SP.776 Design for Demining, SP.786 Grad level G credit

 

Spring 2007, WF 3:30-5:00, Room 26-142, Units 2-1-6

Instructors: Andrew Heafitz, heafitz@mit.edu, Benjamin Linder, blinder@mit.edu

http://mit.edu/demining

 

Schedule

 

Date

 

 

Topic

MIT

Feb

7

W

Introduction

First day of cClasses

 

9

F

Problem, Mines

 

 

14

W

Technologies and processes

 

 

16

F

Accidents, Community

 

 

21

W

Needs and Ideas

 

 

23

F

Concepts

 

 

28

W

 

 

Mar

2

F

Trip

 

 

3

S

Trip

 

 

7

W

 

 

 

9

F

Project proposals due

 

 

14

W

 

 

 

16

F

 

 

 

21

W

 

 

 

23

F

 

 

 

28

W

No Class

Spring break

 

30

F

No Class

Spring break

Apr

4

W

 

 

 

6

F

Design Review 1

 

 

11

W

 

 

 

13

F

 

Campus preview

 

18

W

 

 

 

20

F

 

 

 

25

W

 

 

 

27

F

Design Review 2

 

May

2

W

 

 

 

4

F

 

 

 

9

W

 

 

 

11

F

 

 

 

16

W

Project report due

Last day of classes

 

 

 

 

This course is supported by the MIT Edgerton Center and the Public Service Center and funded in part by the National Collegiate Inventors & Innovators Alliance (NCIIA)


Grading

 

20%     Individual Assignments

10%     Project Proposal

15%     Design Review 1

20%     Design Review 2

25%     Project Report

10%     Attendance and Participation

 

Instructors use the marks obtained by a student and their discretion to determine a final course grade.

Discretionary considerations include attention to personal development, ethical practice, respect for others, active involvement with your work and recognition of design ability not reflected in the assessment marks given out.

 

Assignments are posted on the class website.

 

 

Course Description

 

Humanitarian Demining is the process of detecting, removing and disposing of landmines. Millions of landmines are buried in more than 80 countries resulting in more than 10,000 civilian victims every year. MIT Design for Demining is a design course that spans the entire product design and development process from identification of needs and idea generation to prototyping and blast testing to manufacture and deployment. Technical, business and customer aspects are addressed. Students learn about demining while they design, develop and deliver devices to aid the demining community. Past students have invented or improved hand tools, protective gear, safety equipment, educational graphics and teaching materials. Some tools designed in previous years are in use worldwide in the thousands. Course work is informed by a class field trip to a US Army base for demining training and guest expert speakers.

 

 

Intellectual Property Considerations

 

MIT Policies and Procedures indicate that students own the intellectual property they create while taking MIT courses, provided the work is not developed in the course of or pursuant to a sponsored research or other agreement, not created as a "work-for-hire" by operation of copyright law, and not developed with the significant use of funds or facilities administered by MIT.

 

In all likelihood, you will own the intellectual property you create in this class. Students only occasionally combine their class work with their research or their employment work. From a legal perspective, you will not be using significant MIT funds or facilities.

 

Given the service nature of this course, an effective mechanism for providing service is to place final student class work in the public domain. In some cases, it is the only way to provide a community a service.

 

As the need arises, we will discuss intellectual property plans in further detail for individual projects. In any event, do not hesitate to talk with us if you have any questions regarding this information.