The students were also eager to help out Chelsie King, a teacher at their school. All the students had their own ideas of what the wheelchair attachment should look like and drew up their own 3D models. "We were all very goal-oriented," said Jacob Zlotnitsky, an 18-year-old student. "We were all focused on successfully making the best product we could in the amount of time we had." They narrowed the options down to two designs which Zigler said "both address the issue in slightly different ways."
The group split themselves up into two, one focusing on the WheeStroll Stroller Attachment, while the other worked on the WheeStroll Stroller Connector. The attachment would help connect an infant car seat to Jeremy King's wheelchair, while the connector would connect an entire stroller to a wheelchair. "Children grow and they grow out of a car seat so we wanted Mr. King to be able to walk with his son no matter what age he was," said Zlotnitsky.
Once they settled on a final design, they worked on either purchasing the parts required or using their school's MakerSpace to 3D print the parts required. The students had borrowed a wheelchair from a school nurse to use as a test model. The group worked closely with the Kings family, to get their opinion on the product and how best it could be tweaked to suit their needs. "It was certainly emotional seeing the process and everything that went into this," said Jeremy King. "I really feel the students took all my concerns to heart when creating the prototypes."
While the students were working to create a wheelchair-stroller for the Kings family, they also wanted to create a prototype that could be easily made by other families with disabilities. "With fairly cheap materials and tools, somebody that's a little bit handy could make these for someone," said Zigler. Once the product was done, the instructions on how to build the wheelchair-stroller were made available online for anyone to access.
The students had completed the design and made the wheelchair-stroller by the time the couple had their child. Within a few weeks, Jeremy King was taking his newborn son, Pheonix for a walk. "Using it was overwhelming because I never thought I would be able to do something like this with our son," Jeremy King said. "Most people can go out on a walk with their family but that is really difficult for me — most people take that for granted."
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