nmantas
Well-known member
I didn't know where to post this. I'm a high school teacher (chemistry) and one of my classes will have 4 weeks in May having no official curriculum and instead we are going to fabricate several projects with our new lab (3D printers, small cnc, large router-based cnc, laser cutters, and an assortment of hand tools and electrical tools). We just finished electrochemistry and built a large and a small electrolysis tank with graphite electrodes and a laser-cut laminated acrylic beam across the tank to hold the rusted item. This is a highly educated group of kids that mostly come from a culture of never having to built anything in their lives....it was cute seeing one student that was basically scared of a cordless drill. It is really rewarding to see them develop some practical skills with their hands and have pride in building something but it also means they don't have many skills or experiences to build on (which is also true for the software/hardware of the machines in the lab).
The students are brainstorming projects (mostly from watching nerdy Mystbuster-like videos on youtube). if anyone had any other ideas for cool small-scale projects (doesn't have to be chemistry related) please let me know. I'd like to have them make a small bucket sized foundry to melt and cast metals but since our school is in the upstairs of an office building it would be difficult to use (would not be using it in my classroom).
The students are brainstorming projects (mostly from watching nerdy Mystbuster-like videos on youtube). if anyone had any other ideas for cool small-scale projects (doesn't have to be chemistry related) please let me know. I'd like to have them make a small bucket sized foundry to melt and cast metals but since our school is in the upstairs of an office building it would be difficult to use (would not be using it in my classroom).