STEM Library Lab

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Egg Drop Lab

Students work in teams to design a container for an egg using provided materials. Students drop their containers, then analyze factors which can minimize force on the egg.

Optionally, students can complete a second round of the experiment if time permits. Students work in teams to design a container for an egg using provided materials.

Lesson Files

  • Egg Drop Guidelines (.docx)
  • Explore Momentum and Impact Force in an Egg Drop (.docx)
  • Explore Momentum and Impact Force in an Egg Drop (.pptx)

Additional DCIs in This Strand

Materials needed for this lesson plan.

  • Straws, set of 250
  • Bag of Cotton Balls
  • Popsicle Craft Sticks (100 pieces)
  • Scotch Tape
  • Gallon Ziplock Bags

Lesson Plans

Explore the tides.

Overview: Have you ever built a sandcastle on a beach only to find it washed away a few hours later? Every 6 to 12 hours or so, the water along most coasts rises and falls in...

Build an Electromagnet

Overview: Student teams investigate the properties of electromagnets. They create their own small electromagnets and experiment with ways to change their strength to pick up...

Tree Growth Study

Overview: How can the age of a tree be determined? Is there a way to tell a good year of growth versus a bad year? Trees contain some of nature’s most accurate records of...

Investigating Shadows

Overview: In this activity, students will explore what affects the size of a shadow and compare the shadows of various opaque, transparent, and translucent objects. Part I....

The Dirty Water Project

Overview: In this hands-on activity, students investigate different methods—aeration and filtering—for removing pollutants from water. Working in teams, they design,...

Drops on a Penny Experiment

Overview: Have you ever noticed on a rainy day how water forms droplets on a window? Why doesn’t it spread out evenly over the whole surface? It has to do with...

Modeling Gravity

Overview: Why can we feel gravity pull us down towards the Earth, but not sideways towards other big objects like buildings? Why do the planets in our solar system orbit the...

Floodplain Modeling

Overview: Students explore the impact of changing river volumes and different floodplain terrain in experimental trials with table top-sized riverbed models. The models are...

Build a Waterwheel from Recycled Materials

Overview: Students observe a model waterwheel to investigate the transformations of energy involved in turning the blades of a hydro-turbine. They work as engineers to create...

Entanglement Challenge

Demonstrate the challenges for marine animals who get entangled in common debris with this 10 –15 minute activity about marine conservation. Pair this activity with a...

Animal Yoga

Stretch your way into different animal movements and poses to learn how they move, get food, and protect themselves. This 5-10 minute full-body activity for young learners...

Weaving the Web of Life

Overview: In this hands-on activity, students construct a food web with yarn to learn how food chains are interconnected. Objectives: 1. construct a food chain and explain...

Battle of the Beaks: Adaptations and Niches

Overview: In this simulation game, students learn about adaptive advantage, based on beak function, by simulating birds competing for various foods. Birds equipped with...

Modeling the Seasons

This hands-on activity demonstrates and explains how seasons is caused by the tilt of Earth on its axis as it orbits around the sun. Students model the seasons with their...

Ring and Discs Demonstration

Ready, Set, Go! A ring and disc of equal mass and diameter speed down an inclined plane. Which one wins? Not an easy prediction to make, but the victor will be clear. Results...

Fire Syringe Demonstration

This is one of the most impressive demonstrations of the heat produced when a gas is rapidly compressed and is the principle behind how a diesel engine functions. How does it...

Repairing Broken Bones: Biomedical Engineering Design Challenge

This STEM activity incorporates the engineering design process into a life or biomedical science activity. It can be used during an anatomy unit or in a health...

Modeling Moon Phases

This lesson on the phases of the moon features just one of several hands-on activities you can do with our adaptable Moon Model Kit. In this activity students will: 1. use...

Color-Changing Celery Experiment

This exciting experiment illustrates transpiration, the process of plants absorbing water through their roots. The water travels up tubes in the stems called xylem to all...

10 Activities To Try With the Magnetic Water Molecules Kit

Try out 10 exciting activities related to the properties of matter using our Magnetic Water Molecules Kit! The following topics are covered: Polarity Hydrogen...

What's Your Blood Type?

