc.
10:20 – 10:40
Jennifer Indovina, CEO and Co-Founder of Tenrehte
Technologies. Inc. (2010 TED Fellow)
10:40 – 10:50
Break
101, 103
Friday (continued)
Time
10:50 – 12:00
October 24, 2014
Activity
Location
Breakout Sessions III
Maker-preneurs 101: How to Support
Student Innovators
Making opens up myriad pathways to students by teaching
them how to ideate, design, create and build. Students must be
supported through the making process and their entrepreneurial
efforts. Want to develop a vibrant collegiate entrepreneurial
ecosystem but not sure how to? Join this panel discussion
and learn how to provide student innovators with hands-on
experiential opportunities such as internships and competitions
and provide students with support structures such as incubators,
accelerators and co-working spaces.
101, 103
Moderator: John Rieffel, Assistant Professor, Union College
Panelists:
• Lisa Camp, Associate Dean, Strategic Initiatives,
Engineering, Case Western University
• Scott Shrake, Engineering Projects in Community
Service (EPICS) Director, Ira. A Fulton Schools of
Engineering, Arizona State University
• Jimmy Gandhi, Director, Ernie Schaeffer Center for
Innovation & Entrepreneurship (CECS),
California State University, Northridge
• Deb Johnson, Executive Director,
Pratt/Brooklyn Fashion + Design Accelerator
Graduate Students in the Maker Movement
Student. Advisor. Teacher. Researcher. Innovator. Maker.
Graduate students have many responsibilities and, consequently,
wear many hats. Increasingly, more graduate students are
identifying as makers on both the personal and professional level
and are actively involving themselves in the maker movement.
Attend this panel discussion to hear the unique stories of four
graduate students involved in making and learn how to better
support graduate student makers on your campus.
11
102
Friday (continued)
Time
October 24, 2014
Activity
Location
Moderator: Stephanie Santoso, Senior Advisor for Making,
White House Office of Science and Technology Policy (OSTP)
and Ph.D. Student, Department of Information Science, Cornell
University
Panelists:
• Trent Robertson, Research Assistant,
University of Hawaii at Manoa
• Aubrey Wigner, Graduate Student, Science Policy,
Arizona State University
• Jennifer Lacy, Graduate Student,
The University of Wisconsin–Madison
• Waldo Evan Jespersen, Graduate Student-Sculpture,
Arizona State University
Majoring in Making
Several institutions of higher education have gone a step
beyond integrating making into existing curricula and have
created entire degree programs structured around making.
Come hear about the unique degree programs available at
the University of Iowa, Ohio State University, the University
of Alabama at Birmingham and Arizona State University and
learn how to design and implement interdisciplinary degree
programs centered on experiential learning, hands-on making
and industry-initiated real world projects.
Moderator: Nadia Kellam, Associate Professor,
The Polytechnic School, Ira A. Fulton Schools of
Engineering, Arizona State University
Participants:
• Ann McKenna, Director, Polytechnic School,
Ira A. Fulton Schools of Engineering, Arizona State University
• Alec Scranton, Dean, College of Engineering,
University of Iowa
• Blaine Lilly, Associate Professor, Ohio State University
• Lee Moradi, Associate Professor and Director of Engineering,
University of Alabama at Birmingham School of Engineering
12
130
Friday (continued)
Time
October 24, 2014
Activity
TechShop Workshop: Laser Cutter
PRE-REGISTRATION REQUIRED
Limited to 10 participants
TechShop Workshop: Vinyl Cutter
PRE-REGISTRATION REQUIRED
Limited to 10 participants
TechShop Workshop: Plasma Cutter
PRE-REGISTRATION REQUIRED
Limited to 10 participants
12:00 – 1:00
Lunch
12:30 – 1:00
Optional Tour of TechShop Chandler
Location
http://bit.ly/ZStwMI
http://bit.ly/ZStwMI
http://bit.ly/ZStwMI
Meet in front
lobby of TechShop
13
12:30 – 1:00
Optional conversation with White House Office of
Science and Technology Policy (OSTP)
1:00 – 1:05
Travel time
1:05 - 2:05
MAKEx Talks
1:05 – 1:25
Jae Rhim Lee, Visual Artist and Designer,
Infinity Burial Project (2011 TEDGlobal Fellow)
1:25 – 1:45
Ryan Holladay, New Media Curator, Artisphere (TED Fellow)
1:45 – 2:05
Alicia Eggert, Interdisciplinary Artist (TED Fellow)
2:05 – 2:15
Break
101, 103
101, 103
Friday (continued)
Time
2:15 – 3:25
October 24, 2014
Activity
Location
Breakout Sessions IIII
K-12 Outreach and Making
Learning is being transformed by the trends of tinkering, maker
culture and personal fabrication. In order for schools to seize
the opportunities afforded by this “Maker” spirit, educators
need more than awareness that the world is changing.
