Engineering Curriculum at Coronado High School: 2010 - 2014

Wednesday, November 30, 2011

Renewable Insulation Challenge!




The largest amount of energy consumed within the average home is related to maintaining adequate climate control through heating and cooling systems. To conserve energy and decrease expenses associated with climate control, proper home insulation techniques are required. Insulation technologies relating to materials and application have advanced throughout the home building industry with time. The home building industry once relied on straw and newspaper for insulating material. The industry currently utilizes technology such as fiberglass and blown expandable foam. Insulation material advancement is driven by consumers demanding insulation material designed for high insulation value along with positive occupant health and environmental impact. Many homeowners today are designing new “green” homes. To meet the needs of green consumers, insulation manufacturers are developing insulating materials made from recycled products such as jeans, t-shirts, and other low volatile organic products that can be treated with boric acid. Manufacturers have found that going green has other benefits to the homeowner as well, such as cotton’s ability to provide excellent soundproofing.





Criteria:
• Design a renewable composite insulation material.
• Achieve the highest R value in the class with your design.



Design Constraints:
• Composite insulation material must have overall uniform thickness less than or equal to one inch.
• Composite insulation material must have consistent internal composition.
• Individual insulation material(s) must be environmentally friendly.
• Individual insulation material(s) must be recyclable.
• Individual insulation material(s) must be economical.
• Composite insulation material dimensions must not exceed the overall dimensions of Heat box apparatus top.



Measurements and Calculations
See class handout


Conclusion Questions

1. Explain how your house might lose energy through radiation.



2. What modifications could be made to your team’s insulation design that allow for more energy efficiency?



3. Which beverage would be more beneficial for cooling you on a hot summer day – a cup of ice cold water or a cup of hot cocoa? Justify your choice.



4. How do birds insulate their bodies to prevent energy loss on the skin’s surface?

Monday, November 28, 2011

Where's This?

Does this look familiar to anyone?

A team in the Engineering Projects class has been working on modelling a familiar location.

Binary Counting

This is a neat video that Dan shared with me. Digital data ultimately is a series of 1s and 0s. We had talked about this in a few of our classes and this video can help you visualize a counting system based on switches:

Saturday, November 19, 2011

Nice Guys Finish First

Congratulations to our Boys Water Polo team for seizing the CIF championships this evening. It was a nail biter of a game! Two periods of overtime followed by a round of sudden death. Good thing we have the week off 'cause I'm too hoarse from yelling to want to do much talking on Monday.

Special congratulations to all of our Engineering Water Polo contingent, in particular Nick, Joe and John.

This game was fun for me to watch. It was hosted at my old stomping grounds, LJHS. I got to watch the game with Dr. Petterson, my childhood buddy who played varsity goalie all four years of our high school era. He really knows his stuff and it was like having my own personal commentator to point out all the intricacies of this gripping match. I learned a lot.

The Bishops and Islanders teams line up to start the game:


Story is the split between expecation and outcome. The Islanders set us up for a great story this evening by letting Bishops take an early lead of 0-3. It was looking grim for some time.

The game was tied up by the fourth quarter and after two periods of overtime, the score was tied up yet again. The game progressed into a final Sudden Death:


Amazing! The Islander's score in sudden death to clench the title!:


How many people can you count in the pool? Yes, that's more than both the teams... extatic Islanders were jumping in from the stands! What an exciting game.

Wednesday, November 16, 2011

Lego Time!

We had some quality building going on today. Here are some of the guys from 6th Period hard at work:


Each student selected 25-30 pieces in turn from the available pool of parts. This meant it was more challenging to come up with a compelling design. Never the less, everyone seemed to create something interesting.

Will made an awesome chicken!:


Lexi made this neat tree that looks straight out of an 8 bit video game:


It's not easy making something from scratch. Nice job today 5th and 6th periods.

Monday, November 14, 2011

Lego Dims



These Lego dimensions will be helpful for a project we start after Thanksgiving (assuming the District gets our Inventor licenses sorted out!).

What is this below and what might we be doing with them?...

Sunday, November 13, 2011

"Cooperate and Graduate"

We've been spending a lot of time in our Engineering Design sections working on team based technical drawing quizes. Learning to work with colleagues is an important career skill. Here's a clip from tonight's 60 minutes that backs me up.





This is a CBS/60 Minutes video so please excuse any advertisements the player forces you to watch...

Friday, November 11, 2011

Service

It was thoughtful of the PTO to leave a nice Veteran's Day note for me at yesterday's luncheon they put on for all the CHS teachers. Thank you for the thought and also for the excellent food (apparently catered by Sapori if anyone has the chance to eat there).



It is the spirit of service, and the goal of spreading a design thinking mindset, that has me excited about the courses I'm developing to encourage leadership and innovation. I gained great experience as a servant leader in the Army and am happy to have a chance to put these skills to good use again. With any of my efforts teaching, I have the student's best interests at heart.

I had some amazing adventures when I was in the Army 10+ years ago. Here are a few pictures from that era:

LT Olson as "Apache 16": Platoon Leader 1-A-1-4IN


Preparing to depart on a night infiltration. Last minute coordination at the Tactical Operations Center meant I hadn't camoed up yet.


CPT Olson on the left. One day prior to conducting a Motorized Rifle Regement attack (100+ armored vehicles rolling out). Which piece of equipment that I'm carrying is the most important to this dismounted reconnaissance mission?


Despite being an Infantry Officer, I spent *a lot* of time maneuvering combined arms armored units (Tanks + APCs). Don't let the smile fool you, a few days in the snow in a metal box gets cold fast (although I did love this work!)...

Thursday, November 10, 2011

Flat Top

What's going up on the deck of the Carl Vinson?

Find out more about tomorrow's game here.

Thursday, November 3, 2011

Turn Off "Word Verification" Please! :)

Engineers,

I love to provide feedback on your posts. When I have to enter word verification over and over on the comments I leave, it starts to make me a little crazy!




Please turn word verification off on your blogs!

Go to Settings>Comments on your blogger control panel:



Scroll down and find the word verification section. Select "No":


Save your settings to update your word verification!

Tuesday, November 1, 2011

3rd Period - I'm Out Today!

Hi 3rd Period,

It looks like I'm going to miss our class as well today. Dane's Nanny called in sick this morning so I'm stuck at home! I love my time with Dane but I wasn't expecting this change of plan today.

Please continue working today on the Scrum tasks you've comitted to.

We will have a scrum meeting on Thursday and review:

1) What you've done
2) What you plan on doing
3) Any roadblocks you've encountered

Thanks,

Mr. Olson

2nd Period - Tasks While I'm Out!

Dear 2nd Period,

I'm attending the School District's strategic planning meeting this morning. Please work on the following in the listed priority. I expect you all will complete #1 (The Deep Dive). Any extra time after that is a chance to get going on #2. #3 is very good so take a look at that if you have time.

Thanks!

Mr. Olson


1) Watch and complete The Deep Dive, an introduction to "Design Thinking" (this may be familiar to a few of you!)
2) Review and begin thinking about who you'd like to talk to for your Professional Interview assignment.
3) Steve Jobs' Stanford Comencement Speech