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Thursday, November 12, 2015

STAR LAB

STAR LAB, our School District's digital planetarium, recently made its way to Crossroads Elementary School. Every student had the opportunity to experience the wonders of space travel. Could we be looking at the next generation of astronomers and astronauts?

STAR Lab

Check out what some of our Kindergarten friends learned while they were in the Star Lab!









Wednesday, October 28, 2015

Hold Your Horses

The third grade students recently engineered and tested their horse pastures. The criteria required the pasture to withstand the force of a bumping horse (marble) and to have a working gate. This third grade team accomplished the challenge with flying colors!


Friday, October 23, 2015

Speedometry

These young engineers used Hot Wheels ramps and cars to deepen their understanding of potential and kinetic energy. Hypothesis were developed, experiments were designed and data was collected. Finally, students were challenged to engineer a racecourse that would keep their car moving as long and as far as possible. 









Be sure to check out the video below!

STEM Connections

It is so exciting to see STEM come to life! This young man couldn't wait to show his classmates the human powered light that he engineered at home. I think we are looking at a future electrical engineer!

Monday, October 12, 2015

Ramp It Up!

The first grade students at CES are becoming experts on force and motion. After exploring how an incline plane can make both a "push" and a "pull" a bit easier, these young engineers were challenged to design and build a platform/ramp system that would allow their hot wheels car to travel at least 2 meters powered only by the force of gravity! 






Monday, October 5, 2015

Bubble Bonanza

The kindergarten students recently discovered that bubbles have some pretty amazing properties. In addition to being able to float, stretch, stack, split, bounce, and drip - bubbles act as a prism and reflect the full spectrum of light. They even discovered that bubbles do indeed have a shadow.

These young engineers were then challenged to apply what they had just learned about bubbles to engineer their very own bubble wand. Although the goal was to produce a bubble that would not pop for at least 3 seconds, some of the wands actually produced bubbles that remained intact for more than 30 seconds! Now that's amazing!








Hold Your Horses

The Engineering Challenge
       The third grade students were recently challenged to engineer a model of a new horse pasture for the Quantico Stables that met a stringent set of criteria and constraints. Although the perimeter of fencing was designated, the students were tasked with optimizing the square area available for the horses. These young engineers quickly realized that Math is indeed an essential component of STEM!










Monday, September 21, 2015

Engineering a Puff Mobile

As an introduction to the Engineering Design Process, the second grade students have been challenged to engineer a vehicle that can be powered by one puff of air. The challenge sounded easy at first, but as these young engineers are quickly finding out, it isn’t!
Do you think you could design a vehicle based on this set of criteria and constraints?
  • The vehicle must move in a forward direction.
  • You may only use 1 puff of air.
  • You may not touch the vehicle during the test.
  • Your vehicle must remain on the track.
  • You may only use the following materials: 4 mints, 2 straws, 2 paper clips, 1 piece of paper, and clear tape.