They need to develop new skills and redesign classroom
environments to support learner-centered practices in order to
prepare kids to solve problems their teachers never anticipated.
Attend this session to learn about the necessity and importance
of making in K-12 curricula and how to connect with local K-12
schools to support high school makers.
101, 103
Moderator: Gary Stager, internationally recognized
educator, speaker and consultant; Executive Director of The
Constructivist Consortium; Co-author of Invent To Learn Making, Tinkering, and Engineering in the Classroom
Panelists:
• Carlos Contreras, U.S. Education Manager, Intel
• Beverly Ball, Arts & Technology Teacher, Denver Academy
• Davin Huston, Clinical Professor, Purdue University
• Alex Belous, Education Portfolio Manager,
Cisco Foundation
Social Entrepreneurship Among Makers
By encouraging creativity, ingenuity and collaboration,
the maker movement has promoted and furthered the
entrepreneurial spirit. More and more tinkerers and makers
are turning their experiences into ventures, a large number of
which are social ventures. Join us for a discussion on social
entrepreneurship in the context of the maker movement and
learn about the role of social enterprise in society, the unique
challenges and opportunities facing social entrepreneurs and
the keys to creating a growing a meaningful social impact
venture.
14
102
Friday (continued)
Time
October 24, 2014
Activity
Location
Moderator: Jacqueline Smith, ASU’s Executive Director of
University Initiatives
Panelists:
• Alexandra Bernadotte, Founder & CEO, Beyond 12
• John Takamura, Associate Professor, The Design School at
the Herberger Institute for Design and the Arts, Arizona State
University and Director of Design for GlobalResolve, a social
entrepreneurship program at ASU’s Polytechnic campus
• Courtney Klein, CEO & Co-Founder, SEED SPOT
• Sentari Minor, Director of Partner Engagement & Education,
Social Venture Partners Arizona
Maker Portfolios in the Admissions Process: Value and
Implementation
Educational professionals from high schools and universities
will discuss various forms of Maker portfolios and how they can
be utilized to showcase the experiences and skill-sets a student
has gained through their Maker projects. The importance
of these skills and the applicability of previous hands-on
experiences, in a collegiate setting will also be highlighted.
Moderator: Dawn Wendell, Senior Lecturer, Mechanical
Engineering at MIT (and former Assistant Director of
Admissions at MIT)
Panelists:
• Alec Scranton, Dean, College of Engineering,
University of Iowa
• Lisa Yokana, Art Teacher, Scarsdale High School
• Chad Ratliff, District Administrator, Albemarle County
Public Schools
• Tim McNulty, Associate Vice President of Government
Relations, Carnegie Mellon University
15
130
Friday (continued)
Time
16
October 24, 2014
Activity
Location
3:25 – 3:30
Travel Time
3:30 – 4:15
Closing Keynote
Michelle Weise, Senior Research Fellow, Higher Education,
Clayton Christensen Institute for Disruptive Innovation
101, 103
4:15 – 4:30
Reflection/Closing/Action/Next Steps
Mitzi Montoya, Vice President and University Dean of
Entrepreneurship & Innovation at Arizona State University
101, 103
entrepreneurship.asu.edu/makersummit