On April 12, 2026 at 8:41:37 PM GMT+2, David St. Martin <dstm...@markdayschool.org> wrote:
I'm interested in getting a conversation started about what folks are doing to move beyond plastic and classic upcycling projects so ubiquitous in art and tinkering programs. I've personally been teaching an 8th grade biocomposite invention class for the past six years. My 7th grade curriculum was a more classic upcycling class where we tinkered with salvaged plastics, designing higher and better uses and building prototypes. That's been ringing hollow for me the last few rounds as I piled our prototypes into the trash can at the end of the semester, so this year I pivoted to Mycelium-based design. I've been failing forward with it each time, and discovering a world that it both very intriguing to kids, highly promising and very authentic. the support network around this field is shallow though. I'd love to hear from anyone doing this, or looking for an authentic way to move toward introducing students to truly sustainable invention, design and making!
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I'm interested in getting a conversation started about what folks are doing to move beyond plastic and classic upcycling projects so ubiquitous in art and tinkering programs. I've personally been teaching an 8th grade biocomposite invention class for the past six years. My 7th grade curriculum was a more classic upcycling class where we tinkered with salvaged plastics, designing higher and better uses and building prototypes. That's been ringing hollow for me the last few rounds as I piled our prototypes into the trash can at the end of the semester, so this year I pivoted to Mycelium-based design. I've been failing forward with it each time, and discovering a world that it both very intriguing to kids, highly promising and very authentic. the support network around this field is shallow though. I'd love to hear from anyone doing this, or looking for an authentic way to move toward introducing students to truly sustainable invention, design and making!
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Rob van Nood
Educational Technologist
Catlin Gabel School
Office: 503-297-1894
Follow: Instagram | Facebook | YouTube | LinkedIn
A caution on the precious plastics path: We built one of the precious plastic grinders and quickly discovered that grinding up plastic generates clouds of microplastics that seemed to get everywhere. I would not do this in a school environment given the emerging research on the effects of microplastics on humans and human development. Additionally, the heating of many plastics releases harmful VOCs, though this may be mitigated with a fume hood.
To view this discussion visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/k-12-fablabs/CAH%3DiDiOoxyR%2BNNGC3DNpbdFZ5_hV%2BvdVH1gu6zOJD7uD115mXA%40mail.gmail.com.
To view this discussion visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/k-12-fablabs/CAH%3DiDiOoxyR%2BNNGC3DNpbdFZ5_hV%2BvdVH1gu6zOJD7uD115mXA%40mail.gmail.com.
Rob van Nood
Educational Technologist
Catlin Gabel School
Office: 503-297-1894
Follow: Instagram | Facebook | YouTube | LinkedIn