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The Heart of Our Cardiovascular System
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Students learn about the heart and its role at the center of the human cardiovascular system. In the associated activity, students play out a scenario in which they are biomedical engineers asked to design artificial hearts. They learn about the path of blood flow through the heart and use that knowledge to evaluate designs of artificial hearts on the market.

Author:
TeachEngineering.org
Bio-Inspired Technology and Systems (BITS) RET,
Angela D. Kolonich
Heart to Heart
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Students learn about the form and function of the human heart through lecture, research and dissection. They brainstorm ideas that pertain to various heart conditions and organize these ideas into categories that help them research possible solutions. An expert in the field of cardiac valve research was interviewed for this lesson and shares his ideas with the class. Students conclude by researching various possible heart defects.

Author:
Janet Yowell
Michael Duplessis
Carleigh Samson
TeachEngineering.org
VU Bioengineering RET Program,
Heat Transfer Lesson
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Students explore heat transfer and energy efficiency using the context of energy efficient houses. They gain a solid understanding of the three types of heat transfer: radiation, convection and conduction, which are explained in detail and related to the real world. They learn about the many ways solar energy is used as a renewable energy source to reduce the emission of greenhouse gasses and operating costs. Students also explore ways in which a device can capitalize on the methods of heat transfer to produce a beneficial result. They are given the tools to calculate the heat transferred between a system and its surroundings.

Author:
Malinda Schaefer Zarske
Integrated Teaching and Learning Program,
Denise W. Carlson
Lauren Cooper
TeachEngineering.org
Landon B. Gennetten
Hello, Are You Listening?
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Students gain a basic understanding of the engineering components behind telecommunications, in particular, the way telephone communication works to link one phone to another for conventional landline and cellular telephones. During this entire-class activity, students simulate how phone calls are connected by acting out a variety of searches for both local and long-distance calls. Students end up with a good understanding of how phone calls are transmitted from callers to recipients.

Author:
Making the Connection—Women in Engineering Programs and Advocates Network (WEPAN),
Martha Cyr
TeachEngineering.org
Hidden in Plain Sight
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Steganography is the science and art of hiding messages in plain sight so only the sender and intended recipient know the existence of a message. Steganography can be characterized as security through obscurity. Through this lesson, students experience a portion of the engineering design process as they research steganography and steganographic methods; identify problems, criteria and constraints; brainstorm possible solutions; and generate ideas. These are the critical first steps in the engineering design process, often overlooked by students who want to get to the "doing" phases—designing, building and testing. In computer science, a thorough design phase makes program implementation much easier and more effective. Students obtain practice with a portion of the design process that may be less exciting, but is just as important as the other steps in the process.

Author:
TeachEngineering.org
IMPART RET Program, College of Information Science & Technology,
Derek Babb
High Arches, Low Arches
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A main concern of shoe engineers is creating shoes that provide the right amount of arch support to prevent (or fix) common gait misalignments that lead to injury. During this activity, students look at their own footprints and determine whether they have either of the two most prominent gait misalignments: overpronation (collapsing arches) or supination (high arches). Knowing the shape of a person's foot, and their natural arch movement is necessary to design shoes to fix these gain alignments.

Author:
TeachEngineering.org
Integrated Teaching and Learning Program,
Eszter Horanyi
Home, Sweet Home!
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In this activity, the students will use wax paper shaped as leaves and kite string to build a shelter to protect them from the rain. The students will then test the shelters for durability and water resistance.

Author:
TeachEngineering.org
Adventure Engineering,
Homeward Bound
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Students review the what they have learned throughout the five lessons in this unit. This includes a review of many types of engineers, reminding students of the various everyday products, structures and processes they design and create in our world.

Author:
Janet Yowell
Integrated Teaching and Learning Program,
Katherine Beggs
Denali Lander
TeachEngineering.org
Abigail Watrous
Hot Problem Solving
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Student teams follow the steps of the engineering design process to meet the challenge of getting their entire class from one location on the playground to the sidewalk without touching the ground between. The class develops a well thought-out plan while following the steps of the engineering design process. Then, they test their solution by going outside and trying it out. Through the post-activity assessment, they compare their problem-solving experience to real life engineering challenges, such as creating new forms of transportation or new product invention.

