- This topic has 55 replies, 7 voices, and was last updated 14 years ago by UCGal.
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November 14, 2010 at 2:40 PM #18184November 14, 2010 at 4:31 PM #630778JCParticipant
I don’t have little ones, but I looked this up for my friends with little ones. Very cool. Looks like there was an event for 6 to 9 year olds in Jan too: http://sdsa.org/resources/calendar/2010-events/january-2010/junior-first-lego-league-expo-jrfll
What did your kids work on if you don’t mind sharing? Or, what was the coolest project you saw? I realize they could be one and the same. π
November 14, 2010 at 4:31 PM #631429JCParticipantI don’t have little ones, but I looked this up for my friends with little ones. Very cool. Looks like there was an event for 6 to 9 year olds in Jan too: http://sdsa.org/resources/calendar/2010-events/january-2010/junior-first-lego-league-expo-jrfll
What did your kids work on if you don’t mind sharing? Or, what was the coolest project you saw? I realize they could be one and the same. π
November 14, 2010 at 4:31 PM #631557JCParticipantI don’t have little ones, but I looked this up for my friends with little ones. Very cool. Looks like there was an event for 6 to 9 year olds in Jan too: http://sdsa.org/resources/calendar/2010-events/january-2010/junior-first-lego-league-expo-jrfll
What did your kids work on if you don’t mind sharing? Or, what was the coolest project you saw? I realize they could be one and the same. π
November 14, 2010 at 4:31 PM #630856JCParticipantI don’t have little ones, but I looked this up for my friends with little ones. Very cool. Looks like there was an event for 6 to 9 year olds in Jan too: http://sdsa.org/resources/calendar/2010-events/january-2010/junior-first-lego-league-expo-jrfll
What did your kids work on if you don’t mind sharing? Or, what was the coolest project you saw? I realize they could be one and the same. π
November 14, 2010 at 4:31 PM #631876JCParticipantI don’t have little ones, but I looked this up for my friends with little ones. Very cool. Looks like there was an event for 6 to 9 year olds in Jan too: http://sdsa.org/resources/calendar/2010-events/january-2010/junior-first-lego-league-expo-jrfll
What did your kids work on if you don’t mind sharing? Or, what was the coolest project you saw? I realize they could be one and the same. π
November 14, 2010 at 6:33 PM #631444UCGalParticipant[quote=JC]I don’t have little ones, but I looked this up for my friends with little ones. Very cool. Looks like there was an event for 6 to 9 year olds in Jan too: http://sdsa.org/resources/calendar/2010-events/january-2010/junior-first-lego-league-expo-jrfll
What did your kids work on if you don’t mind sharing? Or, what was the coolest project you saw? I realize they could be one and the same. ;)[/quote]
Obviously the robot building and programming was cool. The did decent in that. Truthfully because no team scored very high. (400 points possible, highest score of all teams was less than 300 I think.)
The research project theme this year was bioengineering. My son’s team far surpassed what any of us parents expected. Maybe because they were 9 and haven’t been hampered with conventional thinking yet… – they pulled completely disparate ideas (reprogramming bacteria, using progenitor cells to culture skin faster, using laminin to culture skin faster, spray on skin instead of grafts)… I’m truly stunned at what they came up with.
– reprogram bacteria to produce laminin (a protien)
– extract the keratinocyte progenitor cells from a donor sample (epidermis stem cells, I guess.)
– grow skin for skin grafts faster.Other projects were equally cool and impressive… There was bioengineering to regrow cartilege in knees. Some brain research. Intelligent wheelchairs. Bionic eyes, limbs, etc… (I can’t recite the details as well with those since I just got the jist from poster boards. I learned a lot more about my son’s teams work since I saw the presentation, had to nag him to do the research, etc.)
I was REALLY impressed with some of the robot designs, too. The kids got lots of ideas for next year’s challenge. Lots of interesting ways to solve the problems.
I love the concept of this program – hook the kids with robotics and sneak in science, teamwork, research, etc. It worked with my son… he would NEVER have put in the science research if there hadn’t been the lure of robots. LOL.