Overview Realistically simulate blood typing without the hazards of real blood. Using actual blood typing procedures, students classify four unknown samples of the simulated...

Understanding Natural Selection Through Models

Overview With this worksheet, students will explore one of the five mechanisms of evolution: natural selection. Students will analyze and interpret 3 models of natural...

HIV/AIDS Test Simulation Lab

Explore the immunological principle that antibodies bind to specific antigens. Your class will learn how ELISA – Enzyme Linked Immunoassay – is a fundamental...

Egg in a Bottle

Overview: In this classic demonstration, students will use differences in air pressure to force an egg into a bottle. This demonstration only takes 10 minutes and leaves your...

Magnetic Meiosis Model Demonstration

Teach the mechanisms of meiosis (and make it memorable!) with this simple and informative magnetic demonstration. Instead of struggling to tell which chromosome is which from...

Modeling the Effects of an Introduced Species

Overview Using a set of Food Web cards, each depicting an organism, students work in groups to model a food web for one of four ecosystems. Students are then given an...

Natural Selection: Antibiotic Resistance and Engineering the Fastest Fish

Overview Immerse your students in this engaging 3-part laboratory activity on evolution by natural selection! Your students will practice important science skills while...

Estimating Populations

Background The size of an animal population becomes newsworthy when it becomes very large (too many rats in one place) or very small (on the verge of extinction). How do...

Butterfly Wings: Using Nature to Learn About Flight

Background Have you ever seen butterflies fluttering around outside, gliding through the air and landing on flowers? While they are delicate and fragile, butterflies are...

Osmosis and Diffusion Lab

This lab allows you to learn about two forms of passive transport: diffusion and osmosis. You will compare and contrast similarities and differences in the processes of...

Seed Identification Activity

This laboratory activity will familiarize students with basic plant anatomy and the basic characteristics and functions of plant seeds. Students will practice using...

Genetics: The Science of Heredity — Modeling DNA Structure and the Process of Replication

This lesson is the first unit of a 5 part module entitled “Genetics: The Science of Heredity” developed by ETA Cuisenaire. Modeling DNA structure and the process...

Crime Scene Investigation Lab

Innovating Science’s crime scene investigation lab is used to study forensic techniques and features an activity to solve the crime of the missing frogs from the...

Measuring Precipitation of Hurricanes

This lesson deepens students’ understanding of how and why we measure precipitation across the globe through the study of rainfall patterns caused by hurricanes. Students...

Prey vs. Predator

The action in this fast-paced activity may become intense as student “predators” attempt to capture their “prey.” What happens when different organisms, living in the...

What Is in the Food You Eat?

In this activity, students test representative food samples for the presence of certain types of matter (nutrients). This investigation allows students to discover some of...

The Science of Spherification

Forget drinking your juice. Instead, try snacking on it! Use the steps and recipes in this food science project to transform drinks into semi-solid balls that pop in your...

Turn Milk Into Plastic

“Plastic made from milk” —that certainly sounds like something made-up. If you agree, you may be surprised to learn that in the early 20th century, milk was...

Proper Hand Washing Can Stop the Spread of Disease

People used to believe that disease was caused by miasma, a poisonous vapor which carried particles of rotting materials that caused illness. People knew that eating spoiled...

How Germs Spread

People used to think that angry gods caused disease, or that a poisonous vapor that came from rotting food or bad air caused illness. It took thousands of years for people to...

7 Van De Graaff Generator Activities

A set of activities to show how the generator works and the principles behind it.

Calorimetry Lab

How does the energy content in lipids and carbohydrates differ? Energy content is the amount of heat produced by the burning of a small sample of a substance and heating...

Owl Pellet Surprise

This fun, hands-on introductory dissection is a great springboard for teaching the techniques of using a science notebook while having students engage in the...

Stream Table Investigation

Overview: Students learn about water erosion through an experimental process in which small-scale buildings are placed along a simulated riverbank to experience a range of...

Boiling by Pressure Drop

The goal of this experiment is to demonstrate that boiling is not just a function of temperature, as most people believe. Rather, it is a function of both temperature and...

How to Make Water Cycle in a Bag

https://www.mobileedproductions.com/blog/how-to-make-a-water-cycle-in-a-bag

How do Antibiotics Affect Bacteria When They are Put Together

Plan and carry out investigations: collaboratively, in a safe and ethical manner including personal impacts such as health safety, to produce data to serve as the basis...

