Wondering how to take stem challenges and make them into bite-sized portions? In this post, I will be sharing how to create a 30-minute stem challenge lesson plan for any teacher to implement. The lesson will go through the engineering design process but accommodate the shortened lesson time.
When is a 30 Minute Stem Challenge Appropriate?
These types of lesson plans can be beneficial to many teachers in different settings. There are many differences between a 30-minute stem challenge versus a multi-day design challenge. Among many of them are that 30-minute lesson plans will not be complex design challenges. They will involve few materials, have prearranged materials by the teacher, students will not involve other skills such as math, or incorporate extended research components.
Even though the design challenge is shortened, they will still need to write and sketch out their responses on an engineer’s report. You can sign up to get a free one-page one here to save you time on creating it.
If you’re more interested in learning what a full-blown design challenge looks like, read this lesson for the Boat Stem Challenge by clicking here.
When Can You Use a 30 Minute Lesson Plan?
- Back to school community-building activity for kids
- During a Fun Friday Party
- During half-day weeks for cart- stem teachers
- Sub Plans
- Great for cart-stem teachers who travel from class to class
- A fun zoom activity for celebration days
Step 1: Ask (5 Minutes)
- Built a Boat that floats. I have this stem challenge, that would work really well for a modified 30-minute lesson.
- Build a Catapult
- Design a paper bridge or use any materials as addressed in this challenge
- Design a marble run. This is a great lesson for 4th-grade energy.
Step 2: Research (5 minutes)
Step #3: Plan (5 minutes)
Step #4: Build (10 minutes)
Step #5: Test & Communicate (5 minutes)
Extra Tips for Delivering in 30 Minutes
- Don’t expect perfection from your students. The designs will be basic with only 10 minutes to build.
- Review growth mindset prior to the challenge and after. There will be students who feel overwhelmed, so provide them with as much support you can in the beginning. Eventually, they will take off with their amazing ideas and confidence.
- Have a list of ready-to-go supplies in baggies for your students. This will help with keeping to the time restriction.
- Allow your students to fail during the test step. Let them know that not everyone’s design will pass, but that it doesn’t define them as engineers. In fact, engineers fail many times before they come to the final destination.
Anonymous says
Where can I find the cute job cards and job descriptions?
Liana Davis says
Here's the link! https://view.flodesk.com/pages/5ef615f2d31e9c00260ab614 Also, thanks!