Difference between revisions of "Lab RATs"
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** Ability to train students on specialized equipment, eg: Soldering, Pickup Winding, etc | ** Ability to train students on specialized equipment, eg: Soldering, Pickup Winding, etc | ||
** Direct students as to locations of items in the lab | ** Direct students as to locations of items in the lab | ||
− | ** Serve as a role model of the rules and [[:File:EGIL Safety Protocols.pdf| protocols]]of the lab | + | ** Serve as a role model of the rules and [[:File:EGIL Safety Protocols.pdf| protocols]] of the lab |
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Revision as of 16:35, 8 July 2021
EGIL/ IMSLab Student Lab Researchers and Technologists (Lab RATs)
Students Lab RATs work on small-scale, one-off projects, in the lab as their availability allows. The expected minimal commitment is a few hours a week per semester/two terms (A + B Term, C + D Term), but students are encouraged to be Student Researchers as long as they’d like in consecutive semesters or moving in and out of the position on a semester basis to accommodate academic scheduling. ContentsWhat Lab RATs GetAs long as your Lab RATs status is “active”, you can:
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What Is Expected of Lab RATs
Lab RATs are expected to dabble, noodle, tinker, and get involved in various lab tasks while active; V.J. Manzo and Ryan McKenna will host regular brief “standup” meetings on Discord and maintain several threads where new tasks (of all sizes, scopes, and timelines) will be offered for your involvement...just volunteer for one of the projects that you can reasonably handle given your other academic commitments. When you’re finished with one task, pick up another one! The expectation is that you have a few hours a week to work on these things, minimally.
Examples of tasks include the following:
- Fixing broken stuff
- Fixing pedals
- Swapping out broken potentiometers
- Help to keep the lab clean and orderly on a regular basis
- Changing guitar strings
- Doing one-off CAD/CAM/machining projects
- Oftentimes for sponsors like Ken Parker or others
- Testing out new and old equipment
- Debugging and Compiling Code
- Building things in “kits” along with guides
- Pedals
- Amps
- Pickups
- Controllers
- Updating/maintaining/moderating websites and repositories
- Act as liaisons to students who may be using the lab as part of a practicum or class project
- Ability to train students on specialized equipment, eg: Soldering, Pickup Winding, etc
- Direct students as to locations of items in the lab
- Serve as a role model of the rules and protocols of the lab
Most tasks are not time-sensitive though some do have more pressing due dates; these are the types of things noted in the standup meetings.
So in short the commitments are:
- Be part of the standup meetings
- Have at least one “task” project going
- Sink, minimally, a few hours a week into that project
How to Sign Up
To become a Lab RAT, email Prof. Manzo (vjmanzo@wpi.edu) and say you wanna be a Lab RAT; explain who you are, what you know (skills, major, etc.), and what availability you can realistically commit to over a two-term span. If approved, request swipe access to the lab here and request access to our Slack channel here.
Working on Projects
When a new project is announced, a card is created on our Trello group and a link is sent on the Slack channel. If you are able/willing to work on this, click the Trello card, "Write a comment..." in the Activity saying so, and get started--there's info in the card description. If more than one person is working on a project, get together and set up some times to meet up and discuss the projects, dividing it up until smaller tasks with some sort of timeline.
Completing Projects
When this project (or the project "spring") is completed, open the card in Trello and check the box next to the Due Date.
Push any relevant info back up to the GIT Repo and bring any physical materials back to the lab.