Innovation Camp for Educators 2016 - Session 3

In action video

Tali Bers and Mackenzie O'Gara

Video

Rosa Weinberg and Benny Klaiman

Video

Rosa Weinberg and Ezra Morrison

Video of Final Project

Sasha Bergmann

Empathy 

Process

Rosario Sánchez Gómez and Katie MacDonald
1 / 10

Necklace in Action

Rosario Sánchez Gómez and Katie MacDonald

Final

Alexia Duarte and Samuel Waldman

The purpose of the Screw Box Reacher is to help anyone who comes to Nuvu and is handicapped. Our device will help them reach different screws at difficult heights without spilling the entire screw box. This circuited reacher grabs onto the screw box with a front clamp and then as somone pulls it out a motorized wheel places a track to stabilize the box so it wont spill.

Process

Natalie Ferry and Hodaya Propp
1 / 10

Process

Benny Klaiman
1 / 6

Sometimes objects fall down, and we either can't or don't want to pick them up. Regardless of the case, the Trunk is here to help. This is not your ordinary household grabber, either; the Trunk has a unique piece of bendable wood that curves around objects you want to pick up at your command, as opposed to the standard claw mechanism. It can move in two directions, to open and close.

My original idea was to design something to the standard claw mechanism so that it could be opened and closed at the push of a switch, but after the idea's conception I was encouraged to go further and redesign the claw part entirely. To start brainstorming, I looked how various animals carried objects, specifically insects.

It was later that I then decided to look at elephants for their trunks (natural progression, I know) once I realized just how truly unique they were; instead of simply picking something up with little appendages, elephants use their trunks to curl around objects before bringing them to their mouth. It was here that I decided on my final general idea, and where I eventually decided on the name for the final product to be "the Trunk" (as well as the affectionate working title, Project Elefante).

Once all that was set in stone, I decided to go ahead and make the first iteration. For this design, I had a piece of cardboard in the shape of a long trapezoid split into 17 segments. Instead of slanted edges, they were set up like stairs (each segment was slightly longer than the last.

The Latest Scoop

Jessica Robinson