Exercise: Team Design Challenge var.1 – Chute Races

TEAM DESIGN CHALLENGE: ALUMINUM FOIL CHUTE RACES

This is partly a recount of the team design challenge from June 2011. It is also an opportunity to think why we do this exercise, and variations that are consistent with the objectives.

WHY?
To provide engaged team atmosphere.
To test team dynamics under time-constrained conditions.
To experience rapid team idea exchange, design and decision-making.
For the teambuilding lessons.
To create an impromptu structure of leadership and functional responsibilities.
To focus on blend of instant creativity and teamwork.
To work with basic (on-hand) materials.

Sometimes, when you’re given a small window of opportunity to prove or demonstrate something, you have to build that thing with just the materials at hand and with only your instinct about whether it will work. Think MacGyver. Think Top Chef Quickfire Challenge.

HOW?
Students will not be given the details of this exercise until the start of the time slot.
Time slot will be 3 hours: 15 minutes explanation, 30 minutes brainstorming and design, 1 hour construction, 1 hour set-up and execution, 15 minutes discussion.
The aim will be to design a chute using some basic materials.
Last year’s materials: aluminum foil (1 roll), elastic bands (1 box), paper clips (1 box), tape (1 roll), cup (1 ea), golf balls (4 ea), string (1 ball).
Materials are open to variation.
Examples: water instead of golf balls; chute must have Y- junction; baseball instead of golf ball; curvature (spiral, bend or mole-hill); ramp-jump; jump and land in receptacle (eg, a bucket).

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