Building a Generator

Students work individually or in pairs to follow a set of instructions and construct a mini generator which powers a Christmas light. Best done as a take-home assignment.

Conservation of Momentum with Vernier

Teacher leads a demonstration with vernier carts of different/equal mass, equipped with bumpers and magnets to demonstrate a variety of scenarios in which as both carts...

3rd Law with Vernier

After learning about the 1st law of motion, students partake in a teacher-led series of questions about 2 carts, and which cart will experience a greater force. The teacher...

Gravitational Acceleration

In 2-3 person groups, students take the mass of assorted objects, then hang them from a spring scale to find their gravitational force. Using the F=ma equation, they rewrite...

Electricity and Magnetism Stations

Students work in teams to design a container for an egg using provided materials. Students drop their containers, then analyze factors which can minimize force on the...

How Does Volvo Keep Drivers Safe?

Students watch a series of short videos explaining how cars are designed with crumple zones, airbags, and automatic braking to prevent passenger damage in a collision....

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FREE K-12 standards-aligned STEM

curriculum for educators everywhere!

Find more at TeachEngineering.org .

  • TeachEngineering
  • Naked Egg Drop

Hands-on Activity Naked Egg Drop

Grade Level: 5 (4-6)

(60 minutes for lesson and building, 60 minutes for testing)

Expendable Cost/Group: US $0.25

Group Size: 2

Activity Dependency: None

Subject Areas: Measurement, Physical Science

NGSS Performance Expectations:

NGSS Three Dimensional Triangle

TE Newsletter

Engineering connection, learning objectives, materials list, worksheets and attachments, more curriculum like this, pre-req knowledge, introduction/motivation, vocabulary/definitions, activity scaling, additional multimedia support, user comments & tips.

Engineers make a world of difference

Engineers must understand well the concepts of energy transfer, conservation of energy, and energy dissipation in order to design uncountable real-world projects. They also need to understand the properties of materials in order to design complex systems. Materials can dissipate energy through various means, such as heat, light, and vibration. For example, engineers design skyscraper foundations using concrete and steel so that any given foundation can withstand the huge force of the building it supports as well as the dynamic forces it may experience during earthquakes. Engineers who design computer keyboards want to select a material that can be repeatedly tapped, can be easily and permanently be printed on for the letters, feels good under finger tips, is inexpensive and environmentally benign, and is cleanable. Identifying the materials that help to meet project constraints is an important aspect of the design process.

After this activity, students should be able to:

  • Explain the transfer of potential to kinetic energy of a dropped egg and explain where the energy goes after it hits the egg catcher.
  • Explain why some materials are better than others for absorbing the kinetic energy of a falling egg.
  • Describe the relationship between height and the kinetic energy of a dropped egg.
  • Explain design modifications made during the design process, weighing factors such as height and materials.

Educational Standards Each TeachEngineering lesson or activity is correlated to one or more K-12 science, technology, engineering or math (STEM) educational standards. All 100,000+ K-12 STEM standards covered in TeachEngineering are collected, maintained and packaged by the Achievement Standards Network (ASN) , a project of D2L (www.achievementstandards.org). In the ASN, standards are hierarchically structured: first by source; e.g. , by state; within source by type; e.g. , science or mathematics; within type by subtype, then by grade, etc .

Ngss: next generation science standards - science, international technology and engineering educators association - technology.

View aligned curriculum

Do you agree with this alignment? Thanks for your feedback!

Each group needs:

  • 1 or more sheet(s) of paper, to sketch and plan egg catcher designs
  • tape and/or glue; white glue for younger students; hot glue for adult helpers and older students
  • at least 1 raw egg (depending on the number of testing trials planned per group)
  • computer with Internet access, for the research phase of the engineering design process
  • Novice Engineer Pre-Assessment , one per student
  • Naked Egg Drop Rules and Score Sheet , one per group
  • Expert Engineer Post-Assessment , one per student

To share with the entire class: materials for building egg catchers:

  • Provide materials such as cardboard or paperboard, clean food containers, foam, tissue paper, fabric, rubber bands, packing peanuts, fiberfill, bubble wrap, cotton balls, grass and other soft and cushiony materials. Reduce the cost by salvaging these materials as much as possible and/or asking students to salvage and bring items from home.
  • Do not provide the following materials because they are such excellent shock absorbers (it is nearly impossible to break the egg from amazing heights): food and food ingredients, powders (sand, flour, baby powder), and pastes and gels that stay wet.

