TY - JOUR
T1 - Quantitative survey and analysis of five maker spaces at large, research-oriented universities
AU - Forest, Craig
AU - Farzaneh, Helena Hashemi
AU - Weinmann, Julian
AU - Lindemann, Udo
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© American Society for Engineering Education, 2016.
PY - 2016/6/26
Y1 - 2016/6/26
N2 - Technical universities around the world are opening makerspaces on their campuses: facilities and cultures that afford unstructured student-centric environments for design, invention, and prototyping. Consequentially, there is a growing need to survey and understand emergent trends and best practices, to compare and contrast them. Towards this end, we have conducted interviews at five university maker spaces: Stanford University, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Georgia Tech, Technical University of Berlin, and at Arizona State University. The comparison of these spaces highlights similarities and differences in the areas' foci, size, accessibility, intellectual property policies, funding and staffing of the surveyed spaces. We extracted quantitative relations between maker space size and number of current registered users, staff supervision composition and staff to user ratio. While the sample size is small, does not span the spectrum of university makerspaces, and does not address crucial cultural factors, this survey and analysis provides an initial dataset and statistics for large, research-oriented institutions and a benchmark for relevant metrics.
AB - Technical universities around the world are opening makerspaces on their campuses: facilities and cultures that afford unstructured student-centric environments for design, invention, and prototyping. Consequentially, there is a growing need to survey and understand emergent trends and best practices, to compare and contrast them. Towards this end, we have conducted interviews at five university maker spaces: Stanford University, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Georgia Tech, Technical University of Berlin, and at Arizona State University. The comparison of these spaces highlights similarities and differences in the areas' foci, size, accessibility, intellectual property policies, funding and staffing of the surveyed spaces. We extracted quantitative relations between maker space size and number of current registered users, staff supervision composition and staff to user ratio. While the sample size is small, does not span the spectrum of university makerspaces, and does not address crucial cultural factors, this survey and analysis provides an initial dataset and statistics for large, research-oriented institutions and a benchmark for relevant metrics.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84983335647&partnerID=8YFLogxK
M3 - Conference article
AN - SCOPUS:84983335647
SN - 2153-5965
VL - 2016-June
JO - ASEE Annual Conference and Exposition, Conference Proceedings
JF - ASEE Annual Conference and Exposition, Conference Proceedings
T2 - 123rd ASEE Annual Conference and Exposition
Y2 - 26 June 2016 through 29 June 2016
ER -