Finding a Badly Needed New Generation of Nano Workers, In Unlikely Places
Student-Friendly Atomic Force Microscope Students in Bogota, Colombia, live in the slums but learn nanotechnology with atomic force microscopes like this one. Nanoprofessor In the next five years, the world will need a hundred-fold increase in nano workers - the people who will build nanomaterials and develop new uses for them. In Colombia, some of these workers might very well come from the slums. At least according to one nano educator. Tom Levesque, general manager of a Chicago firm called NanoInk, is in the business of teaching students that the next big thing will be very small. His curriculum program NanoProfessor, released in 2009, aims to get students involved in nano-fabrication projects as part of science classes. According to Levesque, Foreign countries have been quick to adopt it. He said a school in Colombia uses the NanoProfessor curriculum and teaches about 350 disadvantaged students how to use "student-friendly" atomic force microscopes....