Competition supplies to share with the entire class:

  • 6 foot (or taller) ladder
  • tape measure
  • tarp, newspaper or butcher paper, to simplify clean up
  • concrete or asphalt slab on which to hold the egg drop competition since grass absorbs a significant amount of shock
  • (optional alternative to the ladder) To improve student safety and increase the wow factor, build an egg dropper rig using the materials list and building instructions provided in the Egg Dropper Construction and Use (see Figure 2). Building the device is especially recommended if a district or regional competition is planned as part of the Elementary School Engineering Design Field Day unit, since its labor and material costs can be shared among many instructors/classrooms/schools. Estimated materials cost for the rig is ~$300.
  • (optional) Especially helpful for large competition events, make a tool to enable quick measurements of egg catcher diameters and heights before the egg drop, as a way to easily enforce the design constraints. The homemade device in Figure 6 consists of a 25-cm diameter circle cut out of wood and an arm with a sliding ruler for measuring device height.

A photograph shows at ~15 young students standing and sitting around a square blue tarp on which an egg dropper rig is placed. The rig is a 10-foot-tall wooden structure with an arm and pulley. Falling from the rig, a white egg is seen midair above a student-designed catcher on the blue tarp.

Students should be familiar with types of energy, specifically gravitational potential, kinetic, thermal and elastic, and the engineering design process. At a minimum, younger students should understand that energy can be transferred and designs can be improved through evaluation and improvement.

Imagine that you are at the Olympics competing in the 10 meter (~30 feet) platform diving event. You've practiced your flawless dive countless hours and you are ready to win a gold medal. You bend your knees, your toes push against the rough surface of the platform, you take a deep breath, and you jump. You whiz through the air, moving faster and faster for what feels like forever. You twist and turn, doing flips as you watch the faces of your supporters. Suddenly, your fingers dip into the water with your arms, shoulders, torso falling from the sky into the depths of the pool. You make the smallest of splashes. Your powerful legs kick and you surface to see all 10.0s from the judges.

Think about what type of energy you had before your jump, during your jump, and right before you hit the water. What allowed you to jump from a great height safely and confidently? What type of energy did you have at the beginning of the jump? (Answer: Gravitational potential energy.) What type of energy did you gain during the jump? (Answer: Kinetic energy.) How could you tell?

Teacher Background

In classic engineering egg drop competitions, an egg gains potential energy the higher it is held above the landing surface. When the egg is released, this gravitational potential energy converts to kinetic energy, as gravity pulls the egg towards the Earth's surface. Once the egg hits the ground, all the kinetic energy (movement energy) needs to transfer somewhere. We know that energy must be transferred into different forms of energy because once the egg stops moving, it no longer has any kinetic energy.

We know by the reliable nature of our world—in this case defined as the law of conservation of energy—that energy is neither created nor destroyed, so in the case of the egg, it must be transferred to different forms of energy. Options for the egg's dissipation of energy as it hits the pavement are sound (the splat of an egg), heat (the egg heats up from the friction of hitting the ground), and/or the continuation of kinetic energy as seen by the breaking of the shell.

As an example of how energy can dissipate, watch what happens to a rubber ball as it hits a wall in the four-second Squash Ball Bounce video at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5IOvqCHTS7o . The ball is elastic so it is able to squish dramatically and then reform to its original shape.

A photograph shows a desktop machine shaped like the frame of a tall open window with two sensors positioned from above and below that squeeze material placed between them. The force of the squeeze and the response of the material are recorded by a computer nearby.

Engineers and material scientists use machines (like the one shown in Figure 3) to test materials' stretchiness or elasticity by crushing and releasing test materials between two sensors. An egg's shell is very brittle (not elastic) so elastic materials are the best choice to absorb a falling egg's kinetic energy. If the egg catcher is well designed and the egg does not break, then the material absorbed enough of the egg's energy so that the egg's kinetic energy is not transferred to sound, heat and/or a broken shell. Instead, the energy is transferred to the elastic catcher material, which might squish and then reform to its original shape, as is seen with the squash ball in the video clip.

