With a short stack of basic office paper and some scotch
tape, I told my eight-year-old son we were going to do an engineering activity.
"We're going to build with paper," I said.
He looked at me like I was nuts.
I asked him to describe paper. Words and phrases like flimsy, thin, and easily ripped
rolled off his tongue.
I wasn't about to argue.
I had him retrieve a book from his bookshelf. He came
back with a thin paperback chapter book. I gave him the basic instruction to
build a support to set the book on using the paper.
We kicked around a few ideas and decided to roll the
paper into tubes about an inch in diameter, taping the open flaps down to keep
the tubes from unrolling.
He was excited to see if the tube would hold his book.
Voila! It did!!
Rolling the paper had increased the strength of the paper. Now I told him to grab a BIG book from his room. He came back to the table with the Guinness Book of World Records. (Obviously, he was taking this engineering challenge seriously.)
We made four more identical tubes out of the office
paper. I asked him how they should be positioned. "Should we group them
all together to form one central support?"
He had a different idea. To make sure the book was
steady, he spread the four tubes out so they were closer to the corners of the
book, evenly distributing the weight.
I'm not going to lie. I was shocked myself that four
pieces of flimsy office paper could hold up the heavy book.
Note: Next time we
attempt this, I think we'll add a second story to our paper-book building!
Love it! A challenge after my own heart! Perhaps we should start a new linky :D
ReplyDeleteOh, I love this idea! Going to use this challenge.
ReplyDeleteGreat idea!
ReplyDeleteGreat challenge! I love that it was his idea to put the paper rolls at the corners of the larger book. Amazing how engineering can come pretty naturally to kids.
ReplyDelete