I've created various materials and lessons last year that were aggregated on Liz Arum's SPOLearningLab site. This curriculum is really focused on developing a solid foundation in 3D modeling and design through the lense of mathematics when and wherever possible.
I've been developing more materials this year, but haven't gotten the chance to organize and share with the kind of coherence that would make it worthwhile for others to dig through. But I do have a ton of "paint by numbers" style modeling lessons/projects geared towards less motivated/lower skilled students here on Vimeo that you're welcome to check out and adopt.Most recently, Autodesk rolled out their Project Ignite initiative, which adds a Code Academy-type skin to TinkerCAD. I've been using it now for a week in my classroom and really have to say - they're off to a great start. The lessons they developed in house are solid and appropriately balanced between building software skills and modeling concepts. I've been building online worksheets through Google Docs (example) to accompany the lessons and help keep kids attuned to important information and accountable to the daily work. Project Ignite is still in development, but as more educator's join and build their own lessons using Project Ignite's framework, I'm sure it'll get stronger and stronger.Hopefully this'll help. Let's keep building a stronger and stronger repository of lessons that offer engaging projects within coherent conceptual and skill building context. I come across more and more all the time....
Jonathan RothmanAcademy for Software EngineeringNYC
On Friday, February 27, 2015 at 3:36:17 PM UTC-5, Tatian Greenleaf wrote:I'm thinking about teaching a 3D modeling elective for 7th & 8th graders using Tinkercad. Does anyone teach something similar and would you be willing to share what types of lessons you teach (even just an outline would be much appreciated!). I'll re-invent the wheel if I have to but I just spent a lot of time designing and fabricating a Spin Art machine unit for my 3rd graders and I'm a little burnt out. ;)In case you're interested, here's a one minute time-lapse video of me putting together the kit I created:Students are refreshing their knowledge of electrical circuits from our paper circuits unit earlier in the year and are experiencing the "beautiful" aspect of this art process as part of my "5 B's" curriculum - Build, Bot, Burst, Beautiful, Become.Tatian--Tatian Greenleaf
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For a compilation of resources/links/etc mentioned on this forum, visit: https://sites.google.com/site/k12makers/
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The first part of lessons and tutorials are by Ultimaker pioneers, the list below are links to lessons and tutorials on the internet, you might also want to look at lesson starters under the 3D printing in classroom section