Last April, we had over 50,000 students participate in the Global Day of Design (and next year’s GDD is slated for May 2nd). It was powerful to watch students embrace design thinking for a single day. So, John Spencer and I were thinking about what it would look like to take this idea to the next level. Our answer? The Mars Challenge!
This is a global design competition that you can do with your K-12 students. Not interested in competing? No problem. You can still participate and share your work with a global audience. You can find the details (including where to sign up) below. Read that post and check this out:
1. Here’s the video introducing the MARS Challenge (it’s awesome)
2. Here’s the sign up form for your class to participate!
3. Get the FREE lesson plans, student notebook, PPT, and downloadable video (by signing up at the bottom of this post)
4. Use the hashtag #MARSchallenge through the month of December to share what your students are making
4. Stay tuned for when we announce the judges for this global challenge!
Here’s more info about the MARS Challenge: Design a School on Mars
Announcing the MARS Challenge: Design a School on Mars From Scratch
This challenge is open to any teacher and group of students in a K-12 education setting. We provide lesson plans, student notebooks, power point presentation for each lesson, and a framework (the LAUNCH Cycle) for your students to tackle this enormous challenge of starting a school on Mars.
Here are the details:
December 1st: MARS Challenge starts (sign up your team/class/school below)December 12th: Panel of Judges releasedDecember 22nd: Challenge ends, all videos must be sent in for judgingJanuary 2nd: Winners announced in four categories (K-2, 3-5, 6-8, 9-12)
The big questions are:
1. Should a school even be on Mars?
2. If there was some type of education system on Mars, what would help further the mission of sustainability and prepare students for a future on Mars and beyond?
3. How can we learn from our years of education here on Earth to make school on Mars and even more valuable and fruitful place of learning?
The Design Challenge Overview
You’re going to make something amazing and you’re going to start on it today. It’s going to be something that has never existed before in the history of humanity.
You know how you typically turn in an assignment to your teacher and then you get it back and, well, that’s pretty much it. This is different. Working with your design team, you’re going to create something people will actually see!
The Launch Process
Look all around you. Seriously. Glance around your classroom. You are surrounded by things that people created. Not only did they create these things but they also designed them. The fancy term for this is design thinking. It’s the term professionals use. You’re going to use the LAUNCH Process. It’s a modified version of the design thinking cycle that artists and engineers use in the real world. Here’s how it works:
Look, Listen, and Learn
Ask a Ton of Questions
Understand the Problem or Process
Navigate the Ideas
Create a Prototype
Highlight What’s Working and Fix What’s Failing
Ready to Launch!
Your Challenge: Build a Model School for People Who Colonize Mars
You’re going to design and build a model school for people who colonize MARS.
Consider the following:
- Where will this school be located on MARS? How will you keep the people safe, but also provide a place where learning is as challenging as life on the planet?
- How will you accommodate each person’s unique role in colonizing MARS with what they’ll be learning?
- What will look similar about school here on Earth? What will look new, different, and better?
- What feature of school will you definitely get rid of from our current system?
- What special features will this school have? What kinds of cool gadgets and technology will this school have?
- What will the learning environment/school look like? What architectural style will you use?
- What will you name the school?
Your items will include:
- Cardboard
- Construction Paper
- Duct Tape
- Glue
- Straws
Don’t forget to experiment and make tons of glorious mistakes. Ultimately, your design is going to be awesome, because it’s yours and it’s coming from your creative mind.
The Final Product
Your group will ultimately design a model school using the above materials. In order to share this model school with the world, you will have to make one of the following options below to be in the running for the final prize!
Option 1: Create a digital brochure inviting people going to MARS to join your school.
Option 2: Create a video showing and explaining the school on MARS
Option 3: Create a video advertisement for the school on MARS
How Can I Join?!?
Sign up using the form at the bottom of the post. You’ll receive an email with the following items (all FREE):
- Lesson Plans for the MARS Challenge (including connection to the standards and step-by-step instruction for teachers)
- LAUNCH Student Notebook – Students have a notebook handout to fill in, sketch in, and follow throughout the entire challenge
- PowerPoint introducing the Mars Challenge and for every lesson during the Challenge
- Resource list for research on MARS, space travel, school design and much more!
You’ll also be asked to fill in information on your school and classroom to be a part of the official MARS Challenge that will be judged. If you don’t want to participate in the final project judging, no worries, have fun doing it with your class!
I’ll keep you updated in the coming weeks with blog posts and emails, and we will also use the hashtag #MARSchallenge to share out what our students are designing, making, and building this month!
Join the MARS Challenge
Enter your email below and get the FREE lesson plans, student notebook, PPTs, and much more to get started design a school on Mars!
Does anyone know where to find the list of the judging panel? My students are excited to hear who is on it! 🙂
Thanks
Looking for a spring design challenge. Our unit on Mars is not for another two months!