Saturday, March 21, 2026

Tinkercad Vs. Minecraft 2026 Edition

 

Its nearly the end - the end of term one here in New Zealand for 2026.   As we're completing a lot of work in our key curriculum areas we've also taken the opportunity to engage students in some of the activities that proved popular last year.

Minecraft is still incredibly popular with the eight year olds that make up the classroom.   Last year one of the most engaged tasks the students had when using #Tinkercad was when we crossed its use with the creation of Minecraft animals.   On Friday in class we started taking small steps in this process.

We started to use Minecraft Education as a source of screenshots and gave the students a limited time to locate and then photograph or screen shot an animal.

When we then went into Tinkercad we had the screenshots to compare to.   The first days activity was to design one animal and then bring it across.  Students had the examples from last year to look at (which are summarised in a blog post on this site here) and started their first designs.

The timeframe that our students were using here was under half an hour to design and then we asked the students to see if they could take their early designs and use the Tinkercad App to AR/VR the design either in the classroom (the dolphin at the top was projected onto a blue classroom table to represent water) or outside the classroom - the Minecraft cow was created to be so large that it dominates our massive school field.

These are very early examples that we are going to be refining, redeveloping and ptoto-typing.   In a number of cases we are using colour matching and details to replicate the animals as closely as possible.   Other students are working on their own designs in their own time and we will be sharing results.

While we are somewhat early in this process it is anticipated that only a few of these designs will make it to a 3D Print stage.   Most of them will work in a digital format just as well, if not better, than in a physical form.

Some of these ideas also feature in our 'non printing 3D printing design challenges and tasks.  You can view that slideshow by clicking on the link here.

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