Basic Fab Academy Course Info
Weekly Schedule and Topics Covered
This is subject to change every year: please check your current year http://archive.fabacademy.org/archives/
Class Meeting Times
Global lectures happen on Wednesdays at 9:00 AM EST (ranging from 6:00 on the West Coast to 23:00 in Japan) and last for approximately 3 hours. Recitations will be held on Mondays 9:00 AM EST, and regional reviews on Tuesday.
Refer to the current schedule for detailed information.
Local Instructors and Gurus are also required to attend the weekly prep meeting on Wednesdays 8:30 AM EST, 30 minutes before the start of class.
Weekly Regional Reviews / Help Sessions
Homework review sessions led by Gurus will be staggered according to global time. Exact time will be confirmed by the Supernode Gurus.
All sessions take place on the MCU conferencing system on channel 4 - Class. More information on this in the section below entitled "Video Conferencing".
Due to the limited number of MCU connections, students must go to their lab to participate with their local working group.
Students: Basic Course Requirements
Student Time Commitment
The time commitment is about 16+ hours a week at minimum, but could be far greater if the student is highly motivated, does not possess the background for a particular unit (or units) or just wants to really throw themselves into the program.
Required Documentation
Students are required to document their work each week for the unit covered and homework will be reviewed during each weekly class cycle. Your local instructor or remote guru will review your documentation in detail every week to make sure you are not falling behind.
Your Fab Academy documentation must show completion of the unit and core skill competencies. It will be in HTML format and must be able to exist within a GIT archive.
At minimum, the Global Evaluation Committee expects a student’s documentation to include:
A text description of their project for the week
designing and fabricating the work
Supporting photographs (video is great, but not required).
All final fabrication files in their original, editable formats
All code in an editable format, testable format
What the student learned: what succeeded and what failed.
It is recommended that students choose a licence for their work prior to the start of publicly posting their files. ie: Creative Commons
Sharing Digital Files and Code
You must share all of your digital design files and code (where applicable) to pass the unit.
Student Rights and Expectations
You have the right to expect:
Access to working and well-maintained digital fabrication machines in your local lab.
That all the necessary course materials will be provided for you by the local lab before the necessary unit.
- This includes sheet goods, molding and casting supplies and electronics components.
Meeting at least three times a week with your local instructor.
Two meetings are devoted to hands-on machine instruction, general lab access and direct physical access to the local instructor for questions, tutoring, etc.
The third session each week is devoted to Wednesday’s lecture session with Neil Gershenfeld.
That your local instructor / remote guru will be available to answer questions via email during the week - outside of class.
That your local instructor will give you meaningful feedback on your work and documentation. If your documentation is unsatisfactory, the Local Instructor will help you to get it up to par.
If you have a Remote Guru assigned, you should expect that:
- the Guru will contact you to set up a mutually agreed upon weekly video check-in session to help you with any questions you may have.
Student Responsibilities
It is your responsibility to be proactive in the Fab Academy course. This course offers a great deal of personal freedom.
However you are responsible for:
Designing and fabricating your own projects
It’s fine to begin with someone else’s files, but it is not acceptable to pass someone else’s work off as your own.
Cite all your sources and inspirations.
Getting your work done on time for each weekly cycle.
Documenting your work in HTML
Ensuring that your documentation is in the class archive. Work that is not in the archive will not be evaluated.