ENGINEERING
- Select some manufactured item in your
home (such as a toy or an appliance) and, under adult supervision and with
the approval of your counselor, investigate how and why it works as it does.
Find out what sort of engineering activities were needed to create it.
Discuss with your counselor what you learned and how you got the
information.
- Select an engineering achievement that
has had a major impact on society. Use the resources available to you to
research it. Tell your counselor about the engineer(s) who made it possible,
the special obstacles they had to overcome, and how this achievement has
influenced the world today.
- Explain the work of six types of
engineers. Pick two of the six and explain how their work is related.
- Visit with an engineer (who may be your
counselor or parent) and do the following:
- Discuss the work this engineer does
and the tools the engineer uses.
- Discuss with the engineer a current
project and the engineer’s particular role in it.
- Find out how the engineer’s work
is done and how results are achieved.
- Ask to see the reports that the
engineer writes concerning the project.
- Discuss with your counselor what
you learned about engineering from this visit.
- Do ONE of the following:
- Use the engineering-systems
approach to make step by step plans for your next campout. List
alternative ideas on such items as program schedule, campsites,
transportation, and costs. Tell why you made the choices you did and
what improvements were made.
- Make an original design for a piece
of patrol equipment. Use the engineering-systems approach to help you
decide how it should work and look. Draw plans for it. Show the plans to
your counselor, explain why you designed it the way you did, and explain
how you would make it.
- Do TWO of the following:
- Transforming Motion. Using
common material or a construction set, make a simple model that will
demonstrate transforming motion. How does this make use of basic
mechanical concepts like levers and inclined planes? Describe an example
where this mechanism is used in a real product.
- Using Electricity. Make a
list of 10 electrical appliances in your home. Find out approximately
how much electricity each uses in one month. Learn how to find out the
amount and cost of electricity used in your home during periods of light
and heavy use. Tell five ways to conserve electricity.
- Using materials. Do
experiments to show the differences in strength and heat conductivity in
wood, plastic, and metal. Discuss with your counselor what you have
learned.
- Converting Energy. Do an
experiment to show how mechanical, heat, chemical, solar, and/or
electrical energy may be converted from one or more types of energy to
another. Explain your results. Describe to your counselor what energy is
and how energy is converted and used in your surroundings.
- Moving people. Find out the
different ways people in your community get to work. Make a study of
traffic flow (number of vehicles and relative speed) in both heavy and
light traffic periods. Discuss with your counselor what might be
improved to make it easier for people in your community to get where
they need to go.
- Science Fair. Build an
engineering project for a science or engineering fair or similar
competition, and enter it. (This requirement may be met by participation
on an engineering competition project team.) Discuss with your counselor
what your project demonstrates and what kind of questions visitors to
the fair asked you about it. How well were you able to answer their
questions?
- Find out what high school courses you
need to take to be admitted to an engineering college. Find out what other
subjects would be helpful in preparing for an engineering career.
- Explain what it means for an engineer
to be a registered Professional Engineer (P.E.). In what types of
engineering work is registration most important?
- Study the Engineer’s Code of Ethics.
Explain how this is like the Scout Oath and Scout Law.