Author:
Jackie Sullivan
Malinda Schaefer Zarske
Integrated Teaching and Learning Program,
Denise W. Carlson
Megan Podlogar
How Antibiotics Work
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Students are introduced to a challenge question. Towards answering the question, they generate ideas for what they need to know about medicines and how they move through our bodies, watch a few short videos to gain multiple perspectives, and then learn lecture material to obtain a basic understanding of how antibiotics kill bacteria in the human body. They learn why different forms of medicine (pill, liquid or shot) get into the blood stream at different speeds.

Author:
TeachEngineering.org
VU Bioengineering RET Program,
Michelle Woods
How Big?
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Students teams determine the size of the caverns necessary to house the population of the state of Alabraska from the impending asteroid impact. They measure their classroom to determine area and volume, determine how many people the space could sleep, and scale this number up to accommodate all Alabraskans. They work through problems on a worksheet and perform math conversions between feet/meters and miles/kilometers.

Author:
TeachEngineering.org
Adventure Engineering,
How Dense Are You?
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Students learn about geotechnical engineers and their use of physical properties, such as soil density, to determine the ability of various soils to offer support to foundations. In an associated activity, students determine the bulk densities of soil samples, and assess their suitability to support foundations.

Author:
Sherry L. Wright
Research Experience for Teachers (RET) Program,
Marissa H. Forbes
TeachEngineering.org
How Dense Are You Lab
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Students determine the mass and volume of soil samples and calculate the density of the soils. They use this information to determine the suitability of the soil to support a building foundation.

Author:
Sherry L. Wright
Research Experience for Teachers (RET) Program,
Marissa H. Forbes
TeachEngineering.org
How Do Things Fall?
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Students learn that it is incorrect to believe that heavier objects fall faster than lighter objects. By close observation of falling objects, they see that it is the amount of air resistance, not the weight of an object, which determines how quickly an object falls.

Author:
Ben Heavner
Malinda Schaefer Zarske
Integrated Teaching and Learning Program,
Denise Carlson
TeachEngineering.org
Xochitl Zamora-Thompson
How Far Does a Lava Flow Go?
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While learning about volcanoes, magma and lava flows, students learn about the properties of liquid movement, coming to understand viscosity and other factors that increase and decrease liquid flow. They also learn about lava composition and its risk to human settlements.

Author:
TeachEngineering.org
Brittany Enzmann
Science and Engineering of the Environment of Los Angeles (SEE-LA) GK-12 Program,
Marschal Fazio
How Far Does the Robot Go?
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Students practice their multiplication skills using robots with wheels built from LEGO® MINDSTORMS® NXT kits. They brainstorm distance travelled by the robots without physically measuring distance and then apply their math skills to correctly calculate the distance and compare their guesses with physical measurements. Through this activity, students estimate parameters other than by physically measuring them, practice multiplication, develop measuring skills, and use their creativity to come up with successful solutions.

Author:
AMPS GK-12 Program,
Keeshan Williams
TeachEngineering.org
Elina Mamasheva
How Fast Does Water Travel through Soils?
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Students measure the permeability of different types of soils, compare results and realize the importance of size, voids and density in permeability response.

Author:
Russ Holstein
Ryan Cain
Eduardo Suescun
TeachEngineering.org
AMPS GK-12 Program,
Magued Iskander
How Many More Fish?
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The activities in this 6-lesson unit use fish-shaped crackers to help students develop their understanding of comparative subtraction by exploring five meanings of subtraction (counting, sets, number line, balance, and inverse of addition). Students investigate properties of subtraction, represent subtraction with objects and pictures, record subtraction with vertical notation and equations, create and solve problems, and carry out missing addend activities. Lessons include questions for student discussion and teacher reflection, extensions, printable student sheets, assessment options, and links to online applets.

Author:
Grace M. Burton
How Many Triangles Can You Construct?
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This activity has students explore the patterns that emerge when connecting midpoints of triangles. The activity includes a student worksheet, discussion questions, and an interactive fractal tool.

How a Faucet Works
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Students learn about the underlying engineering principals in the inner workings of a simple household object -- the faucet. Students use the basic concepts of simple machines, force and fluid flow to describe the path of water through a simple faucet. Lastly, they translate this knowledge into thinking about how different designs of faucets also use these same concepts.

Author:
Janet Yowell
Jackie Sullivan
Malinda Schaefer Zarske
Integrated Teaching and Learning Program,
Tod Sullivan
Chris Sheridan, Tod Sullivan, Jackie Sullivan, Malinda Schaefer Zarske, Janet Yowell
TeachEngineering.org
Chris Sheridan