SME Recognizes its 20 Influential Academics in Smart Manufacturing 

These educators are teaching smart manufacturing methods and technologies that are being developed today for use tomorrow.

These educators are teaching smart manufacturing methods and technologies that are being developed today for use tomorrow.

SME has named 20 academics who are educating and shaping the next generation of engineers and smart manufacturing technologists across a diverse range of disciplines, according to the organization. All were selected with the help of industry peers and manufacturing experts by SME Media’s Smart Manufacturing magazine.

These educators are teaching smart manufacturing methods and technologies that are being developed today for use tomorrow.

Most want to use smart technologies on earth—some by helping legacy equipment owners assimilate into Industry 4.0, others by sharing their perspective and wealth of information that they gleaned working in industry before joining academia. One even created a company that early on in a child’s development helps parents choose STEM-related products that stimulate their interest in math and science. 

 

 “One of the best ways to develop the up-and-coming generation of manufacturing professionals is by exposing them to—as one of our honorees puts it—the pioneers and dreamers who are improving existing technologies and creating new ones,” says Robert Willig, executive director and CEO of SME. “Almost all of the 20 achievement-focused honorees number among their top accomplishments educating and shaping the next wave of pioneers and dreamers.” 

 

One of the honorees, Dr. Ihab Ragai, associate professor of Engineering at Penn State University, spent more than 20 years working in manufacturing before joining the ranks of academia. He created one of the industry’s first design-for-manufacturing platforms that tracks manufacturing process data and correlates it to the state of the part to conduct stress analysis and fatigue-life predictions for tooling in the process.

Ragai advises students to study all facets of manufacturing. “Many new graduates continue researching the same topics without exploring or identifying other areas that would complete the puzzle,” he says. “Either work in industry for some years to grasp the bigger picture or team up with other members from the academic community with different areas of expertise.”

The article in the June 2021 issue of Smart Manufacturing magazine includes significantly more detail on the advances and accomplishments of these exceptional researchers and educators in their own areas of manufacturing. It is available here. 

Sources: Press materials received from the company and additional information gleaned from the company’s website.

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