Home > Activities > 

Top Activities

Rating: 5 BeatBox

Simple Simon is no match for this NXT robot! The BeatBox allows students to push touch sensors in random order to create tunes. Each BeatBox can be programmed to play a variety of notes. Read More

Rating: 4 BoogieBot

Choreographing dances to match music and stay within the limits of the dance floor is the ultimate test of timing and distance control for your students. Read More

Rating: 4 The History of Measurement

Today we are fortunate enough to have a standardized system of measurement, but it wasn't always that way. Many early cultures used body parts to figure distances! Could this have caused any problems? Students will use the Motorized Mechanisms Set to build a trundle wheel and determine . . . Read More

Newest Activities

Rating: 3 Build Me A Wall

Ever watch a carpenter frame a house or a construction worker build a building? They must use math and measurement to complete their tasks. Let’s learn how! Using basic LEGO bricks and simple instructions, students will each build one wall of a multi-storied project. Read More

Rating: 3 Snowmobile Challenge

These two snowmobiles race each other in a circle around the NXT brick, which rotates with them on a pivot. One of the snowmobiles is built to go faster than the other one by using different gears, but the slower one has the “inside lane” because its cord is shorter. Which one will win? Read More

Rating: 3 The RoboDog

This RoboDog is ready to go for a walk, either on his leash or on the loose by himself! He can go straight or turn on smooth floors, and he can turn his head to look left and right. With the leash, students can control when the dog stops and turns left or right. Without the leash, the dog . . . Read More

All Activities

1 2 3 4 5 ... Next >

Rating: 5 BeatBox 

Simple Simon is no match for this NXT robot! The BeatBox allows students to push touch sensors in random order to create tunes. Each BeatBox can be programmed to play a variety of notes.

Rating: 4 BoogieBot 

Choreographing dances to match music and stay within the limits of the dance floor is the ultimate test of timing and distance control for your students.

Rating: 4 The History of Measurement 

Today we are fortunate enough to have a standardized system of measurement, but it wasn't always that way. Many early cultures used body parts to figure distances! Could this have caused any problems? Students will use the Motorized Mechanisms Set to build a trundle wheel and determine . . .

Rating: 4 3-D Beginning Graphs 

Students build a simple graph to represent big and little objects.

Rating: 4 A Tour of the Solar System 

Can you imagine visiting outer space as easily as you visit another state? What if you could send postcards home from a visit to Pluto? Imagine you are planning a trip to outer space. Build a spacecraft of LEGO bricks and program it to travel to various places in the solar system.

Rating: 4 Applause, Applause 

How do you tell performers you liked a show? With applause! Could you tell if an audience liked one performer better than another based on how loud the applause is? Invent an RCX applause meter to measure an audience’s reaction to a performance of some kind. Be sure to include a moving part that . . .

Rating: 4 Conveyer Curiosity 

  What would you do without electricity? What other sources of energy could be used in place of an electrical current? In this activity you are asked to help the manager of the local grocery store keep his check-out lanes open… without the use of electricity! Not only must you design and . . .

Rating: 4 Egyptians as Engineers 

Students build LEGO vehicles and sleds that are strong enough to drag a given amount of weight up an incline, thus mimicking the Egyptian methods of pyramid construction. This project incorporates engineering concepts into the standard fourth grade geography unit on Ancient Egypt.

Rating: 4 Inventor 2 Programming Exercises 

Programming exercises and design challenges for use with Inventor 2 in ROBOLAB.

Rating: 4 Light Control 

Can a light sensor control a motor? Explore how the RCX can use a light sensor in a program.
 
1 2 3 4 5 ... Next >
Warning

We've detected that your current browser settings will hinder your browsing this site. The problematic browser settings are listed below:

Re-test your settings.

Browse