Refer to the three What Are Newton's Laws? lessons (about Newton's first, second and third laws of motion) and the Solid, Liquid or Gas? activity (about materials) as background or information sources for teachers and students.

Teacher Design Considerations and Tips

Overall, to create a winning design, students must thoroughly understand the competition rules and scoring so that they know the constraints (requirements and limitations) of the problem well (refer to the Naked Egg Drop Rules and Score Sheet ). This means that like real-world engineers, students must balance competing factors to be successful in this activity. Like professional engineers, they pick appropriate materials, considering the ability to dissipate kinetic energy as well as cost, reused and repurposed materials, and environmental impact of materials used. For example, while plastic foams absorb a lot of kinetic energy, they do not biodegrade quickly.

The ingenious use of materials such as packing peanuts, tissue paper, fabric, rubber bands and grass can cushion and protect an egg from damage; see the Materials List for additional material ideas and refer to the rules and score sheet for prohibited materials (because they work too well!). As students follow the steps of the engineering design process (Figure 4), encourage them to try different materials, different amounts of materials, and/or combinations of different materials in their egg catcher devices. Expect the designs to incorporate their knowledge of materials and the properties of those materials.

Beyond the smart use of materials, another strategy is to design and build catchers that combine the concepts of a hammock and a trampoline. In this approach, the catcher curves around the egg to hold it similar to a hammock, and is also elastic like a trampoline. Students can modify these sorts of designs by changing the height of the suspended hammock and/or the "give" of the springs or spring-like structures.

For the egg catcher footprint, it is best to use the largest surface area possible for increasing the likelihood of catching the dropped egg. Then, working within the constraint that the catchers must be no more than 25 cm in any direction, direct student teams to decide what shape gives them the largest surface area for aiming the egg at, as well as complying with the 25 cm rule. (A circle footprint provides the biggest surface area within this constraint.) Once groups have mastered the catch from the highest possible height, have them iterate through the design process for size. Have students aim to reduce the surface area since the competition tie-breaker depends on minor diameter, which is defined with a sketch in the rules and score sheet.

If highly elastic materials are used, the egg may bounce off and crack on the ground. To prevent this from happening, students may build walls on the device. As part of the engineering design process, direct students to aim to minimize the catcher height while still preventing breakage or bouncing.

Before the Activity

  • Decide whether to provide students with an assortment of building materials from which to use, or break the first hour into two parts, with time in between for the teacher and/or students to acquire building materials as specified from group designs. Then, for the building component of the activity, assemble scavenged or purchased materials and/or request that students bring scavenged or purchased materials from home. Take note of the banned list of materials—items that are too effective at being shock absorbers!
  • Gather and assemble materials for students to plan and build egg catchers.
  • Gather and assemble competition supplies and equipment. Arrange for extra helpers and judges if necessary.
  • Make copies of the Novice Engineer Pre-Assessment , Naked Egg Drop Rules and Score Sheet and Expert Engineer Post-Assessment .

With the Students

  • Administer the pre-assessment, as described in the Assessment section.
  • Present the Introduction/Motivation content to the class.
  • Divide the class into groups of two students each. Hand out the supplies, including the rules and score sheet.

A circle diagram with seven steps delineated: ask: identify the need and constraints; research the problem, imagine: develop possible solutions; plan: select a promising solution; create: build a prototype; test and evaluate the prototype; improve: redesign as needed, returning back to the first step: ask.