November 14, 2010 at 6:33 PM #631573UCGalParticipant[quote=JC]I don’t have little ones, but I looked this up for my friends with little ones. Very cool. Looks like there was an event for 6 to 9 year olds in Jan too: http://sdsa.org/resources/calendar/2010-events/january-2010/junior-first-lego-league-expo-jrfll
What did your kids work on if you don’t mind sharing? Or, what was the coolest project you saw? I realize they could be one and the same. ;)[/quote]
Obviously the robot building and programming was cool. The did decent in that. Truthfully because no team scored very high. (400 points possible, highest score of all teams was less than 300 I think.)
The research project theme this year was bioengineering. My son’s team far surpassed what any of us parents expected. Maybe because they were 9 and haven’t been hampered with conventional thinking yet… – they pulled completely disparate ideas (reprogramming bacteria, using progenitor cells to culture skin faster, using laminin to culture skin faster, spray on skin instead of grafts)… I’m truly stunned at what they came up with.
– reprogram bacteria to produce laminin (a protien)
– extract the keratinocyte progenitor cells from a donor sample (epidermis stem cells, I guess.)
– grow skin for skin grafts faster.Other projects were equally cool and impressive… There was bioengineering to regrow cartilege in knees. Some brain research. Intelligent wheelchairs. Bionic eyes, limbs, etc… (I can’t recite the details as well with those since I just got the jist from poster boards. I learned a lot more about my son’s teams work since I saw the presentation, had to nag him to do the research, etc.)
I was REALLY impressed with some of the robot designs, too. The kids got lots of ideas for next year’s challenge. Lots of interesting ways to solve the problems.
I love the concept of this program – hook the kids with robotics and sneak in science, teamwork, research, etc. It worked with my son… he would NEVER have put in the science research if there hadn’t been the lure of robots. LOL.
November 14, 2010 at 6:33 PM #631891UCGalParticipant[quote=JC]I don’t have little ones, but I looked this up for my friends with little ones. Very cool. Looks like there was an event for 6 to 9 year olds in Jan too: http://sdsa.org/resources/calendar/2010-events/january-2010/junior-first-lego-league-expo-jrfll
What did your kids work on if you don’t mind sharing? Or, what was the coolest project you saw? I realize they could be one and the same. ;)[/quote]
Obviously the robot building and programming was cool. The did decent in that. Truthfully because no team scored very high. (400 points possible, highest score of all teams was less than 300 I think.)
The research project theme this year was bioengineering. My son’s team far surpassed what any of us parents expected. Maybe because they were 9 and haven’t been hampered with conventional thinking yet… – they pulled completely disparate ideas (reprogramming bacteria, using progenitor cells to culture skin faster, using laminin to culture skin faster, spray on skin instead of grafts)… I’m truly stunned at what they came up with.
– reprogram bacteria to produce laminin (a protien)
– extract the keratinocyte progenitor cells from a donor sample (epidermis stem cells, I guess.)
– grow skin for skin grafts faster.Other projects were equally cool and impressive… There was bioengineering to regrow cartilege in knees. Some brain research. Intelligent wheelchairs. Bionic eyes, limbs, etc… (I can’t recite the details as well with those since I just got the jist from poster boards. I learned a lot more about my son’s teams work since I saw the presentation, had to nag him to do the research, etc.)
I was REALLY impressed with some of the robot designs, too. The kids got lots of ideas for next year’s challenge. Lots of interesting ways to solve the problems.
I love the concept of this program – hook the kids with robotics and sneak in science, teamwork, research, etc. It worked with my son… he would NEVER have put in the science research if there hadn’t been the lure of robots. LOL.
November 14, 2010 at 6:33 PM #630871UCGalParticipant[quote=JC]I don’t have little ones, but I looked this up for my friends with little ones. Very cool. Looks like there was an event for 6 to 9 year olds in Jan too: http://sdsa.org/resources/calendar/2010-events/january-2010/junior-first-lego-league-expo-jrfll
What did your kids work on if you don’t mind sharing? Or, what was the coolest project you saw? I realize they could be one and the same. ;)[/quote]
Obviously the robot building and programming was cool. The did decent in that. Truthfully because no team scored very high. (400 points possible, highest score of all teams was less than 300 I think.)
