The Systems Engineer
Activities supporting the ‘Systems Engineer’ workshop
Activities supporting the ‘Systems Engineer’ workshop
Today you have been Systems Engineers and learned that a system is a set of things working together as part of a whole. There are lots of different systems in the world around us ranging from manufacturing plants to waste disposal and even our own bodies.
Everyday tasks like shopping at the supermarket or taking a journey by bus need systems to ensure they run smoothly. Can you imagine what would happen if we did not queue to pay the driver or did not press the stop button when it was time for us to get off?
Systems all need a systems engineer. They use different people, components and actions together to solve a particular problem.
Your problem today was to build a marble run where the marble rolled for the longest amount of time. To be a successful systems engineer you needed the skills of collaboration (working with other people), imagination (thinking about different ways to design your system) and resilience (bouncing back from setbacks and keep trying until you found a solution). You also used the engineering design cycle to create your system.
This is best done on a wall, door or fridge, but could easily be made in a large cardboard box.
You will need: cardboard, masking tape, scissors and a marble
Have you ever tried to make a domino run?
To try this at home you will need a hard, flat surface and plenty of dominoes. Click here to visit a website with instructions from beginner to advanced level toppling.
You may want to use a combination of your domino and marble runs, as shown in this video.
A Rube Goldberg (or Heath Robinson) machine is any system that uses a chain reaction to perform a simple task. This is the video of an example of a Rube Goldberg machine that you watched in school.
To make your own Rube Goldberg machine you need to:
Maybe one day you will create something like this!