Site search
sponsored by
Ariana Gabriel, 8, enjoys going to Build-A-Bear workshops, but with the price of gas nowadays, it has been harder to get to them.
So Im going to invent a mechanical one, she explained.
As part of Camp Invention this week at Bordewich-Bray Elementary School, students come up with fantasy inventions. Participants from schools throughout Carson City first identify a problem, then brainstorm solutions. As the final step, they fill out a mock patent application.
Arianas invention would take the labor out of making the stuffed bear and be more convenient, as she would keep it in her bedroom.
You just tell it what you want and it makes it and dresses it, the Carson Montessori School third-grader explained. It has dress mode and shoe mode and decorating mode and all that.
Privacy motivated other inventions.
Hayden Story, a Bordewich-Bray third-grader, worked on sensors to put on his top bunk.
Theyll tell me that my brothers been up there, and Ill tell my mom, he said. My mom doesnt want him up there either because hes only 4 well, almost 4.
Jessica Preston was inventing a sensor to put on her special drawer and a timer to let her know how long theyd been in the drawer.
I have a lot of stuff in there that nobody can see and my diary, she said. I also have some candy for safe keeping.
Lauren Langworthys invention was a special lock to keep people out of her bedroom.
The parts for the inventions are taken from old appliances and other recycled materials the students bring in from home. Although the inventions dont actually come to fruition, teacher Laurel Dority says its the process that matters.
A student came up to me this morning with a piece of something and said, What can we make with this? she said. And thats what scientists do. Thats the kind of thinking were encouraging.
Ninety-four students from schools throughout Carson City spent Monday through Friday from 8 a.m.-3 p.m. rotating through five classes each day. This is the third year Bordewich-Bray Elementary School has hosted the camp.
They enjoy it so much, said Vice Principal Casey Gilles. Its really well-grounded in science and hands-on problem solving.
Jessica Granat, a second-grade teacher, led the M.A.R.S. (Moving at Rocket Speed) workshop. On Thursday, the students made simulated rovers.
The level of sophistication, she said, varied greatly from the kindergarten group to the seventh-graders. And thats what she wanted to see.
Its fun for me because its not so much me saying this is the lesson and you do it, she said. Its more of me facilitating and letting them use their imaginations. Theyre getting to be creative.
Contact reporter Teri Vance at tvance@nevadaappeal.com or 881-1272.
So Im going to invent a mechanical one, she explained.
As part of Camp Invention this week at Bordewich-Bray Elementary School, students come up with fantasy inventions. Participants from schools throughout Carson City first identify a problem, then brainstorm solutions. As the final step, they fill out a mock patent application.
Arianas invention would take the labor out of making the stuffed bear and be more convenient, as she would keep it in her bedroom.
You just tell it what you want and it makes it and dresses it, the Carson Montessori School third-grader explained. It has dress mode and shoe mode and decorating mode and all that.
Privacy motivated other inventions.
Hayden Story, a Bordewich-Bray third-grader, worked on sensors to put on his top bunk.
Theyll tell me that my brothers been up there, and Ill tell my mom, he said. My mom doesnt want him up there either because hes only 4 well, almost 4.
Jessica Preston was inventing a sensor to put on her special drawer and a timer to let her know how long theyd been in the drawer.
I have a lot of stuff in there that nobody can see and my diary, she said. I also have some candy for safe keeping.
Lauren Langworthys invention was a special lock to keep people out of her bedroom.
The parts for the inventions are taken from old appliances and other recycled materials the students bring in from home. Although the inventions dont actually come to fruition, teacher Laurel Dority says its the process that matters.
A student came up to me this morning with a piece of something and said, What can we make with this? she said. And thats what scientists do. Thats the kind of thinking were encouraging.
Ninety-four students from schools throughout Carson City spent Monday through Friday from 8 a.m.-3 p.m. rotating through five classes each day. This is the third year Bordewich-Bray Elementary School has hosted the camp.
They enjoy it so much, said Vice Principal Casey Gilles. Its really well-grounded in science and hands-on problem solving.
Jessica Granat, a second-grade teacher, led the M.A.R.S. (Moving at Rocket Speed) workshop. On Thursday, the students made simulated rovers.
The level of sophistication, she said, varied greatly from the kindergarten group to the seventh-graders. And thats what she wanted to see.
Its fun for me because its not so much me saying this is the lesson and you do it, she said. Its more of me facilitating and letting them use their imaginations. Theyre getting to be creative.
Contact reporter Teri Vance at tvance@nevadaappeal.com or 881-1272.


News












