Family Engineering: Rubberband Cars

Participants use the engineering design process to create rubberband-powered cars. Then, they learn about little-known Black inventors who helped make our roads and vehicles safer and are invited to imagine and create an invention to help improve car or road safety!
Full Program Description
Brainstorm, design, build, and test structures to solve problems and help make the world a better place – just like real engineers!
In this program, we’ll design, build, and test rubberband vehicles. You’ll also have a chance to learn about several Black engineers who created many inventions we depend on every day, from automatic transmissions to traffic lights.
Supplies
- materials to build ramps for driving and testing the cars (we used our wooden hollow big blocks and our giant magnetic tiles, but you can use cardboard and stacks of books)
- rubberbands
- car setups (I used wide wood craft sticks, toothpicks, straws, skewers, and dowels to hot glue the basic rubberband car setup for participants before they arrived to make the process a just-right challenge instead of a frustrating experience, but you can let participants do the whole thing themselves. There are lots of ways to make rubberband cars. I chose what seemed to be the simplest to me).
- wheels (recycled bottlecaps, cardboard circles, or purchased wheels)
- hot glue
- materials to decorate the cars, such as markers, decorative tape, stickers, gems, etc.
Assets
table signs with instructions | printable 8.5″ x 11″ pdf | copy & edit in Canva
auto-loop Powerpoint slide show | download | copy & edit images in Canva
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