Premise
Working against a Criteria & Constraints List individually or with partners, students will design and build an apple cantilever, aiming for the longest span. As with all the Back-to-School challenges, the materials are the symbols of the season: school supplies and apples!
Where Can I Find Out More?
If you're familiar with my work, you know I've been switching over to using video to explain the bulk of my challenges. It seems to be the best/fastest way to explain the important details: materials, set-up, tips, modifications, extensions, demonstrations, and more! Who has time to read all that?! However, if you do prefer to read it, you'll find the video transcribed at the end of this post. :)
Check out the video below to see Apples Afar in action:
This challenge has a print-friendly resource (left) and a digital resource for use with Google Slides (right).
Apples Afar is one of the five challenges in the Back-to-School STEM Challenge Bundle.
And if that's not enough, you can find even more STEM challenges in my Mega Bundle, on this blog, and on my YouTube channel!
Please reach out with any questions and tag me in photos of your students' work on Facebook & Instagram.
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Video Transcription
Hi, welcome to part two of our Back-to-School
STEM Challenges. Challenge two of five is called Apples Afar. And the basic
premise is you're going to be building a cantilever. A canti-wha-hoo? A
what'sa-whosee? A cantilever. So what that is, is basically a structure that is
supported on one end and juts out and it supports a load on the other end.
So for materials, again, we're going to be
using symbols of the season: school supplies and apples. Let's take a look a
closer look.
This is the STEM Challenge Cycle you should
follow for every challenge. I'll define each step in another video. I've added
a pop-in card to that video here as well as a link in the description.
So again, you're going to want to give
yourself about 90 minutes. It's a little on the longer side but since it's
Back-to-School and you want to take your time to establish procedures, I think
it's reasonable. You can always break that over two days if you like.
The basic idea as it's written is that the
students will build their cantilever and it has to support an apple that is
either on top of, inside of or hanging from. And if you have younger students,
that might be too difficult so you might want to consider not having an apple
at all, we'll talk about that in a second. So you want to make sure that the
apple stems again are fair. Either they are the same size or you just remove
them altogether. And the reason is that if they choose to secure the apple here
when they measure the span ... Notice I'm being very careful, I don't want it
to break ... Okay, it's a tough challenge. They're going to measure out to the
farthest point of the apple so this one will measure to the stem.
As I was saying, if you have younger students
this might be a little bit too challenging. So what you would either want to do
is adjust your expectations, they won't build it out quite this far, maybe
their cantilever will only go out to this position. Another thing you that can
do is just have them build out and don't have them connect anything to the long
end. Another thing you can do is just change what it is they have to connect at
the end. So, make them balance a school supply, maybe a crayon, maybe a pencil,
maybe a glue stick ... There we go. Maybe a binder clip, an eraser, you get the
idea. So it doesn't have to be the apple, the apple does certainly lend some
difficulty to it. So make the decision based on your kids. Obviously, you might
not know your kids that well yet, so do it just based on a gut feel about their
age level. You've probably taught before, if you haven't, talk to some teachers
at your new grade level and they'll help you figure it out.
One other thing you want to think about
before you start is if you're going to allow a brace. So, a brace cantilever,
you can see right here, these pencils connecting provide a brace about halfway
through ... Well, maybe it's not quite halfway through, I can't quite see, the
cantilever. I have another brace up here. So you want to make sure that if you
have younger students for sure I wouldn't have any restriction on this. If you
have maybe seventh or eighth grade students you might want to consider not
allowing a brace at all, so just a single cantilever. And make sure that they
understand that if they do provide a brace that it can't exceed past a certain
point. You can choose if it's the halfway point or three-quarters or whatever.
The reason is that the definition of a cantilever is that it's supported on one
side and it juts out over the other. If we have a support that's on this end,
then we've got two ends on the support and it's not a cantilever anymore.
You know, there are a lot of options always
to modify a design challenge so just do what you feel is a good idea. You can
always change your mind. The growth mindset is not just about the kids, it's
also about us. So give yourself a little bit of room and flexibility to grow
and to move and to learn new things. And, you know, if you mess up it's not a
big deal. Try, try again.
This challenge is a great opportunity to talk
about Newton's Laws of Motion. If you have third grade, fifth grade or middle
school, you have standards in the Next Gen Science Standards that are related
to this, so you definitely want to take a few minutes before you do this
challenge to review those for yourself and see where you can make those
connections.
As always, one of the things you want to do
with your prep is to make sure that you have looked for your cross-curricular connections
if you are a self-contained teacher, and if you are a single subject teacher,
look at your single subject standards and see what you can connect and get as
much as you can out of the STEM Challenge.
A few ideas for extensions are to have students
identify the forces working on the apple and where those forces are balanced
and unbalanced. Introduce Newton's Laws of Motion, of course. Estimate and
measure distances and practice doing metric conversions. Use the design and
apple to illustrate prepositional phrases. And even have students write a short
story where they personify the apple and explain what it's doing out on the
edge of a cantilever.
So now you have the basics you need in order
to start this challenge Apples Afar in your classroom. But if you want to know
more, or you just want to save yourself a lot of planning and prep time, check
out the resource right here.
This resource contains everything you need
including modifications for use with second through eighth graders. You'll
still need to gather the simple materials, of course, but the rest has been
done for you. You'll get Aligned Next Generation Science Standards for
Engineering and Physical Science, links to my STEM Challenge How-To videos to
help you get the most from each challenge and the Apples Afar materials list.
In Teacher Tips you'll find premise and set-up, how to increase or decrease
difficulty through the Criteria & Constraints List, measuring results and
cross-curricular extension suggestions. You'll find an editable Criteria &
Constraints List so you can tailor the challenge to your students.
For Student Handouts, there are two versions.
Four-page expanded room for response for younger students, and a two-page
condensed space paper saver version. You'll also find a set of group discussion
questions. In the Extension Handouts, you'll find estimated measure distance
and measure and convert distance practice, as well as math extension and
process flow templates. This resource is available individually and is part of
the discounted Back-to-School and Mega STEM Challenge bundles. For one-to-one
paperless classrooms, a version for use with Google slides is coming soon.
Links can be found in the description below the video.
So I hope you and your students have a great
time with Apples Afar. I would love to hear about it. Message me in the
comments or at any of my social media links which are in the description. Make
sure you like and subscribe. Next week we'll be back with challenge number
three which is Apple Annihilator. See you next time.
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