| Media
Contact:
Dr. Hamid Davoodi,
919/515-5675
Jennifer Weston, Engineering Communications, 919/515-3848
Dec.
30,
2004
NC
State Engineers Assist Developmentally Disabled
Workers
FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Christmas came early to one local business seeking
to employ teenagers with developmental disabilities.
Thanks to a team of North Carolina State University
engineering students who designed and built a user-friendly
workstation, the workers can now accomplish their job
tasks more easily.
The project began this fall when Rick and Jackie Holcombe
contacted NC State’s College of Engineering for
help in creating a workstation that would be easy for
their prospective employees to use and safe to operate.
The Holcombes’ business, It’s Lagniappe,
is a small startup company in Morrisville that aims
to employ teenagers who have developmental disabilities.
“We started the business because our daughter,
Lindsay, is home-schooled and needs to learn job skills,” Jackie
Holcombe said. “Unfortunately, there is a very
long waiting period to be placed in environments that
offer job-skills training for people with developmental
disabilities.”
Dr. Hamid
Davoodi, a lecturer in the Department of Mechanical
and Aerospace Engineering at NC State, saw
the Holcombes’ request and approached some of
his students with the idea of having the project fulfill
an engineering elective requirement. Four of his senior
mechanical engineering students, David Anderson, Nathan
Houston, Bernard “BJ” Meier and George
Ware, were immediately interested in the proposition.
“The students were very excited about this opportunity,” Davoodi
said. “They set up a schedule, created the design
and met each of their targeted goals on time with little
supervision. I have been very impressed with their
professionalism and their enthusiasm. The project had
a number of challenges to be addressed, and they have
been able to work as a team to resolve each issue,
including finding a source of funding.”
The home business produces bags of buckwheat hulls
for sale on the Internet. Buckwheat hulls are used
for a variety of health, craft and beauty products.
The workers transfer the hulls from a 700-pound bag
into individual 2-pound bags.
The assignment for the engineering students was to
design a repackaging workstation that could safely
deliver the buckwheat hulls from the bulk bag to
an accessible location for repackaging. The workstation
also needed to incorporate features that would allow
the workers to easily measure 2 pounds of hulls without
having to weigh each individual bag.
“This project gave us a sample of how real-world
engineering works,” Meier said. “We had
to meet with the client and consider the design constraints
and create a timeline for accomplishing goals to keep
the project on track.”
The team delivered the completed prototype workstation
earlier this month.
“The design far exceeds our dreams,” Jackie
Holcombe says. “This workstation is exactly
what we needed and is so user-friendly. We are very
appreciative of all the work these students and Dr.
Davoodi have done to help us. The new workstation
prototype will make it possible for us to expand
our business and hire more workers. There are several
people with disabilities who have been waiting for
this opportunity, and now we are closer to being
able to offer them a chance to work and learn.”
“We had a great time working on this project,” Ware
said of his team members, all of whom are expected
to graduate in May 2005. “We learned how to use
the strengths of each team member to accomplish our
goals. It was a very rewarding experience.”
Thanks to
the new workstation and increased demand for the
product, Jackie Holcombe believes her family’s
business will be able to pay minimum wage without external
support, and she looks forward to the possibility of
partnering with other businesses that employ workers
with disabilities.
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