Houston educators 3D print COVID-19 face shields for health workers
Each masks costs about $1 to manufacture; could help address medical supply shortage
Style Magazine Newswire | 3/26/2020, 10:26 a.m.
(HOUSTON) - The COVID-19 outbreak has put the heroics of countless educators on display across the country.
However, one team of educators in southwest Houston have found a way to use their unique talents and the school’s cutting-edge classroom technology to help address a critical need during the COVID-19 crisis.
Mehmet Gokcek and his team of educational engineers who work at the Harmony Public Schools “Innovation Lab” in Southwest Houston have spent the school system’s COVID-19 closure hard at work inside the lab, 3D-printing medical face shields to help alleviate the shortage of supplies experienced by health care workers across the region.
Each shield takes roughly five hours to manufacture and only costs about $1 in materials.
By the end of the week, Gokcek believes his team can have roughly 40 shields printed. The supplies necessary to print many more shields are inbound and with the design perfected, additional printing should go swiftly.
The team is working with Harris County health officials to arrange a donation of the shields while they continue to be manufactured inside the school’s lab. Harmony, a statewide public charter school with 58 campuses in more than 20 Texas cities, will next expand this community service project to other regions by training its STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering & Math) teachers in other communities to create the shields.
Harmony Public Schools is a statewide system of free, PreK-12 college preparatory charter schools. Harmony blends the highest standards and expectations, with a rigorous STEM-centered curriculum and dedicated and engaged teachers and families to cultivate excellence and prepare students to succeed in college, careers and life.

