Published: January 29, 2019 | Updated: October 7, 2019

Program goal: To build Idaho’s advanced manufacturing workforce

Ruby Jiles, Sadie Etzwiler and Payton Jackson from Southside Elementary School in Cocolalla show another North Idaho student the 3D-printed prototypes of collapsible snowshoes their team designed for the inaugural North Idaho FabSLAM Student Showcase at Lewis-Clark State College in Lewiston in 2018. The event was staged by the Idaho STEM Action Center, which launched the MakerMinded program throughout the Gem State today in partnership with Lightweight Innovations for Tomorrow (LIFT). The MakerMinded digital platform expands student and school access to world-class advanced manufacturing and science, technology, engineering and math learning experiences, and highlights student competition.

Ruby Jiles, Sadie Etzwiler and Payton Jackson from Southside Elementary School in Cocolalla show another North Idaho student the 3D-printed prototypes of collapsible snowshoes their team designed for the inaugural North Idaho FabSLAM Student Showcase at Lewis-Clark State College in Lewiston in 2018. The event was staged by the Idaho STEM Action Center, which launched the MakerMinded program throughout the Gem State today in partnership with Lightweight Innovations for Tomorrow (LIFT). The MakerMinded digital platform expands student and school access to world-class advanced manufacturing and science, technology, engineering and math learning experiences, and highlights student competition. Photo by Kevin Grote for Idaho STEM Action Center

Lightweight Innovations for Tomorrow, a Detroit-based national manufacturing innovation institute, and the Idaho STEM Action Center have officially launched the MakerMinded program in the Gem State.

MakerMinded will expand students’ and schools’ access to world-class advanced manufacturing and science, technology, engineering, and math learning experiences through a digital platform that highlights student competition. Through these transformational experiences, middle and high school students will gain 21st-century skills and secure their path to in-demand STEM careers.

Originally designed by LIFT and Tennessee Tech University’s iCUBE and launched in 2016, MakerMinded impassions students about advanced manufacturing and equips them with the skills and mindsets needed in the innovation economy. It directly links students to a diverse range of national and local STEM and advanced manufacturing programs, including manufacturing facility tours, gaming activities, and project-based learning. MakerMinded also drives a sense of competition, as students and schools receive points for each completed activity that are tallied on a real-time online leader board. The top schools are celebrated at year-end recognition events. “Idaho is pleased to provide teachers and students throughout our state with access to an innovative program like MakerMinded,” former Idaho Gov. Butch Otter said. “Our state’s partnership with LIFT aligns perfectly with our mission to seek education and work-based learning opportunities that allow Idaho to build the workforce to fill STEM-related jobs and attract new business.”

STEM Action Center executive director Dr. Angela Hemingway concurs. “Manufacturing is an important part of Idaho’s economy, with over 1,600 manufacturing firms employing 10.2 percent of the workforce,” she said. “The nearly 70,000 manufacturing employees in Idaho have an average annual compensation of $64,280.”

Idaho will become part of a national MakerMinded initiative that includes campaigns in Michigan, Indiana, Kentucky, Ohio, Tennessee, and West Virginia, where LIFT works with local partners to onboard schools and activate students’ participation. To date, over 5,000 students and teachers from over 400 middle and high schools are active on the platform.

LIFT is a public-private partnership dedicated to developing and deploying advanced lightweight metal manufacturing technologies and implementing education and training programs to better prepare the workforce today and in the future.

“The innovative MakerMinded platform has proven successful in attracting students to the world of advanced manufacturers. LIFT is proud to be part of the movement to prepare the next generation of innovators and makers,” LIFT education and workforce development VP Emily DeRocco said. “The experiences MakerMinded provides help build the foundational technical and employability skills young students need as they prepare to enter a competitive career and adulthood.”

The program’s expansion into Idaho is made possible through a grant from the U.S. Department of Defense’s National Defense Education Program to help fulfill the mission to attract, inspire, and develop exceptional STEM talent across the education continuum. Through exposure to cutting-edge education programs and activities, MakerMinded students can become the future workforce the nation needs to meet its most complex defense technological and manufacturing challenges.

“I’m excited to see MakerMinded come to Idaho,” John McFarlane, Idaho’s MakerMinded coordinator at the STEM Action Center, said. “Advanced manufacturing is a rapidly expanding sector in Idaho’s economy and this program will help students see employment possibilities they might not have considered otherwise.”

The Idaho MakerMinded goal is to sign up at least 50 schools and 1,000 users across the state by the end of the 2018-2019 academic year. Awards will be presented to the top performing schools for their engagement in May 2019.

Students, schools, employers and others interested in joining the Idaho MakerMinded campaign should visit: www.ID.makerminded.com