The research project theme this year was bioengineering. My son’s team far surpassed what any of us parents expected. Maybe because they were 9 and haven’t been hampered with conventional thinking yet… – they pulled completely disparate ideas (reprogramming bacteria, using progenitor cells to culture skin faster, using laminin to culture skin faster, spray on skin instead of grafts)… I’m truly stunned at what they came up with.
– reprogram bacteria to produce laminin (a protien)
– extract the keratinocyte progenitor cells from a donor sample (epidermis stem cells, I guess.)
– grow skin for skin grafts faster.Other projects were equally cool and impressive… There was bioengineering to regrow cartilege in knees. Some brain research. Intelligent wheelchairs. Bionic eyes, limbs, etc… (I can’t recite the details as well with those since I just got the jist from poster boards. I learned a lot more about my son’s teams work since I saw the presentation, had to nag him to do the research, etc.)
I was REALLY impressed with some of the robot designs, too. The kids got lots of ideas for next year’s challenge. Lots of interesting ways to solve the problems.
I love the concept of this program – hook the kids with robotics and sneak in science, teamwork, research, etc. It worked with my son… he would NEVER have put in the science research if there hadn’t been the lure of robots. LOL.
November 14, 2010 at 6:33 PM #630793UCGalParticipant[quote=JC]I don’t have little ones, but I looked this up for my friends with little ones. Very cool. Looks like there was an event for 6 to 9 year olds in Jan too: http://sdsa.org/resources/calendar/2010-events/january-2010/junior-first-lego-league-expo-jrfll
What did your kids work on if you don’t mind sharing? Or, what was the coolest project you saw? I realize they could be one and the same. ;)[/quote]
Obviously the robot building and programming was cool. The did decent in that. Truthfully because no team scored very high. (400 points possible, highest score of all teams was less than 300 I think.)
The research project theme this year was bioengineering. My son’s team far surpassed what any of us parents expected. Maybe because they were 9 and haven’t been hampered with conventional thinking yet… – they pulled completely disparate ideas (reprogramming bacteria, using progenitor cells to culture skin faster, using laminin to culture skin faster, spray on skin instead of grafts)… I’m truly stunned at what they came up with.
– reprogram bacteria to produce laminin (a protien)
– extract the keratinocyte progenitor cells from a donor sample (epidermis stem cells, I guess.)
– grow skin for skin grafts faster.Other projects were equally cool and impressive… There was bioengineering to regrow cartilege in knees. Some brain research. Intelligent wheelchairs. Bionic eyes, limbs, etc… (I can’t recite the details as well with those since I just got the jist from poster boards. I learned a lot more about my son’s teams work since I saw the presentation, had to nag him to do the research, etc.)
I was REALLY impressed with some of the robot designs, too. The kids got lots of ideas for next year’s challenge. Lots of interesting ways to solve the problems.
I love the concept of this program – hook the kids with robotics and sneak in science, teamwork, research, etc. It worked with my son… he would NEVER have put in the science research if there hadn’t been the lure of robots. LOL.
November 15, 2010 at 4:41 AM #630926joecParticipantThis is cool. I’ll have to keep this in mind when my little one is big enough. Used to spend hours upon hours playing Lego’s growing up. Still have pretty much all my old childhood sets too.
November 15, 2010 at 4:41 AM #631946joecParticipantThis is cool. I’ll have to keep this in mind when my little one is big enough. Used to spend hours upon hours playing Lego’s growing up. Still have pretty much all my old childhood sets too.
November 15, 2010 at 4:41 AM #631628joecParticipantThis is cool. I’ll have to keep this in mind when my little one is big enough. Used to spend hours upon hours playing Lego’s growing up. Still have pretty much all my old childhood sets too.
November 15, 2010 at 4:41 AM #630848joecParticipantThis is cool. I’ll have to keep this in mind when my little one is big enough. Used to spend hours upon hours playing Lego’s growing up. Still have pretty much all my old childhood sets too.
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