Twenty-nine students seeking careers in manufacturing earned $5,000, $2,500, $2,000 or $500 toward their college or trade school education from Nuts, Bolts & Thingamajigs (NBT), The Foundation of the Fabricators & Manufacturers Association International (FMA), and SolidWorks Corporation.
NBT and SolidWorks awarded 11 traditional scholarships to college- or trade school-bound high school seniors and college students who seek careers in manufacturing. In addition, 18 students received a $500 “GO-Brennan” scholarship based on a YouTube promotion tied to NBT’s sponsorship of 16-year-old stock car driver and welder Brennan Palmiter.
This year, NBT and SolidWorks have awarded scholarships totaling $48,500. The 2009 winners are:
$5,000 NBT/SolidWorks Scholarships
Michael Adams,
Kevin G. Dickson Jr.,
Megan Feil,
Matthew Johnson, West
Jay Woeste,
$2,500 NBT/SolidWorks Scholarships
Anthony Cazabat,
Avery-John Domingo,
Hank Peppe,
Ethan Scott,
William F. Terry IV,
$2,000 NBT/SolidWorks Scholarships
Andrew Kudlak,
$500 “GO-Brennan” Scholarships
Kyle Brubaker,
Johnathon Canalizo,
Don Chartrand,
Ed Dobos,
Terrell Hill,
Mark Littleford,
Bill McCreary,
Manuel “Manny” Moscoso,
Ray Parkhurst,
Charles Rogers,
William (Bill) Smith,
Dakota Swearingen,
Andrew Taulbee,
Mitch Thygesen,
Steven Saliba, Holly Hill,
John Hatch,
Austin Rutland,
Garrett Moyer, South
“We applaud the students selected as NBT/SolidWorks and “GO-Brennan” scholarship winners, and are pleased to assist them in fulfilling their academic goals,” said Terrence Egan, director of NBT. “These students recognize that working a skilled manufacturing job can be rewarding financially and fulfilling personally.”
To be eligible for the traditional scholarships, applicants were required to be full-time students with a minimum 3.0 GPA (for a college scholarship) or a 2.0 GPA (for a trade/technical school scholarship) enrolled in an engineering or manufacturing-related course of study, or a trade or technical program that may lead to a career in manufacturing. Students were responsible for submitting academic records and an engineering or manufacturing-related program description with each application.
Membership-based scholarships were available for individuals who are members of the Fabricators & Manufacturers Association, International (FMA), the Tube & Pipe Association International (TPA), or the Outside Processors Council (OPC); the employee of a member company; or the child of a member or member company’s employee.
College scholarships for members were $5,000 per school year and college scholarships for non-members were $2,500 per school year. Trade school scholarships of up to $2,500 per school year required membership, and students could apply for membership at the time of application. In addition to the monetary grant, each scholarship winner received a copy of SolidWorks’ Student Design Kit CAD software package. The Student Design Kit is an easy-to-learn, Windows-based 3D CAD application that gives students the ability to create “real-life” 3D designs they can easily manipulate.
For the “GO-Brennan” promotion, high school, trade school and college students seeking careers in manufacturing were required to create and post their own videos on YouTube explaining why they wanted to be in manufacturing, what career they sought and where they wanted to attend school. Applicants also were encouraged to include footage of themselves welding or building with metal.
For more information about scholarship winners and information about next year’s awards, visit http://www.NutsAndBoltsFoundation.org/Scholarships.cfm.
About SolidWorks Corporation
SolidWorks Corporation, a Dassault Systèmes
About NBT/FMA
Nuts, Bolts & Thingamajigs is the foundation of the Fabricators & Manufacturers Association International. NBT offers grants to not-for-profit organizations and educational institutions introducing young people to metal forming and fabricating careers in manufacturing, provides funding to organizations starting or expanding manufacturing camps for youth, and issues scholarships to students at colleges and trade schools pursuing careers in manufacturing. More information on NBT is available by visiting www.NutsAndBoltsFoundation.org.
Based in