We have blogged at length about one of t
he starting project for 2026 in our junior classroom, students using their iPads and the
Tinkercad App to
create a personalised, unique and original stencil. We are currently in the process of printing a class set of these including a revision by the student so we can trace the progress with their designs and use it to increase the creativity.
We have encouraged students to add their names to the design, to see if they can stencil their name into the creation, and experiment with this and various shapes that are tessellated to produce an art output.
The students key skills that they are developing is the basic shapes, measurement (as all designs have to be measured by the students to check size for being submitted for printing and using the 'hole' design from the main interface, to in this case go through the entire design and reduce the printing. As repeatedly noted we have utilised the Bambu H2D for this.
Later designs have evolved to have the student put their own name in the bottom right hand corner (as shown left) and students have started experimenting with original shapes
and using the 'scribble' tool to create an original shape.
Already we've had other projects come out of the examples - one of the student wants to increase the size of the base and produce matching shapes so they can be inserted into the design as a match task for a young child. As a teacher there is the clear potential to use this to create some geometric work in the future (by having a range of shapes featured that could then be used to identify various features of a shapes).
This is also allowing students to circle back to a previous task. This is the second task for the year, the first being the 'badge' or name plate task. Several of the students have now returned to this task and improved or revised their earlier designs. An example of this is left - the student has produced a different version involving using the 'hole' to partially sink the name into the base.
This student also modified the base font design and explored altering its shape and dimensions - which is something that they are now passing onto other students. All these designs have come from students who are eight years old, two of the three are designing using
Tinkercad for the second week.
One student opted to include every member of the family in a design, but obviously looking at it you could include short phrases, greetings etc and it would prove to be effective. We have yet to spray paint any of the designs or use anything other than regular base filament.
We also have a classroom with considerable glass bi-fold doors that lead to an outside area. We are always considering ways that we can display information and projects on this (glass) space - this might be something that we could complete either using the stencil directly or correcting something that potentially could be spray painted into place as is completed during Christmas on plenty of stores by local sign writers.
This print shown left is one of the largest that the students have produced measuring 140mm across and being 150mm long. This print took forty five minutes to complete, used 23g of filament to complete the project. According to the Bambulab software the projected cost of the project was 0.55.
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