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#1
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Hi,
I agreed to do three one-hour workshops for one group of 10 third and fourth graders (the same children for all three weeks.) The workshops are during school and will be in a classroom (or outside), visiting the airport is not feasible. They will be GA focused (although billed as the "Wonder of Flight). Now I need to plan the workshops, and I'm asking for suggestions for activities, with pointers to details if possible. I could easily lecture for three hours straight, but that's not going to work with ten 9-year old boys (most likely). Here are a few of the things I plan to do: 1) I'll bring in variety of airplane parts (prop, cylinder, piston, instruments, and whatever else I can get.) I'll have the kids sketch them, which means they'll study the details more. Then we'll figure out what the details are for (what do the fins on the cylinders do, for example?) 2) I'll probably start each session by listening to the local ATIS on the handheld (and perhaps by calling WX-BRIEF for the recording if I have a speaker phone) and making a go/no-go decision based on the weather (and maybe I'M SAFE.) That will lead us to learning a bit about weather. 3) If I can make a crude wind-tunnel with a window fan and build airfoils to learn something, I'll do so (any suggestions or experience here would be helpful) 4) We'll make the equivalent of balsa-wood airplanes with cereal-box cardboard (I don't have the nerve to really use balsa and the sharp knives required.) I tried cardboard planes at home, and they can fly pretty well if properly balanced, and they really demonstrate the downside of an aft CG if not. 5) There will be a chart session with old sectionals (they'll plan a route somewhere, figure out the heading, look for obstructions, etc.) 6) I may have a hang glider pilot bring in his kite. Suggestions for other feasible activities or materials you are aware of? Thanks for your help. |
#2
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III wrote:
.... Now I need to plan the workshops, and I'm asking for suggestions for activities, Model aircraft Clubs often do this sort of thing, so you might get some good ideas from them, if you can contact a club in you area. (Links below, to find clubs). A club may also be able to provide some resources, such as small scale airfoils, propellors, even scale-like engines. If you get real lucky and find someone who designs, you might even find a scale wind-tunnel. Most model stuff is non-scale, but a lot is. The Cessna Skylane is popular by builders so it might be relatively easy to find one for a static display. If you cannot visit the airport, but there is a reasonably open park nearby, a member might be able to demonstrate flight with a rubber-powered or electric-powered "small-field" model, if that would be useful for your goals. List of clubs can be found at: http://www.modelaircraft.org/templat...4C3A316A4F7CC9 http://www.maac.ca/zones/clubs/clubs_a.html Good luck... |
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