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Pat McAtamney: Empowering student-led engineering teams

The MIT Edgerton Center technical instructor’s expertise and dedication enriches the student experience.
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Pat McAtamney smiles in front of a large machine inside a cement brick room
Caption:
Pat McAtamney in the N51 Machine Shop
Credits:
Photo courtesy of the MIT Edgerton Center.
Pat McAtamney stands in front of a parked pickup truck, smiling behind a smoking grill on the street
Caption:
McAtamney cheerfully grilled hundreds of hot dogs and burgers for a long line of hungry students outside the N51 shop at the Open House for the Edgerton Center Clubs and teams last fall.
Credits:
Photo: Sonny Oram/MIT Edgerton Center
McAtamney's dog Max sits in the motorsports car while a student smiles behind him
Caption:
McAtamney with his dog Max and Motorsports team members
Pat McAtamney leans on car while a student inspects the front suspension.
Caption:
Pat McAtamney discusses front suspension with a student on the Solar Electric Vehicle Team.
Credits:
Photo: Sonny Oram/MIT Edgerton Center

At the Open House for the Edgerton Center Clubs and team this past fall, MIT Technical Instructor Pat McAtamney cheerfully grilled hundreds of hot dogs and burgers for a long line of hungry students outside his shop in Building N51. “They ate every single burger. I didn’t even get one,” he laughs. His continuous smile throughout the event underscored his wholehearted dedication to his pivotal role in guiding the Solar Electric Vehicle Team, Motorsports team, and other Edgerton Center teams in design and fabrication. Additionally, McAtamney oversees operations in the N51 garage's machine shop.

McAtamney came to MIT in 2002, having worked as a research machinist on NASA's Hubble Space Telescope, on space shuttle radar systems, and in the biomedical industry. He was a technical instructor in the Department of Mechanical Engineering, teaching 2.008 (Design and Manufacturing II) for 11 years before he took over management of the Edgerton Center’s N51 Garage. But his dedication extends far beyond the expectations of a shop manager.

A home where everyone can thrive

The N51 Garage, nicknamed “Area 51” has advanced tooling that includes CNC lathes and milling machines, an injection molding machine, and a water jet cutter — all making it possible for teams to create almost any part they need. The garage is filled with notes and memorabilia left behind to inspire current students.

When McAtamney first inherited the shop in 2013, he says, “There were hardly any women.” McAtamney made a point to encourage women students to join teams and run for leadership positions. One of these students, Cheyenne Hua ’19, enthuses, “As a freshman I had no idea how to do anything in the shop, and Pat took me under his wing and taught me how to turn a wheel hub on the lathe during IAP. He gave me confidence that I could hold my own in this world, being a city kid with almost no hands-on experience, and after that my education really took off.” 

Once women were in leadership positions, a snowball effect took place, and female membership jumped to about 50%. McAtamney noticed that with more female captains, communication improved and teams scored higher at competitions. “I think there's a big correlation between more communication on the teams that have been brought on by female membership and the success of the teams,” he says. Most recently, the Solar Electric Vehicle Team won the American Solar Challenge two years in a row with a majority of women in leadership roles.

Inclusion was ingrained into McAtamney’s life from a young age. Growing up with four sisters, he recalled, “My parents were very strict with how my two brothers and I treated my sisters. You respected them. My sister Jo-Ann played street hockey with us. She was a year younger than me, but she's playing street hockey with me and 10 of my friends, and if she wanted to play, she played.”

A culture of service and community

McAtamney gets out of the shop about twice a year to accompany students to competitions around the world, where students constantly surprise him — in a good way. “Don't ever underestimate the MIT student. They're always capable of surprising the heck out of you by doing something that you really didn't think they were going to do,” he says.

The motorsports competition of 2018 stands out in McAtamney’s mind as a time when the sportsmanship of his students surprised him.

Led by Hua, the motorsports team appeared to have won the race but was disqualified on a technicality when they exceeded the allowed power output by a couple of watts for a fraction of a second due to pressing the gas too quickly at the beginning of the race. “In my mind, they won,” McAtamney says with emotion. He offered to take the students out for a consolation dinner instead of attending the awards ceremony, but the students said they wanted to attend the ceremony. Watching them congratulate the winning team despite their disappointment filled him with pride.

McAtamney says that team members frequently venture off to help other teams solve an issue. “I've seen the battery lead for the MIT, either Solar Car or Motorsports, take off for the day and go help that team solve the problem. Or if we have spare parts that could fit one of their cars, they bring the parts over to that team and help them.” It’s no surprise that the Solar Car team also won the sportsmanship award at several competitions in a row.

Teams also gave back to the surrounding communities. At the 2015 World Solar Challenge in a remote mining town of Coober Pedy, Australia, the Solar Car team came across a jewelry store and discovered the store’s owner was struggling to get his 3D printer working. “What do you think happens in the store with an MIT student?” McAtamney asks. Students spent an hour fixing the printer and showing the shop owner how to use it.

The Socratic method

McAtamney’s teaching approach leads students to the answer by asking questions. His method aligns with Edgerton’s famous quote: “The trick to education is to not let them know they are learning something until it is too late.” Having students do everything themselves distinguishes MIT from many other institutions, whose competition teams are directed by faculty rather than the students themselves, and many parts are outsourced.

“It's very easy for a student to come to me and say, hey, Pat, these two pieces are supposed to press together. And I measure them and they should press, but they're not pressing. And I could tell them a solution. Well, you can take this one, throw it in the freezer, in five minutes, it's going to press together. But you tell them, hey, just go research the thermal expansion of material. And if they struggle to a point, then I'll sit there and discuss with them different things and kind of point them the way without actually saying: Put it in the darn freezer.”

McAtamney’s teaching has empowered students to solve complex problems on their own, preparing them for their careers as engineers. This intense discipline is the reason companies like Tesla and SpaceX frequent the garage to recruit their next engineers. Hua now works at SpaceX and is one of many alumni who still keeps in regular contact with McAtamney.

“Pat was and is the backbone of the student teams,” she says. “But he doesn't just run the shop, he really teaches us by letting us figure stuff out ourselves but is always there to guide. I would go so far as to say that what I learned from Pat is serving me just as well in my current structures engineer job at SpaceX as any of my coursework.”

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