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Akron Global Polymer Academy Lesson Plans

Egg Walk Challenge - Using Plastics to Walk on Eggs

Grades: 6-8
Author: Dave Reber, Mary Harris, Sandy Van Natta
Source: Gene Easter Streetsboro Ohio


Abstract

Students will design a pair of shoes using plastics that will enable them to walk on eggs without breaking them.


Objectives

What should students know as a result of this lesson?

What should the students be able to do as a result of this lesson?


Materials

Plastics of various kinds: sheets, cups, plates, etc., dozens of eggs in cartons, (ask each student to bring 1 dozen eggs) tape, razor knives,old shoes, any plastic materials you have available, measuring tape.


Procedures

Engagement

Engagement Present the problem: I present the egg walk as a part of my motion unit. The students are to imagine they have landed on an imaginary planet and must develop a pair of shoes to obtain supplies. The surface of this planet has a very brittle thin crust. Students are then told "You are going to build a pair of shoes to walk on eggs using only these materials". The materials are various types of plastic and tape.

Ask how this problem relates to the real world.

Assessment: Informally monitor the students responses to see if they are logical.

Exploration

The students should exchange ideas as to how the shoe should look, be made, and who should walk on the eggs. Let the students handle the various plastics to examine properties.The teacher can ask such guiding questions as:

Assessment: Review the test and the student generated data to determine important plastic properties.This can be done as an informal observation of students..

Explanation

Explanation: The students tell the rest of the class why they built the shoe the way they did. Why did they use certain materials and not others?

Assessment: Check for participation of each group member during the discussion. Each member of the group should have a role (a particular piece of research that they are in charge of)

Day 3-2: Students will complete a lab report for homework which will include the data they have collected and conclusions they have drawn from the data.

Assessment: Assessment A rubric can be designed to see if students used the proper terminology and logic to explain their results.

Elaboration

Ask students "How can this project be extended, what is possible future application?" Assessment Have students design and calculate a shoe for a person of twice their body weight to successfully walk on eggs.

Demonstration None

Direct Instruction The teacher will define relevant terms such as Pressure, and PSI.

Cooperative Learning Students can work in as group of four to design and build the shoes.


Prerequisites

Skills Students should have an understanding of pressure and how it is calculated and measuring skills.

Misconceptions Frequently students do not distinguish between pressure and force.


Best Teaching Practices


Alignment with Standards

NGSS Standards:

Common Core Standards:

National Standards:

Ohio Standards:


Content Knowledge

N/A


Safety

Students will be using razor knives, and other sharp objects to construct the shoes. The Teacher should provide a cutting area to monitor the number of students in the area.


Applications

There are many real life examples dealing with pressure. The following is a short list: walking on ice safely, removing a car from a muddy ditch, SCUBA diving, how snow shoes work, why athletes typically wear cleats, why walking on gravel is so painful as you get bigger.


Assessment

N/A


Other Considerations

Grouping Suggestions: Each student should be given a task or job in the group. One student obtains all the materials, one draws the design, one cuts the materials, and all help assemble.

Pacing/Suggested Time:


Printable PDF Worksheets

N/A