As the holiday season is left behind, many manufacturing leaders find a moment to step back from year-end deadlines to reflect on the bigger picture and look ahead. One question often surfaces during that quieter reset: Where will the next generation of engineers, designers, and problem-solvers come from?
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In the U.S. alone, hundreds of thousands of manufacturing roles remain unfilled, and the skills gap continues to widen. Apprenticeships, workforce programs, and reskilling initiatives play an essential role. But for many future engineers, the earliest exposure to engineering doesn’t happen in a classroom or a training facility.
It happens much closer to home—starting on the living room floor.
Where engineering skills take route
Long before students open CAD software or step onto a factory floor, many encounter core engineering principles through play. Toys that twist, balance, transform, and articulate introduce fundamental concepts of physics, materials behavior, geometry, and mechanical interaction without ever being labeled as STEM.
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Comments
Great Connection to Play and Engineering
Have been buying 'educational' toys with a STEM-focus for my niece and nephews since they were toddlers... nice to know it might have helped them be better problem-solvers and creative thinkers. Guess I'm not such a boring aunt after all!
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