Authors
Stanley Hunley, Joshua Whitman, Seungik Baek, Xiaobo Tan, Drew Kim
Publication date
2010
Journal
age
Volume
15
Pages
1
Description
The project presented in this paper is designed to motivate interest in the engineering field for K-12 students, especially those who have previously viewed engineering as disconnected from biological sciences or the medical field. This idea is supported by recent trends in biomedical engineering, namely that the number of biomedical engineering bachelor‘s and master‘s degrees awarded throughout the United States has more than doubled since 2000, and that the demand for biomedical engineers will increase through 2010. However, to stimulate early interest in the biomedical engineering field, there is an apparent need for simple projects that clearly convey the relevance of engineering to biomedical contexts.
This paper describes a novel educational program that seeks to achieve this connection at the K-12 understanding level using a build-and-test experimental device that incorporates physics, biology, teamwork, engineering analysis, and cutting edge technology into a single, integrative project. The build-and-test device used in this program is an actuator that simulates the action of sarcomeres (individual contractile units of muscle fibers) during muscle contraction, which demonstrates how creativity in engineering design may inspired by phenomenon found in nature. To build the device, a group of three or four students are assigned individual tasks that combine to produce a working device. The diversity of these specific tasks also allows students to identify areas of engineering that may pique their interest. Furthermore, the project implements new technology in the form of electroactive polymer (EAP), which produces a motion when …