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Ushering in the Next Generation of Engineers

Belden partners with Glenbrook South High School, donating equipment, time, and expertise to provide real world manufacturing experience to budding STEM students.

Chris Noble and Ray DiVirgilio of Belden with Glenbrook South student Costa Aralis at PACK EXPO Las Vegas 2021.
Chris Noble and Ray DiVirgilio of Belden with Glenbrook South student Costa Aralis at PACK EXPO Las Vegas 2021.

This year at PACK EXPO Las Vegas and Healthcare Packaging Expo, Belden showed off more than just its cable and connector products. It also displayed a machine that laminates a business card—which, on the surface does not seem that compelling—until you talk to the person who built the machine, who is still in high school.

Costa Aralis, a senior at Glenbrook South High School in Glenview, IL, was part of a team that designed, engineered, and built the machine which includes a robotic arm, sensors, pneumatics, camera, conveyor, I/O, and more. Together with several other students, Aralis and team started working from the ground-up, designing everything, including cutting aluminum extrusion, designing 3D-printed gripper fingers, and  programming the robotic arm in order to create a machine that could execute a task, just as if it were on a production or packaging line. The team was then expanded to include the digital electronics class where students divided into groups to further develop the design, which included a graphics team, a space planning team, and a media team.

 “Between the robot, the industrial networking, all the firewalls, and all the sensors, I’ve never had an opportunity to apply all those things at once until now,” Aralis said while demonstrating the machine at the Belden booth at PACK EXPO Las Vegas. “Jumping in headfirst and learning by doing is a skill that I’ve been developing in my [engineering classes] at Glenbrook South. This real world experience will help me in college and my future career endeavors,” he said, noting he plans to pursue a career in electrical engineering.

The high school team, which started working on this over the summer, was led by Justin Zummo, an engineering teacher at Glenbrook South and Chris Noble, Belden’s global director of solutions, CPG, with help from Raymond DiVirgilio, a senior solution services engineer at Belden. Noble initiated the workforce development project as part of Belden’s Outreach Program, which encourages employees to give back to the community, along with support from the PMMI U Skills Fund, which provides PMMI members with a financial contribution for workforce training.


Listen to article   Listen to PMMI Media Group editors talk about highlights from PACK EXPO Las Vegas 2021, including the Belden, Glenbrook South partnership. 


Noble wanted to provide factory floor experience to students that goes beyond what they learn in the classroom or even at robotic competitions. “Real machine building includes deadlines and critical thinking, figuring out how to divert and come at it from a different angle when something is not working,” Noble said. “I gave the kids the autonomy to go about the design and the concept.”

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