Sunday, October 31, 2010

Be More Active!


Take the Be More Active Challenge
Average daily media use for children is 7 hours 38 minutes. 
1 in 3 children are overweight or obese.
Less than 1/3 of 15 year olds got 60 minutes of daily activity.  (60 minutes is recommended)
Only 10% of schools have daily gym classes.
This is our service project.   We're going to give  out these fliers to our classmates and any one who wants them!

Sunday, October 17, 2010

Another Mission Finished

We finished another mission. We just finished the Patent and Mechanical Arm mission.  You have to push it to make the arm grab the patent.  Then there's the 1st mission we finished - Ramp and Syringe.  It is to get the syringe to base and to grab the nurse. We completed both of them!

Monday, October 11, 2010

The Project

Every year each team has to do a research and service project to tell your community about a current problem. This year's  theme is about Biomedical Engineering.

Biomedical Engineering means - "Biomedical engineering is the application of engineering principles and techniques to the medical field. This field seeks to close the gap between engineering and medicine. It combines the design and problem solving skills of engineering with medical and biological sciences to improve healthcare diagnosis and treatment."- Wikipedia

So after so brainstorming, research,  and building consensus, we found our topic, and we came up with obesity! We are going to try to find a way for people to know how much food they eat and how much they burn! So you eat 2000 calories a day but you burn only 1500 of them! That's weight gained! So we want to invent an easier way to measure how many calories you eat and how many you burn so you know exactly how much you can eat!

The Challenge

This year's challenge is all about Biomedical Engineering. As you can see from this year's board. (seen below), there are a lot of parts that have to do with the human body.
You can see the Bone, the Heart, Some eyes, And a foot!

But that's not all - you also have the community project which will be in another post!

What is FLL?

FLL stands for first First Lego League. So it's FLL for short. The FLL site says -
"The best way to summarize FIRST LEGO League is to say that it is a robotics program for 9 to 16 year olds (9 to 14 in the US and Canada), which is designed to get children excited about science and technology -- and teach them valuable employment and life skills. FLL can be used in a classroom setting but is not solely designed for this purpose. Teams, comprised of up to ten children with at least one adult coach, can also be associated with a pre-existing club or organization, homeschooled, or just be a group of friends who wish to do something awesome."-FLL 
But if you still wondering what that has to do with Legos, we build Lego robots that compete in challenges!