Diversity & Inclusion

‘I learned a lot about myself’ building a 3D printer: Digital Harbor student [VIDEO]

The 16-year-old McCoy became hooked on 3D printing after he spent eight weeks assembling, from assorted parts, a Printrbot Jr. 3D printer.

A fully assembled Printrbot Jr inside the Digital Harbor Tech Center. (Photo by Tyler Waldman)

Darius McCoy was disinterested the first few times he went to the Digital Harbor Tech Center after school.

Darius

McCoy building his first Printrbot Jr.


As Digital Harbor High School student McCoy recounted in his TEDxYouth video, he didn’t show much interest in any of the offerings inside the Digital Harbor Foundation‘s Federal Hill tech center when he first started going there after classes had ended for the day.
But the 16-year-old McCoy eventually became hooked on 3D printing after he spent eight weeks assembling, from assorted parts, a Printrbot Jr. 3D printer.
“I learned a lot about myself,” he said earlier this month at the second TEDxYouth@Baltimore event at the University of Maryland BioPark.
He has since built a second Printrbot Jr., this time in just eight days, and helped a group of Perryville High School seniors assemble their own Printrbot earlier this month.
Watch McCoy talk about what he learned by becoming a maker:

Companies: Digital Harbor High School / University of Maryland BioPark / Digital Harbor Foundation

Before you go...

Please consider supporting Technical.ly to keep our independent journalism strong. Unlike most business-focused media outlets, we don’t have a paywall. Instead, we count on your personal and organizational support.

Our services Preferred partners The journalism fund
Engagement

Join our growing Slack community

Join 5,000 tech professionals and entrepreneurs in our community Slack today!

Trending

Baltimore residents can eliminate e-waste. Here’s how.

This exec spent 30 years at one company, and thinks more people should do the same

AI in action: How InsightFinder AI and Robin AI transform IT and legal workflows at major organizations

Technical.ly’s new Report for America journalist in Baltimore will cover Maryland’s digital divide

Technically Media