STUDENT WORK
Circuits
IDEAS curricula introduce students to paper circuits. Using copper tape, batteries, and LEDs, the possibilities are endless. From re-creating magical objects from favorite movies to designing cards and signs to fabricating items to populate imagined worlds, including light in a creation is admittedly one of the most challenging activities in the curricula and always brings tremendous satisfaction when makers’ see their ideas illuminate.
Using a Fandom wiki page for artistic inspiration, a middle-school student recreates the Gem Rejuvenator, a magical weapon from a favorite movie called Steven Universe.
Creating light up drawings and cards is an approachable, fun, and creative way to apply paper circuit making skills. A sketch was drawn, a simple circuit was designed and tested, and voila, cards springs to life.
Once makers get the hang of making a simple circuit with 1 LED, they often want to experiment with figuring out how to get multiple LEDs to light up. And once they do, a door opens for making more elaborate creations, like this card celebrating Dia de Los Muertos (Day of the Dead).
Using a Fandom wiki page for artistic inspiration, a middle-school student recreates the Gem Rejuvenator, a magical weapon from a favorite movie called Steven Universe.
A final project from the world-building curriculum, LEDs light the sign that draw us in to the fantastical world of a cave filled glowing crystals.
Made by a teacher during a World-building curriculum training, a paper circuit with a yellow LED was integrated into a bonfire that sat on the beach of an ideal “day off” world.