  • Review the steps of the cyclical and iterative engineering design process (see Figure 4). Tell students that as student engineers, they might begin by asking questions to understand the problem, including its criteria and constraints, then researching to learn more, then imagining ideas before making plans for how to create the best solution they can think of. Next, teams each create a prototype, test it, and change and improve the design from what they learn through testing.
  • Ask: Identify the need and constraints . Have students read the first page of the competition rules and score sheet. As mentioned earlier, the engineering "need" is to design a device to catch an egg dropped from a height without the egg breaking. Make sure teams are aware of the constraints (requirements and limitations). Remind students that the egg catchers must be made of approved materials (no gels, food, powders), have all materials secured, and be less than 25 cm in any direction.
  • Research the Problem . Have student teams independently investigate materials science and energy of motion topics. Show the class the Squash Ball Bounce video and discuss the elasticity measuring device. Additional research might focus on inventions such as trampolines, catchers' mitts and rock climbing pads to learn about their design approaches and materials.
  • Imagine: Develop possible solutions . Direct student teams to brainstorm together and then design and sketch on paper their ideas for egg catcher designs. Remind students to include dimensions and materials lists. Remind them to calculate the surface area available to catch the egg of their planned devices. Encourage students to salvage materials or use materials some people consider waste (what's in the recycling bin?). Engineers often try to incorporate underutilized materials like "waste" to decrease the cost and the environmental impact of their designs. Examples include saved and dried paper towels used as cushioning in the egg catcher or an empty cereal box to make the egg catcher exterior structure.
  • Plan: Select a promising solution . After teams have developed a few design ideas, have them decide on a final design. Remind them to review the rules and scoring sheet to make sure the design addresses and considers all the constraints.
  • Require the final plan to include a drawing of what the catcher will look like including labels that describe special features, and a list of materials and amounts, especially if the teacher is providing the materials.

A photograph shows a cardboard box with the inside walls and inside bottom padded with a thick layer of glued-on cotton balls.

  • Test and evaluate prototype.
  • Use the score sheet to record pre-competition material and dimension checks (see Figure 6) to verify that team prototypes meet all the constraints, balancing the conflicting factors of their devices. This includes a check for permitted vs. banned materials and a shake test, plus measurement of the catcher height and footprint area (all dimensions must be < 25 cm).
  • Then test the catchers by dropping eggs either by hand from a ladder or by using an egg dropper device (like the one shown in Figure 2). The minimum drop height is 100 cm and the maximum height for the egg-dropping device is 365 cm. The maximum height using a ladder depends on ladder height and student safety limitations.
  • During competition, give each group three drops; let them pick how much to increase the height between each successful drop.

A photograph shows young students watching a teacher measure an egg catcher (looks like a box filled with shredded paper) by using a homemade wooden tool that consists of a 25-cm wood circle and a sliding ruler. A student team hopes its egg catcher is not too big!

  • Improve: Redesign as needed . Expect students to learn a lot from their egg catcher tests and from observing other teams' tests, resulting in many ideas for design improvement and refinement.
  • Regroup the teams or class to discuss what parts of their designs worked well and what needs to be changed during the re-design process. If an egg breaks due to bouncing, a revised design might raise the catcher walls. If an egg breaks due to inadequate cushioning, a team might change the material amount or type. Other issues might be the result of student error, such as poor aiming of the dropped egg or sloppy placement of the catcher on the ground below the egg.
  • Then direct teams to restart the design process with their design changes in mind. Test again, as time and materials permit, declaring a winner at competition end.
  • Administer the post-assessment, as described in the Assessment section.

constraint: A limitation or restriction. For engineers, constraints are the requirements and limitations that must be considered when designing a workable solution to a problem.

engineering design process: A series of steps used by engineering teams to guide them as they create, evaluate and improve a design solution. Typically, the steps include: identify the need and constraints, research the problem, develop possible solutions, select a promising solution, create a prototype, test and evaluate the prototype, redesign as needed.

gravitational potential energy: One type of potential energy due to the mass of Earth pulling objects towards its surface.

kinetic energy: The energy of an object's motion.

potential energy: The stored energy of an object.

prototype: A first attempt or early model of a new product or creation.

Pre-Activity Assessment

Pre-Assessment: Before starting the activity, administer the three-question Novice Engineer Pre-Assessment to gauge students' base level of understanding about the egg drop challenge and the types of energy involved. Answering the questions also helps students begin to formulate solutions.

Activity Embedded Assessment

Rules and Score Sheet: Have students use the Naked Egg Drop Rules and Score Sheet to prepare for the competition. Throughout the design process, observe and evaluate students' catchers to help them think through the constraints of the challenge.

