Classroom Activity: Sketching Gadget Anatomy
Main Idea: Close observation and
sketching lead to a better understanding of how machines work.
Learning Objectives:
- Observe a machine closely from several angles while it
operates.
- Identify the elements of machines combined in different
gadgets.
- Show how the moving parts in machines relate to and affect
each other.
- Create a clear diagram of how a machine works.
Time: about 30 minutes with one machine
per group
Materials:
- paper
- pencils with erasers
- printed copies of the Inventor's
Toolbox pages for reference.
- a selection of small machines with visible working parts (the
more you have, the better): egg beater, cork screw, car jack, can
opener, garlic press, tongs, monkey wrench, hand drill,
Vise-Grips, the mechanism from a music box, wind up toy, pencil
sharpener, stapler.
Procedure:
- Have students prepare to work in small groups (2-5).
- Provide each group with one machine to examine in detail.
Suggest that students take turns operating the machine while the
others watch to see how each part moves.
- Challenge each group with the following questions to encourage
thought and discussion. Invite them to investigate their own
questions as well.
- What is the function of this machine?
- How many moving parts does it have?
- How are the moving parts connected to each other?
- What does each moving part do in the machine?
- Which parts are elements of machines?
- Place the machine at rest so that everyone in the group can
see it and distribute paper, pencils and erasers.
- Students should begin sketching diagrams of their machines.
They should draw the machine from their own point of view first.
Later they can trade places and draw it from different points of
view to show all working parts.
- When the diagrams are completed, students should add arrows
and written notes to indicate directions of motion for each part,
label the elements of machines involved, and explain
connections.
- Have students display and explain their diagrams to other
groups.
- If time permits, give each group a new machine to investigate
and sketch.
Teacher Tips:
- Encourage students to draw systematically, starting at one
point and drawing each part and connection in order.
- Emphasize that in this kind of drawing it is not important
that their drawing look exactly like the machine; instead it
should show how the machine works. For example, getting the exact
proportions for the parts is less important than showing how they
connect to each other.
- Encourage students to experiment with sketching enlarged views
and cut-away views to show parts that are very small or obscured
by other parts. Leonardo often left out the casing and structure
surrounding machines in his illustrations so he could show the
workings more clearly.
- Many of the published Leonardo resources in the Bibliography
contain examples of his work that students will understand better
after they have tried this activity. They may want to see how
other artists have created diagrams of machines. David Macaulay's
book The Way Things Work contains many wonderful and
whimsical examples.
Real World Connections:
Ask students to get their parents involved in helping them locate
examples of machine diagrams from home. The instructions provided by
manufacturers with bicycles, kitchen appliances, tools, and lawn
mowers often contain explanatory diagrams to help you understand
these machines. Auto repair manuals also contain dozens of these
diagrams. Many construction sets such as Lego® and K'NEX®
also have similar kinds of diagrams to help you build particular toy
designs.
When you have several diagrams from different sources, ask the
students to compare them and discuss them using the following
questions as starting points:
- What are some similarities and differences between different
diagrams?
- Which diagrams do they think are the easiest to understand and
the hardest to understand?
- What techniques have the illustrators of the better diagrams
used to make their work clearer?
- What techniques can the students apply from these examples to
make their own machine diagrams more understandable?
~ This activity was adapted from the science
kit: Science,
Invention, Creativity: Looking at
Leonardo. ~
Science Learning Network / email: sln@mos.org
/ © 1997 The Museum of Science