National Engineers Month |
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Build A Bridge This activity works well for
students from 5th to 12th grade. Total class time is 45 to 55
minutes.Divide the students into teams of no less than 3 students per
team. The teams have 10 dollars (monopoly money) to purchase supplies to
build a bridge. The bridge will need to span 10 inches (2 thick text
books support each end of their bridge). The span should be just longer
than the length of the straw. They have 15 to 20 minutes to design and
build their bridges. Then each bridge is tested in front of the whole
class. The bridges are tested using large washers (lag washers are heavy
and work best for the time allowed). Let the students place the washers
on their bridge under test. They are allowed to spread the load over the
whole deck area, that is not supported by the books, evenly. Supplies: 8.5"
X 11" paper (100 sheets) Plastic
straws (50) Marshmallows
(1 bag) (can be used as a glue or end connectors on the straws) Lag
washers (50-100 depending on age of students) Student
cost for each item: Paper
= $1 Straws
= $3 Marshmallows
= 50 cents If
you have time to pre-build a truss folded version out of 1 or 2 pieces
of paper to show that the cheaper material may also be the strongest
when engineering concepts are used in the design. It also shows how
education can make what seems impossible work. You can ask the question:
"How much will 1 or 2 sheets of paper support?" and then show
what an engineered bridge (the truss design) will hold. This
activity shows the tasks that engineers go though daily when designing
any product:
This
leads into a discussion of the importance of school, or the value of
college (depending upon the age group) and the fun of being an
engineering. You can introduce many different areas of engineering:
civil, structural, electrical, computer, chemical, etc. Thanks
to Michael Fisher in Oregon for providing this activity idea.
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