| Lesson Number |
At-Home Activity
(Parental involvement and/or supervision are essential while
students carry out these activities.) |
| Getting
Started: Using Machines to Get Things Done |
Examine your kitchen can opener
and explain to family members how it works. |
3.1
Designing Machines |
Identify machines in your kitchen
that make things easier to do. Discuss these with your family
members. |
3.2
Levers: How They Work |
Find examples of levers in your kitchen
or work room. Explain to family members how these levers make
something easier to do or move. Discuss how you could change the
design to make it more efficient.

|
3.3
Design Investigation: Raise It Up |
n/a |
3.4
Simulating Human Movement |
Walk around your home and identify
some everyday things you do (e.g., opening doors, climbing stairs)
that would be difficult or impossible to do if you were missing
a limb. Discuss with family members how an artificial limb would
have to be designed to enable a person with a missing limb to
perform the action or activity. |
3.5
Pulleys, Wheel and Axle, and Gears |
Identify toys or household items that
use pulleys or wheels and axles (e.g., curtain or blind strings).
Explain to family members the advantages of using the pulley or
wheel and axle in each case.

|
3.6
Case Study: Mechanisms in Giant Machines |
- Use Lego blocks or other simple building toys to build a model
of a dragline excavator or a power shovel
- With family members, visit a construction site in your community.
Explain to them the different mechanisms that are included in
the excavating machines, and how they work.
|
3.7
Moving Efficiently |
- Examine various toys and identify how friction has been reduced
or increased in them. Share your findings with family members.
- Compare different in-line skate wheels. Why are some easier
to skate or glide on?
- Compare mountain bike tires with racing bike tires. Which
bike is easier to peddle? Why?
|
3.8
Friction and Mechanical Advantage |
Identify mechanisms in your home in
which friction is necessary for the device to work. Discuss ways
in which your family reduces friction on certain household machines.

|
3.9
Design Investigation: Moving the Couch |
Describe to family members the model pulley
system you designed in this Design Investigation. Discuss how
a similar system could be used around your home (e.g., to hang
a canoe in the garage). |
3.10
Career Profile: Testing Force and Endurance |
Take home the model hand you built
in the Try This activity in this lesson. Explain the design
to family members. Interview a family member or acquaintance who
may have a prosthetic limb to learn about their experiences. |
3.11
Inquiry Investigation: Testing Shoes |
Locate a variety of different kinds
of shoes in your home closets (e.g., basketball shoes, soccer
shoes, winter boots, etc.). For what purpose is each shoe used?
Explain to family members how it is designed to meet the need
for which it is intended.

|
3.12
Force, Area and Pressure |
Identify some mechanisms in your kitchen
that are designed to increase or decrease the pressure exerted
on an object (e.g., a fork). Explain to family members how they
work to increase or decrease pressure. |
3.13
Pressure on Liquids and Gases |
Investigate different types of pumps
used in your home (e.g, an air mattress pump, a tire pump). Explain
to family members how they work. |
3.14
Inquiry Investigation: Squeezing Liquids and Gases |
Share your experimental results in
this lesson with family members.

|
3.15
Pressure in Fluid Systems |
Locate examples of things in your
home that use hydraulic or pneumatic systems. Explain to family
members how they work. |
3.16
Design Investigation: A Hydraulic Solution for a Pain in the Neck
|
Share the design instructions that
you created in this lesson with family members. Ask them to try
to follow the instructions. Ask for suggestions or ideas of how
to improve the design or the instructions.

|
3.17
Case Study: A Student-Friendly Classroom |
- Examine a room or a product in your home. What is it designed
to be used for? What esthetic and ergonomic features does it
have? Could you improve it? Discuss your findings with your
family.
- Visit a kitchen or bathroom remodelling centre with family
members. Discuss with a representative what esthetic and ergonomic
features are considered in the design of a kitchen or bathroom.
What features have changed from the designs used 10, 20 or 30
years ago and why?
- Visit a manufacturing plant with family members. Discuss with
a representative what esthetic and ergonomic features were considered
in either the design of the plant or the product(s) manufactured
there. Suggest improvements that might be made to either the
plant or the product(s).
|
3.18
Designing for People with Special Needs |
Find a device you use every day. Discuss
with family members how you could modify it for a person with
special needs. Sketch the modification(s) you would suggest.

|
3.19
Case Study: Mountain Bike or Road Bike? |
Closely examine your bicycle. Does
it have the correct design for the type of riding you like to
do? Can you think of any modifications that would make it more
efficient? |
3.20
The Life of a Product |
- Identify some plastic products in your home that you use only
once. With family members, suggest alternatives that would reduce
the use of such products. Make a plan for a "litterless" day
in your home.
- Visit the local grocery store with family members. Make a
list of different ways in which items are packaged. Note the
type of materials that are used in the packaging and how they
would be disposed of in your community. Write a report of ways
in which the packaging of certain products could be improved.
What could you as a consumer do to ensure that companies improve
their packaging practices?

|
3.21
Exploring an Issue: A World Without Cars? |
Discuss the Role-Play scenario
described in this lesson with your family. How do they like the
idea of a downtown traffic-free zone? Would they support such
an idea? Practise role-playing the scenario with family members
in preparation for completing this assignment. |
| Design
Challenge |
Note to parents: Since the Design
Challenge may be used by teachers as a performance assessment
opportunity, parents should consult with the teacher to determine
the appropriate degree of parental involvement in their child's
completion of the Design Challenge.

|
| Unit
Summary |
The Unit Summary in your textbook
lists all the learning expectations you have covered in the unit
and identifies the specific lessons in which the knowledge and
skills have been developed.
You can use the Unit Summary to help you create a personal study
guide in preparation for an end-of-unit test:
- Copy down the list of learning expectations from your textbook.
These are grouped under three headings: Understanding Concepts,
Applying Skills, Making Connections.
- For each learning expectation, locate the appropriate lesson(s)
in the unit where the expectation was covered. These are found
at the end of each expectation (e.g., 2.1).
- expectation and make study notes of the key ideas or skills
you learned.
|