Schools
Sixth-Graders Persevere with Project Lead the Way Challenge
After studying Newton's Law, they design and build their own working gliders
With upbeat pop songs playing in the background, Elizabeth Hookeâs sixth graders worked in small clusters on balsa wood gliders. Some were meticulously coloring designs, while others, fingers sticky with glue, were piecing their planes together. The assignment was a two-week Project Lead the Way challenge that asked students to create a plane that could fly for a minimum of five seconds.
To get there, students researched Newtonâs Laws and how airplanes fly, created virtual models of their gliders, virtually raced against other students, and finally printed specs and built gliders out of balsa wood.
âI taught this last year as part of an elective,â said Hooke. âThis year, the other two sixth grade teachers also have their Project Lead the Way training, so the whole grade is doing it now.â
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Hookeâs class seemed to thoroughly enjoy the hands-on project.
âI like it. Itâs fun,â said Alessia Casale. âItâs also really hard because you have to figure out the perfect way to make the plane. If not, it wonât fly as well.â
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âItâs also hard to figure out a way to design the plane so that it doesnât just drop straight down,â added Neha Kakkanattu. âIt has to actually fly. That was a little bit hard for me.â
The assignment was an exercise in critical thinking and perseverance, two of the districtâs Strategic Coherence Plan skills.
âIf you fix one thing, five other things go down,â Courtney Pease explained. Students were required to constantly test and reassess their plans until they got the results they were looking for â a life skill that is sure to come in handy as they grow older.
