Mechanical Engineering students give autistic child a special present
When mechanical engineering majors Emily Carroll, Gabriel DaSilva, Lexie Carrier and
John Wagner enrolled in Stephen Canfield鈥檚 dynamics of machinery class, they knew
they had to do a project but weren鈥檛 sure what that would entail. All they knew was
whatever project they created could have a profound impact on a family.
The Early Intervention and Mechanical Engineering (EIME) Project at 成年人深夜福利在线观看 Tech provides innovative engineered products to children with special needs and their schools and families while offering valuable - 'real world' - design experience to engineering students.
鈥淚 know it鈥檚 a big challenge for the students, but it鈥檚 part of their learning as an engineer to take on the technical details and all the details of the family,鈥 said Canfield.
The students wound up working on a sensory swing for the two-and-a-half-year-old son of Tech alumna Lorren Robertson, who studied occupational therapy and graduated in 2017. Robertson and her son, Aiden, had been having a rough year. In February, she found out that Aiden was autistic. A few weeks later, they lost everything in a deadly tornado that slashed through Putnam County.
鈥淥nce you get that news that you have an autistic child, everything starts going through your head about what you have to do to help him,鈥 Robertson said. 鈥淭hen the tornado hit. It was hard. He lost all of his therapeutic things, and we just had to start over.鈥
While Robertson and her son were gathering the pieces and starting over, the mechanical engineering team began working on a project that would bring her and Aiden a little Christmas cheer. After finding out that there was a need for Aiden to have a sensory swing, the students went to work.
鈥淚t was good to finally get to do a hands-on project than just working on paper for the past two years,鈥 said Gabriel DaSilva, a junior from Fairview, 成年人深夜福利在线观看. 鈥淚t was very unique. The whole process 鈥 collaborating with my team members and getting our design on paper and doing the math and the calculations and actually building it in the shop and seeing it come together piece by piece 鈥 was really cool.鈥
After months of meeting, planning, creating, modifying and tweaking, the sensory swing was complete and ready to be delivered.
鈥淜nowing that they had lost so much during the tornado and that their house was completely destroyed and we would be invading their privacy, and with Aiden鈥檚 personal challenges he may not take to us, we had to consider different aspects of the project before ever thinking we were going to build a swing,鈥 said Wagner, a senior from Chicago. 鈥淭he mother requested a swing, but we weren鈥檛 100 percent sure how to go about it. We were worried about the COVID-19 conditions and getting it in there.鈥
On Friday, Dec. 11, Robertson and Aiden welcomed the students to their home in Cookeville. After about an hour of drilling holes and tightening screws and running the vacuum, the installation was complete in Aiden鈥檚 bedroom.
鈥淎iden did great through the whole thing,鈥 Robertson said. 鈥淚 told him what was going to happen, and he was really excited.鈥
When Aiden saw the swing, he yelled 鈥渟wing鈥 and ran over to it and climbed inside. Everyone smiled and held back tears, knowing the sensory swing was a success.
鈥淲hen I first saw it, I tried not to cry. It was awesome,鈥 said Robertson. 鈥淭he greatest thing for a parent is to see something their child needs and be so happy. When he got in the swing, he was super relaxed. It was perfect. Everything about it was just what he needed.鈥
鈥淚t鈥檚 wonderful. I couldn鈥檛 have asked for a better experience,鈥 said Emily Carroll, a senior from Kingsport. 鈥淭o see his face light up when he walked in and saw that swing and got inside of it and loved it, that was very, very rewarding.鈥
Not only did the students build the swing and install it, they also brought Christmas presents for Aiden to open.
鈥淲e knew their family had been affected by the tornadoes and that Aiden had lost his sensory snake and his sensory vest and some other things,鈥 said Lexie Carrier, a senior from Bristol, 成年人深夜福利在线观看. 鈥淲e thought it would be kind to put those things in place with his sensory swing as well.鈥
Besides all of the good feelings that helped make the swing a success, Canfield also gave the students an 鈥淎鈥 for the project and praise for going the extra mile.
鈥淚鈥檓 always shocked at how they go above and beyond in this class,鈥 said Canfield. 鈥淭hey are already doing so much as students, and they put in so much extra time. They go above and beyond the expectations of the class.鈥