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EPICS
Engineering Projects in Community Service
EPICS - What is it?
Students
Faculty & Staff
Community partners
Working together to
make a difference
EPICS
Goals
Engineering Projects in Community Service
Design and implement engineering solutions to
real problems
Develop teamwork & communication skills
Gain project planning & leadership experience
Develop customer-awareness
Gain awareness of ethical, economic,
& legal issues
Foster community involvement
EPICS
Organization
Engineering Projects in Community Service
Large-team experience:
teams of 10-15 students
Vertically-integrated teams:
freshmen+sophomores+juniors+seniors+
graduate students
Long-term design experience:
academic credit throughout the student’s
career
EPICS
Organization (cont.)
Engineering Projects in Community Service
Partnerships with local community organizations:
together, the students and community partner
identify engineering problems faced by the agency
Multidisciplinary projects:
BME, ME, IE, ECE, ChE, MS&E, Business, EMA,
Art, CS, and others
Realistic Experience
define-design-build-test-deploy-support
EPICS
Course Structure
Engineering Projects in Community Service
Common meeting time for all teams
(Wed. 4:30-7:30 p.m.)
Faculty advisor for each team
1-3 credits/semester
May register for up to 7 semesters
May fulfill technical elective or senior design
requirements
EPICS
Engineering Projects in Community Service
Current Projects
EPICS
Movement Disabilities
Engineering Projects in Community Service
Students are working with
the Department of
Rehabilitation Medicine to
improve page turners for
quadriplegic patients
Advisor :
Prof. Frank Fronczak, ME
EPICS
Voice Improvement
Engineering Projects in Community Service
Students are working with the
Department of Communicative
Disorders to design a portable
device that monitors the voice
loudness of speech impaired
patients by using a throat
microphone
Advisor:
Prof. Willis Tompkins,
BME
EPICS
Biofeedback / Stress
Management
Engineering Projects in Community Service
Students are working
with the Department of
Medicine to design a
device for measuring
brain waves and
providing feedback
during meditation
Advisor:
Prof. John Webster,
BME
EPICS
Shared Volunteer System
Engineering Projects in Community Service
Students are designing an information
management system for the Morgridge Center,
RSVP and United Way’s Volunteer System
Advisors:
Prof. Fred Bradley, MS&E
Leah Newman, IE
EPICS
Coordinating Leadership
Opportunities
Engineering Projects in Community Service
Students are collaborating
with the Student
Organization Office to
develop a web-based
information management
system
Advisors:
Prof. Fred Bradley, MS&E
Leah Newman, IE
EPICS
Campus Sustainability
Engineering Projects in Community Service
Students are working with the
Sustainability Forum and
Center for Sustainability to
design systems to educate
the public about material flows
and human activity to
contribute to the quality of life
Advisors:
Prof. Fred Bradley, MS&E
Leah Newman, IE
EPICS
Homelessness Prevention
Network
Engineering Projects in Community Service
Students are working with the Madison
Homelessness Prevention Network to create an
information management system for the Madison
community service organizations
Advisors:
Prof. Fred Bradley, MS&E
Leah Newman, IE
EPICS
Project Partners
Engineering Projects in Community Service
Community organizations:
Madison Community Development Block Grant Office,
Morgridge Center for Public Service,
Retired Senior and Volunteer Program,
United Way’s Volunteer Center
Departments:
Rehabilitation Medicine,
Communicative Disorders,
Medicine
EPICS
Project Partners
Engineering Projects in Community Service
UW
service and outreach:
Sustainability
Forum
Environmental Management Center
Center for Sustainability and Global
Environment
Student Organization Office
Leadership Institute and Office for Human
Resource Development
EPICS
Role of
Project Partners
Engineering Projects in Community Service
Provide challenging, real projects
Be involved throughout the project
Evaluate prototypes; suggest improvements
Use the final project
Suggest further projects
Demonstrate their mission to students
Provide better service to the community
EPICS
Benefits to
students
Engineering Projects in Community Service
Real-world problem
solving
Design
Teamwork
Communication skills
Multidisciplinary
experience
Project management
Leadership
Professional
responsibility
Web site
development
Community
involvement
Information systems
Creativity
EPICS
Benefits to
Community Partners
Engineering Projects in Community Service
Improve current services and realize
opportunities for new services via
access to technology and expertise
that would otherwise be prohibitively
expensive
EPICS
Status
Engineering Projects in Community Service
Started at Purdue in 1995
Started in Wisconsin in Fall 2000
7 teams - 70 students, 5 faculty advisors, 1 staff
Support from NSF, Corporation for National
Service
EPICS
Engineering Projects in Community Service
What makes EPICS work?
Close partnerships
Long-term commitment
Institutional support
The idea: making a
difference
The people: students,
community partners,
faculty, staff
EPICS
Student view
Engineering Projects in Community Service
Benefits of EPICS from a student’s point of view:
“The issues worked on have real importance”
“Real world customers/clients”
“Cross functional: work with business, marketing, other
engineering majors, design majors”
“Project management: we don’t just answer to a professor,
real people are counting on us”
“Build relationships and learn from other students and
clients”
EPICS
Engineering Projects in Community Service
CONTACT INFORMATION
John Webster, Director
Phone: 608-263-1574
e-mail: [email protected]
Web Site URL
http://epics.engr.wisc.edu