Archive for the 'Alumni' Category

CLEP & Dantes Testing

Posted on December 6th, 2007 by admin
Categories: Alumni, General

NTI is a CLEP and a Dantes (DSST) test site. Students of any college interested in taking these tests can now take them at NTI by simply making a phone call.

Schedule

Tests are scheduled to start Monday – Friday from 8:30AM to 3:30PM (the last test is scheduled to end by 5:30PM).

Procedure

  1. Call Amy at NTI (952.944.0080 x104).
  2. Schedule a day and time. Have preferred days and times available.
  3. Come in at the agreed upon day and time. (Click address link at the bottom of this page for directions.)
  4. Tell the front desk receptionist you are here to take a (CLEP or Dantes) test. They will call the test administrator to come and get you.
  5. Sign in. Show ID–you need a picture and a signature. Pay $15 administration fee (cash or check only).
  6. Sign into the test. Give your Credit Card info (unless using a voucher). Take the test. Get the results.
  7. Cheer. Leave. Repeat?

Postsecondary CLEP opportunity

The state of Minnesota will pay the CLEP exam fee for MN public, private and home educated high school students. Students will still need to pay NTI to administer each test. Interested high school students should contact their high school counselor or principal for an authorization form or for more information. Authorization forms and detailed information is available through the State Education Web Site.

More information

Information for current students
Information for potential students

The SolidWorks @ Yahoo! online group

Posted on November 28th, 2007 by ChrisMacCormack
Categories: Alumni, Careers, Engineering, General, Links, Pro Engineering, Software, SolidWorks

Wow,

Over the last 24 hours I cannot tell you all how much I have enjoyed the http://tech.groups.yahoo.com/group/solidworks/! online group. My 2nd semester class was able to get much needed information on how to spec out a helical gear on a CAD print in a matter of minutes (About 78) and Matthew Lorono–one of the fine person’s moderating the group with me–recently launched the SolidWorks Legion blog site. There is currently a post from him about Design with intent and Horizontal Modeling which I found to be fantastic. I will question him on a couple of his points, but his intent in this post is loud and clear. Use best modeling practices to ensure changeability, ease of creation and an overall stable CAD database for all to use.

Chris

Visit with Vince Adams – Product Manager for COSMOS FEA products.

Posted on October 17th, 2007 by ChrisMacCormack
Categories: Alumni, Careers, Engineering, General

COSMOS? What is this COSMOS?

COSMOS is the fully integrated finite elemental analysis tool for SolidWorks.

Finite Elemental Analysis what?

Finite elemental analysis is a numerical analysis system that calculates the Stress/Strain (among other things) on all of the cool designs you come up with here at NTI and as you enter the work force. In other words, will your design live up to the abuse they will receive in everyday use?
This is one of the ways engineering departments validate designs throughout the design process (From beginning to end). As you begin your designs you may have a concept on which you will pursue. With tools like COSMOS you can begin immediately validating these concepts to ensure that when it becomes time to spend $50,000 on a prototype you will have a good idea that your design will work properly and ultimately ensure a quality product.

So you may be asking why I am talking about this. Well, yesterday afternoon, Vince Adams from SolidWorks Corporation stopped by after an eight hour COSMOSWorks User Group Meeting to tour the school and speak with the students. Vince is the product manager for the COSMOS products at SolidWorks Corporation. In this position Vince oversees the ongoing development of COMSOS products. This includes visiting the COSMOS customers worldwide to understand the FEA needs that these people deal with everyday and incorporate those needs into the next generation of COSMOS products.

For NTI a visit like this means we gain some fantastic insight into the SolidWorks/COSMOS customer base future employee needs. As Vince spoke to the students, he mentioned that knowing how to analyze your designs and incorporate analysis into your design process is quickly becoming a necessary skill set for students like you entering the workforce. Tools like COSMOS will help you all to be able to do this with little knowledge of the mathematics behind it. Although Vince was quick to note that understanding the mathematics involved in FEA will make you better at these analyses.

Vince spoke at great length about many topics of which I will blog more about in the weeks to come. I do want to thank Vince very much for this visit and hope he will return in the future. For those of you how are interested in doing some research about FEA Vince Adams has a book published with Abraham Askenazi of Buell motorcycles called “Building Better Products with Finite Element Analysis w/ NEi Nastran Software and Tutorial”. He noted that this book talks more about the analysis process and less about the mathematics. By the way, Nastran is another FEA package I believe was designed by or for NASA. (Not 100% sure on this)

More to come…

NTI CSWA Exams are a go!

Posted on October 16th, 2007 by ChrisMacCormack
Categories: Alumni, Engineering, General, SolidWorks

All, Today (Oct 16, 2007) NTI began our 1st CSWA exams. So far I am very impressed with the results both in total score and in broken out categories. In speaking with others that have taken the exam and some inside knowledge of the test the anticipated pass rate ranges between 50 – 75%. As of right now, we are within that rate.

