Developing design ideas further, using understanding of mechanisms

In this lesson, we will continue to develop our design ideas. We will learn how to label and annotate our ideas, explaining how it is suitable for our intended users, and how the mechanisms will work. This lesson includes equipment beyond pen, paper or pencil. Please make sure your child is adequately supervised.

Developing design ideas further, using understanding of mechanisms

In this lesson, we will continue to develop our design ideas. We will learn how to label and annotate our ideas, explaining how it is suitable for our intended users, and how the mechanisms will work. This lesson includes equipment beyond pen, paper or pencil. Please make sure your child is adequately supervised.

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Lesson details

Key learning points

  1. indicate the design features of their products that will appeal to intended users
  2. explain how particular parts of their products work
  3. use annotated sketches to develop and communicate their ideas

Equipment

Card, paper, masking tape, paper fasteners, glue stick, scissors

Content guidance

  • Equipment requiring safe usage.

Supervision

Adult supervision recommended

Licence

This content is made available by Oak National Academy Limited and its partners and licensed under Oak’s terms & conditions (Collection 1), except where otherwise stated.

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6 Questions

Q1.
What does being persuasive mean?
Correct answer: To convince someone to do or believe something through reasoning or temptation.
To give extra information about a mechanism.
To make someone do as you say by force.
Q2.
What is a prototype?
A finished product.
A picture of the produce.
Correct answer: An early model of the product, designed to test the concept or process.
Q3.
Why is it important to produce a prototype?
It is not important.
Correct answer: So you can experiment and change your design to improve its function.
To give extra information about a mechanism.
Q4.
What part of the scissors are the levers?
An image in a quiz
The attachment in the middle.
The circular handle.
Correct answer: The metal bars.
Q5.
What is an mechanical system?
Correct answer: A set of related mechanisms used to create an outcome.
A type of lever.
The way a mechanism moves.
Q6.
What is a lever?
A flexible bar which is fixed to a point.
A large bar which hold the structure of the product.
Correct answer: A rigid bar which moves around a pivot.

7 Questions

Q1.
What is a fixed pivot?
A short card strip used to keep the lever and linkage mechanisms in place.
Correct answer: When a paper fastener joins card strips to the backing card.
When a paper fastener joins card strips together.
Q2.
What part of the scissors is the pivot?
An image in a quiz
Correct answer: The attachment in the middle
The circular handle
The long blades
Q3.
What is an mechanical system?
Correct answer: A set of related mechanisms used to create an outcome.
A type of lever.
The way a mechanism moves.
Q4.
What is a mechanism?
A fixed structure.
A mechanical robot.
Correct answer: Where materials or components are connected to make movement.
Q5.
What is a sketch?
A detailed and finished drawing.
A finished copy of a product.
Correct answer: A rough drawing (not the final version).
Q6.
Why is using a bridge in your design important?
A allows a lever to rotate.
It helps you cross the river.
Correct answer: It keeps the lever and linkage mechanisms in place.
Q7.
Why is adding annotation to a final design important?
Correct answer: It adds important information to help with the making process.
It helps you learn to spell.
It is not important.

Lesson appears in

UnitDesign and technology / Mechanisms: levers and linkages

Design and technology