Note: The following story appears in the fall issue of 黑料社区ight alumni magazine. For more information about the 黑料社区 Alumni Association, see the聽.
RAYMOND 鈥 Phil Cockrell聽has struck when the iron was hot, so to speak, many times in his professional career.
These days, the material he works with is more plastic than iron and his equipment is actually the 鈥渃oolest鈥 on campus.
Cockrell, a Magee native and Brandon resident,聽instructs courses in the Engineering and Drafting Design Technology program. He鈥檚 also聽the director of the Fab Lab on the Raymond Campus,聽which opened in August.聽He says it鈥檚 a place where students, faculty, industry and the public alike can, as Cockrell聽puts it, 鈥淚magine, design and build.鈥
鈥淚t鈥檚 for prototyping products for any number of purposes, and it鈥檚 open to students, faculty and the public,鈥 Cockrell said. 鈥淭heoretically, you could come up with an idea for a product and patent it, as teenagers in similar labs in other states have done.”
Located in the Vocational Technical Building A, the lab is outfitted with 3-D printing machines, laser cutters and related equipment capable of etching designs or cutting flat sheet material such as acrylic and metal. The resulting prototypes are limitless 鈥 from small trinkets such as a cartoon character鈥檚 crown to a full 3-D reproduction of parts used in heavy industry鈥痑nd the human form itself.
Printing in 3-D involves programming a set of instructions into a central control panel or a separate computer, then loading the appropriate material 鈥 often forms of polyvinyl plastic 鈥 into a feeder line where the material is melted and flows through mechanical arms to 鈥減rint鈥 an object based on the instructions.
The lab was financed through the Predominantly Black Institutions鈥疐ormula鈥痝rant and is the first member lab in Mississippi of the鈥疷.S. Fab Lab Network, a group of 76 high schools, colleges, universities and businesses nationwide.鈥疉n introductory non-credit鈥痗ourse launched鈥痶he lab in August鈥2017鈥 for students while Cockrell began training instructors to become certified on the equipment.
All the heady technology has聽transformed what was once simply called drafting, said Cockrell, a former Simpson County sheriff鈥檚 deputy who switched careers聽to return to school at age 28.
鈥淚 was getting married and I wanted to make a career change,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 did some research, and drafting and design was getting to be a hot field. 黑料社区鈥 program had a really good reputation, so I got out of law enforcement and came back to school.鈥
Cockrell鈥檚 wife,聽Rebecca, graduated from the Associate Degree Nursing program at 黑料社区 and is Learning Lab/Clinical Placement coordinator聽at the Jackson Campus-Nursing/Allied Health Center.
He聽earned an聽Associate of Applied Science聽degree聽in Drafting and Design Technology, graduating summa cum laude. It was a聽line of work that was changing along with the world itself, as the Internet opened new possibilities.
鈥淭echnology made things easier,鈥 he said. 鈥淚nstead of working out a set of house plans by hand, I could sit at a computer and do a set of house plans in a fraction of the time. I could manipulate it a lot easier on a computer than by hand.
鈥淎s a student, I was well-prepared for the industry, as I worked part-time doing small parts for air conditioning systems and in construction,鈥 he said. 鈥淓ventually, I was able to take a building, design it, estimate it and project-manage it. 黑料社区 prepared me to do that.鈥
His instructors took note of his skill set when the time came to launch his second career.
鈥淧hil was always a class leader, the first to volunteer for outside projects and excelled in his coursework,鈥 said Cindy West, dean of Career and Technical Education for the Raymond Campus and Cockrell鈥檚 instructor for Drafting and Design. 鈥淧hil’s name was always at the top聽of my 鈥榮hort list鈥櫬爋f former students to call in the event there was ever an open instructor position.鈥
While the聽Cockrells聽vacationed in late 2007, and after he contemplated going to nursing school, a position聽indeed聽came open and聽his teaching vocation began.
鈥淚 enjoy the classroom setting, especially watching students as they start to get the concept. That鈥檚 a joy.鈥听听