Challenge: For a Y1 student (a five year old) to be introduced to CAD design and construct their first print, as tutored by a Y4 student.
Background: As a teacher one of the most reluctant aspects that I personally had when shifting levels was the prospect of using Tinkercad with junior students here at Auroa Primary School, this was proven a very long time ago to be a non-starter not only have the students constantly come up with great ideas and engagement with their iPads and technology.
In this instance a pair of students from the core classroom which is seven and eight year olds went back to a junior (five year old classroom). We have worked with five year olds already this year on a couple of collaborative projects - which you can see by clicking on the link here.
While there are a series of prints featured in this post they have all followed the same design and creation format, so we will treat them as a single example.
The basis for all of them is the students name, then projected around the classroom as a object (using the AR/VR function of the Tinkercad App and the students iPad). This was shown to the student (the Y1) and the student was encouraged to continue the process.
The Y4 tutor also was clever in her design of putting two capital letters into the design the first was to exclude the possibility of the 'i' being unlinked in the result of printing (as can be seen with 'Abbie'). In the second instance the Y was made a capital so it would sit above the line and not be reduced to handing underneath.
As can be seen once the students had projected the image inside the classroom they then moved outside and projected it to be bigger than the single storey classroom the student is from, and allowed her to manipulate it further.
The final manipulated image was taken on the school field where the image was made as large as was feasibly possible and then a photo was taken using the students iPad.
From the start of the process to taking the photos was approximately ten minutes.
Once this had been completed the students then again looked at the 3D Print design and thought about how it might look. The first version of which was printed.
This print measured 80mm in length was 15mm high and was 20mm wide. This took only thirty minutes to print on
the Bambu H2D (included in this was essentially fifteen minutes of printer preparation time and 15 minutes of actual printing).
The students realised that while this had some appeal as a practical print it was small, so a second version was created. This was then doubled in size. Even on the smaller version the precision of the Bambu came to the fore as the printer was able to print the lettering with minimal rafting or waste plastic/PLA.
As can be shown by this print (in yellow) the print itself would benefit from an increase in size to allow it to have a touch more stability.
In this second version (shown immediately to the left) the print time has increased to just over one hour. The new dimensions for the print are essentially double of the previous print -
that is 140mm long however 40mm high and 25mm wide. The provided more stability
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