Forging Futures: Metal Casting Summer Youth Program Sparks Interest in Metallurgical Careers

Offered by Michigan Tech's Summer Youth Programs (SYP) for the first time this summer, Metal Casting: Forge Your Future let high school freshmen, sophomores and juniors work directly with Tech researchers in the University's metal foundry — one of the few fully operational metal foundries in the nation found on a college campus.
The week-long summer exploration was developed by Tech's Department of Materials Science and Engineering (MSE) in partnership with Metallurgical Engineering Trades Apprenticeship & Learning (METAL) — a national program led by the Institute for Advanced Composites Manufacturing Innovation.
The foundry, MSE's departmental expertise, and the University's ability to partner with METAL created the perfect setup for getting pre-college students excited about the science and art of metal casting and forging. Students fabricated unique items to take home, including an aluminum scratch block, bronze coin and cast-iron "pudgie pie" campfire pan.
"From making molds to making patterns, we tried to show them the whole process," said Peter Jaszczak, MSE lab associate and foundry staff. "We ran simulations, doing some computer-aided design work, and then we made the patterns, which were turned into the final casting."
Learn more about students' experience at Forge Your Future on Michigan Tech's Unscripted Research Blog.