After taking the test myself I truly believe that this test could easily be used with any CAD modeling program out there. The test is geared more to the students’ ability to interpret poor sketches and develop accurate models from those interpretations. Those who will be taking this test next week should abide by these recommendations: take your time – you have 3 hours (use them), pay attention – to the entire problem and question, double check your answers, but do not over analyze them, and finally, , it has nothing to do with your GPA and this time around it is free.

This is a test that we just became proctors for. The next sets of exams are on Oct 22 & 23. I will keep you posted.

Chris MacCormack

Looking for fresh Drafting and Design Projects.

Posted on October 9th, 2007 by ChrisMacCormack
Categories: Alumni, Engineering, Pro Engineering, SolidWorks

Hello All,

I am looking for some real world projects for my Engineering Drafting & Design students. Does anyone have any projects that will include research, computations, analysis and modeling? These can be projects that you released several years ago, are not going to work on, or you just find them cool.

Also I am working on a semester long project like a go-kart, alternative fuel vehicle, robot, etc… that will cover the many different tools of SolidWorks as well as get them working together in teams to get the project done.

Anyhow, all of these project my students are responsible for presenting the project specifications (Customer Market, size, weight, movement…) to the rest of the class and ask the audience for ideas (Brainstorming). Then they will begin their designs with periodic update presentations. Their final presentation will include their designs, testing results and hopefully if I can get some help from area manufacturers, prototypes.

Thanks!
Chris

Continuing your education

Posted on December 6th, 2006 by admin
Categories: Alumni

I have received several emails in the past 6 months looking for information on going back to college to complete a BA or BS degree, so I decided to post some basics.

First, there two major things you should know:

  1. no college must accept any other college’s credits–it is up to each college to set their own criteria; and
  2. most colleges don’t accept many credits 10 or more years old.

Several students (and staff) have most recently been taking classes at St. Mary’s (private colleges traditionally accept more credits than public colleges and are easier to get into). I transferred my tech college credits from Dunwoody (it was a diploma at that time) to Metropolitan State University. They were big into non-traditional students at that point in time. They still have a portion of the college that is pro-nontraditional, so that may be worth checking out. Your best bet is to search each college’s web site for non-traditional options, such as CLEP testing, Dantes testing (also known as DSST), Credit for life experience, etc. My husband earned most of his AS and BS degrees by these methods through Thomas Edison State College in New Jersey, but he took tests and a few courses at Metro State. Thomas Edison ‘banks’ credits, so you can earn credits numerous ways. The nice thing about testing is you only need to pass the test (many times 60% will do) to earn the credit for a course.

There are numerous online options. Virtual colleges such as Capella (my alma mater–in Minneapolis) and the University of Phoenix have been offering programs online a long time. In my experience, virtual colleges do it better than brick and mortar colleges simply because it is their specialty, but they are more expensive. You really must be able to motivate and manage yourself, and enjoy reading and writing to do well in an online class. I love learning that way, but many people do not. This site may be helpful: http://www.educationforadults.com/.

If you want to get a degree in engineering or architecture and have been working in that arena since graduating from NTI, be prepared to sell your past NTI education and your on-the-job knowledge to someone at the college you want to attend. Most 4-year programs in these fields are very particular about the classes students need and very distrusting of 2-year programs. Come prepared with a transcript, course descriptions, samples of your work, tests and a cross-referenced list that matches NTI courses with their’s. You need to convince them of course redundancy. If you are sure you know GD&T, for example, and they are still not convinced, ask to test out. Push as far as you can (in a professional manner of course) for the most credits you can get.

Another option is to become certified in your field. Some colleges recognize professional certifications and give college credit. You can become a certified drafter through ADDA. If you are in manufacturing or engineering, consider the Certified Manufacturing Technologist – CMfgT, the Certified Manufacturing Engineer – CMfgE, or the Certified Engineering Manager – CEM all available through SME.

These are a few options. If you have had success using any of these options or others, please share your wisdom by posting a reply to this message.

Graduate Profiles & Stories

Posted on October 20th, 2006 by admin
Categories: Alumni

NTI grads end up going places and do things they never would have imagined. Paul Christensen, for example, who graduated from NTI when it was located in St. Louis Park became an instructor here for many years—he and I started teaching here at about the same time. He is now an engineering design consultant in Atlanta. Craig Hedstrom, who graduated about 15 years back hasn’t touched a CAD system in years. He’s been too busy managing projects for Honeywell.

We all have our stories to tell, how our lives have changed, where our ambitions have taken us. If you are interested in telling your story graduates, please do so by commenting to this blog.

Alumni eMail?

Posted on September 18th, 2006 by admin
Categories: Alumni

Starting this Fall, we will be offering graduates free email for 5 years or until we reach capacity, which ever is the later. We will use this email address to communicate job postings, gather and share graduate statistics, gather and share programmatic feedback, and spread the latest news. Past graduates can request this service by contacting Amy Nelson. We need your first and last name, and month and year of graduation to set up an account.

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