Thursday, May 19, 2016

Build a Bridge: Testing Bridge Design {Science Activity}

Building Paper Bridges

There are so many ways to build a bridge. Let’s take a few minutes and look at three types of bridge design and how well each type of paper bridge holds pennies.

We hope this science activity will get your kids thinking about the reasons why different structures are build the way they are.

Building Paper Bridges

Build a Paper Bridge

What materials do you need to build a bridge?

  • 2 plastic or paper cups
  • a large supply of pennies
  • 2 pieces of construction paper
  • tape
  • scissors

Bridge Design

Single Strip Bridge

Building Paper Bridges

The first bridge you might create is a single strip bridge. It is made of a singe piece of paper placed on two cups. You will want just a couple of inches between the cups.

Building Paper Bridges

Once the strip is in place, starting adding one penny at a time. This bridge only held one penny. When a second penny was added to the bridge it totally collapsed. This type of bridge just wasn’t very stable.

Collapsed Oval Bridge

Make an oval by taping to paper strips together at their ends. The ends were slightly pinched to give the oval a little more stability.

Building Paper Bridges

This bridge bowed in the center the same way that the single strip bridge did.  It was able to hold a few more pennies. The pennies needed to be placed down the center of the bridge. When they were spread out the bridge, the bridge fell into the space between the cups.

Folded Bridge

Create a folded bridge by folding a strip of paper horizontally as you would fold a fan. The folds that were created were very narrow.

Building Paper Bridges

Attempts were made to lay the pennies on top of the folds, but they kept slipping into the folds on the folded bridge. This style of bridge was able to hold all the pennies gathered for this activity. It would have  probably held a lot more. The bridge didn’t even have a slight bow in it.

 

After all the bridges had been created, we talked about why one bridge design worked and others didn’t. We have our thoughts about why some were successful and others were not.

Why do you think some worked and others didn’t?

Building Paper Bridges

More Kids Activities

Activities like studying how to build a bridge can expand a child’s way of thinking about how things work.  By testing bridge design, your child will start thinking about why some structures work better than others and be able to apply that in the world around him.  For more kids activities, take a look at these:

Did you know? We wrote a science book!

Our book, The 101 Coolest Simple Science Experiments, features tons of awesome activities just like this one that will keep your kids engaged while they learn. How awesome is that?!

The 101 Coolest Simple Science Experiments

The post Build a Bridge: Testing Bridge Design {Science Activity} appeared first on Kids Activities Blog.



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