Technical Center Celebrates 50th Anniversary


One of the students gets to experience just how warm and heavy the fire gear is – even minus the boots



Download 1.63 Mb.
Page11/22
Date16.01.2018
Size1.63 Mb.
#36895
1   ...   7   8   9   10   11   12   13   14   ...   22

One of the students gets to experience just how warm and heavy the fire gear is – even minus the boots.

“We have a hunger of the mind which asks for knowledge of all around us, and the more we gain, the more is our desire; the more we see, the more we are capable of seeing.” –Maria Mitchell

Last year Professor Paul J. Dine and a group of students from New Jersey Institute of Technology (NJIT) Albert Dorman Honors College visited the Technical Center. Congressman Donald Payne, (D-N.J), impressed by the students and professors’ enthusiasm about the visit, requested a return visit.

NJIT is a major public technological university whose mission is education, research, economic development, and service. It also “prepares its graduates for positions of leadership as professionals and as citizens.” It offers programs to prepare students for a “technology dependent economy of the 21 st century.”

Sponsored by the city of Newark and a matching grant from the state legislature in 1881, the Newark Technical School was established. Non-degree courses were offered in science, math, and drawing. In the 127 years since the school was established, it has changed its name to NJIT and has courses and programs that evolved into six full colleges, among them the Albert Dorman Honors College. Founded in 1985 as “the Institute Honors Program, it became a college in 1995.” Approximately 600 students in the honors program excel in engineering, aerospace studies, computer science, architecture, sciences, and liberal arts.

The college goes beyond the classroom. Students are offered a superior academic program, hands-on research activities and projects, and meet with specialists at major corporations in their respective fields in order to prepare them to be leaders in their fields.” The Technical Center was only one of several learning opportunities that the students are provided. They visit Washington, DC, tour major companies, and tour historical and cultural sites.



The students’ quest for learning was quite evident from the moment they arrived until they were boarding the bus to travel home. Unfortunately because of the time they needed for travel, their experience at the Technical Center was somewhat limited. However, they were still able to visit labs, facilities, participate in hands-on demos, and attend briefings.



John Reinhardt shows one of the test methods that can assess damage to thermal acoustic insulation

At the Full-Scale Fire Test Facility, the group was able to see Fire Safety Branch test articles: the narrow-bodied B707 used for material flammability test comparisons, burn through testing, cabin water mist, etc.; the wide-bodied DC10 used for cargo compartment simulations; and the new test article that can assess damage to thermal acoustic insulation. The DC10 is being modified with an upper deck in preparation for the new A380 and other new large aircraft. They also learned about devices such as the smoke detector installed in restroom trashcans, and about the recent fuel tank inerting efforts.






Download 1.63 Mb.

Share with your friends:
1   ...   7   8   9   10   11   12   13   14   ...   22




The database is protected by copyright ©ininet.org 2024
send message

    Main page