Discussion Questions: Ask students questions to determine their depth of understanding, such as:

  • What are ways you can get disqualified from the competition? (Answer: Using prohibited materials, building an egg catcher with any dimension greater than 25 cm, not securing materials to the structure of the egg catcher.)
  • What egg catcher shape maximizes surface area under our constraints? (Answer: A circle.)
  • What materials dissipated the kinetic energy from the falling egg? (Answer: Elastic materials.)
  • Why might you need walls on the sides of an egg catcher? (Answer: To prevent the egg from bouncing out and breaking on the ground.)
  • What are safety concerns with this activity? (Answer: Falling off the ladder.)

Post-Activity Assessment

Post-Assessment: After the activity, administer the six-question Expert Engineer Post-Assessment to gauge student comprehension. This short-answer test gives students an opportunity to write about their successes and failures through experiencing the design process.

Discussion Questions: As a class, ask the following questions to reveal students' depth of comprehension:

  • How did your design change from your initial sketch to your first-built catcher prototype to your last catcher? (Have each team share its story.)
  • Why was it important to test your catcher before competition?
  • What did you learn by doing a test? (Listen to examples from many teams.)
  • Why do professional engineers build prototypes and models and test them?
  • Why is it important to understand the properties of materials for your designs?
  • What types of energy or energy transfer are present in the fall of the egg? (Answer: Prior to the drop, an elevated egg has a large amount of gravitational potential energy due to its height above the ground. When it is dropped, that the energy is transferred from potential to kinetic. Right before the egg hits the egg catcher, (nearly) all the potential energy has been converted to kinetic energy.)

Presentations: As an alternative post-activity assessment, require student groups to make brief summary class presentations of their egg catchers to the rest of the class, pointing out their features, lessons learned, improvements and final results.

Safety Issues

If using a ladder to drop the eggs, do not permit any rough-housing around the ladder. Have one person dedicated to holding the ladder when a student is climbing it.

  • For lower grades, relax the construction requirements to permit larger devices or more materials.
  • For higher grades, increase the construction requirements to smaller egg catchers or increase the initial drop height.
  • Have more advanced students do some area calculations to determine the shape that provides the biggest egg catcher design surface area within the 25 cm constraint. (A circle footprint.)

Show students an example of how energy can dissipate by watching what happens to a rubber ball as it hits a wall in the four-second Squash Ball Bounce video at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5IOvqCHTS7o .

egg drop experiment 5th grade

Imagining themselves arriving at the Olympics gold medal soccer game in Rio, Brazil, students begin to think about how engineering is involved in sports. After a discussion of kinetic and potential energy, an associated hands-on activity gives students an opportunity to explore energy-absorbing mate...

preview of 'Engineering in Sports: Energy Transfer in Athletic Gear' Lesson

Contributors

Supporting program, acknowledgements.

The contents of this digital library curriculum were developed by the Renewable Energy Systems Opportunity for Unified Research Collaboration and Education (RESOURCE) project in the College of Engineering under National Science Foundation GK-12 grant no. DGE 0948021. However, these contents do not necessarily represent the policies of the National Science Foundation, and you should not assume endorsement by the federal government.

Heartfelt thanks to Travis Smith, for developing, building, testing and writing instructions for the egg dropper device (Figure 2). Travis also designed and made the device for quickly measuring the dropper (Figure 5). You can see from Figure 2, where Travis is pictured in the hat and blue shirt, that he is a wealth of knowledge on engineering, geekery and fashion.

Last modified: May 27, 2022

IMAGES

  1. Science for Kids Egg Drop Experiment

    egg drop experiment 5th grade

  2. 5th Grade (Eggs Drop Experiment)

    egg drop experiment 5th grade

  3. Fifth grade Lesson Egg Drop

    egg drop experiment 5th grade

  4. There were so many creative projects today for our 5th grade egg drop

    egg drop experiment 5th grade

  5. Fifth Grade Students Take Science to New Heights with Egg Drop

    egg drop experiment 5th grade

  6. Science for Kids Egg Drop Experiment

    egg drop experiment 5th grade

VIDEO

  1. physics: egg drop project

  2. Egg drop experiment

  3. Egg drop experiment

  4. Egg Drop Experiment

  5. Egg Drop Experiment

  6. Egg Drop Experiment