For the last three months I have been teaching an intensive, twenty-hours-a-week class for underprivileged adult students in CAD design with Solidworks and Fusion 360, and metalwork starting with manual milling machines and working up to modern HAAS CNC machines. I first gained these skills by self-teaching myself at makerspaces like Techshop and Autodesk Pier 9, and consider these skills amongst the most empowering abilities to a designer or person with creative ambitions, so I was excited to share my enthusiasm with the students. But it was also incredibly daunting- this was an incredibly ambitious undertaking. Many of my students had not previously had any experience with metal work or machining, and a normal course covering the breadth of topics I set out to, budgets a year or more for all this. However, all of the students were interested and motivated, so I took them on a whirlwind tour over the 12 week class. At the end of the class, each student had designed and manufactured their own part, start to finish: from creating their own 3d CAD drawings, to setting up the machines, generating toolpaths, and correctly setting work and tool offsets and speeds and feeds. 100% of my students achieved their HAAS basic CNC mill operator certification, too.