02 Workshops

Workshop Schulhaus am Wasser

On June 18 2015 we had the possibility to conduct a workshop at the primary school “Schulhaus am Wasser” in Zurich. Participants were two groups of first year scholars aged 6-7. In preparation for the workshop we decided to use the StyroPaper material to explore flying objects with the children. Our basic intention was to observe how different children would invent flying objects if the task is either to design a plane (an object that flies as long as possible) or an object that creates a weird, beautiful motion whilst flying. This methodology was used before in a workshop with ZHAW and Technorama, so we will be able to compare the approach of the children to the approach of the adults. In the following we will describe the setting for the workshop, then the observations and insights that we made during the workshop, the resulted objects and a comparison to the results of the workshop with the adults.

Setting
We had 45 minutes to conduct our workshop and decided to do it in three steps. The first step was an introduction to the material that we used. We wanted the children to understand that styropor is made out of thousands of little air bubbles which form a solid material. Therefore we showed them, that balloons fly much better if they are filled with air than without air. From this insight we guided them to bubble pack and then to a block of styropor. The last step was to show them, that one can produce thin layers of styropor to get similar properties as paper.
After the introduction we had two experiments which were switched from one group to the other. The reason was that we could compare the results afterwards to see how the experiments are influencing each other. In the first experiment we asked the participants to build a flyer out of the StyroPaper material which will fly as far as possible. Therefore we gave the children premanufactured forms and a building instruction. They only had to fold the StyroPaper and add a little metal wire as balancing weight. The task in the second experiment was to design and build an object out of a raw sheet of StyroPaper which would produce a weird, beautiful motion whilst flying. At the end of the workshop we asked the children for a general impression on what they learned in the 45 minutes.

Observations & Insights
The children were very enthusiastic about doing a workshop with us – researchers from the ZHdK. As we started our workshop they were really focused and interested in our introduction to the material. Even the teacher stated later in a brake, that it is not common, that the children are so much concentrated on a topic. During the introduction we tried to involve prior experiences of the children as much as possible by asking them questions about their experience and knowledge regarding the topic of air and flying. Whilst some of the answers were quite elaborated “We experimented before with some things that made it possible to experience that air is not nothing” some were driven by real world experiences “With a friend of mine we were building a planes from styropor and Playmobil and were throwing them from the highest floor” or phantasy “If I could fly I would be a bird”. The demonstration of the lightness of the material, that we brought to the workshop, was capturing for all of them. Some of the participants stated that we could build something out of styropor, even before we made a reference to this material.

Group A
Between group A and group B we were able to see a difference in the way they approached the prepared experiments. Especially because we swapped the two tasks between the groups. Group A firstly had the task to build a plane that would fly as far as possible. For this they were presented the remanufactured plane-forms and some tools and tape. They were all focused on building one plane but we as moderators had to take care that they worked precisely. Precision seems to be something that children in that age group are not used to comply. Nevertheless at the end we had a plane form every child and we were able to put on a challenge where each participant was asked to throw his/her glider to compare the distances that they reached. In the second experiment we gave the children raw sheets of StyroPaper and asked them to build the weird-flying object. At the beginning the children had some timidity to design really weird objects and stayed to common forms most of the time. After encouraging them and giving them some examples they really started to thing creatively and innovative about that task. From the first experiment they already knew how to use the tools and also the properties of the material were common to them. The resulted objects were very different in form and size but demonstrated a wide variety of possibilities.

Group B
Group B was starting with the task to build a weird-flying object. Compared to group A they didn’t had the prior experience with the material and therefore it seemed like it was more easy for them to come up with creative solutions. The forms they invented ranged from animals to phantasy objects that were inspired by examples from nature (e.g. leafs and birds). The freedom that they had without the previous task of building a long flying object encouraged them to truly be creative – something that we had to promote in this task with group A. It seemed that the satisfaction that the children got from the first exercise was a good condition for the second task – they were quiet more focused and worked more precisely as group A. This was not only observable from their behavior but also recognizable in the distances the gliders flew.

Resulted Objects
The following image illustrates the variety of different objects that the participants were designing during the 45 minutes.

Comparison to Adults
When we compare the results of the workshop with the children to the ones we had from the workshop with the people from ZHAW, Technorama and ZHdK we could notice some interesting facts. First, the children don’t have some much prejudices about flying objects than adults do have. The adults tried to build really complex planes – especially in task one. For example they tried to build biplanes which – at the end – turned out to not fly so well as if they would have followed our building instructions. After recognizing, that the planes they made didn’t work out so well, the adults started to argument for their design, whereas children were just accepting that their planes weren’t so precise. The same insight could be transferred to the second exercise, where again the children were much more creative without having to much prejudices of how a crazy flying object would look like. Adults seemed to think again too much about forms rather than just building objects and trying them out.

Summary
In general the workshop setting worked out very well. Coming from an introduction to the material and then having two tasks with different approaches (precision and creativity) is challenging and interesting as well. We could now think about how we would transfer these insights into a Science Toy. Probably the explanation for the material has to be either written or presented as an introductory video. The material itself could be supplied as raw sheet and premanufactured plane form. The ready Science Toys could be found here.