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Engineering Design Process

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Presentation on theme: "Engineering Design Process"— Presentation transcript:

1 Engineering Design Process
STEM ELECTIVE

2 Engineering Design Loop

3 Engineering Design Loop
A specific and iterative set of steps that engineers use to evaluate and refine potential solutions, select the most promising solution, construct a prototype, test and evaluate the prototype, communicate the design, and redesign.

4 Engineering Design Loop
Iterative- characterized by or involving repetition. The steps of the design loop are iterative (not rigid or linear). During the process, you may go back and forth among the steps and may not always follow them in order. For example, you may skip ahead to test a proof or concept or go backwards to learn more about the essential problem.

5 Warm Up Design Challenge
Construct the tallest tower possible in 10 minutes using only 5 index cards and 1 pair of scissors per team. No external support is allowed No adhesives are allowed Tower must stand for 10 seconds

6 Warm Up Design Challenge
Teams must follow the Engineering Design Loop while designing your index card towers One team member must be the team reporter who records the team’s progression through the process as your team solves the tower challenge

7 Warm Up Design Challenge
Did all teams follow the steps in the engineering design loop? Did you skip or combine steps? Was the loop helpful? Can you imagine how helpful the process would be on a large scale project?

8 STEP 1: Identifying A Need
Design process begins with an engineer recognizing a need for a solution rather than just coming up with an idea or gathering information on an existing product.

9 Identifying A Need Instead of asking, Engineers ask,
“What do we want to design?” Engineers ask, “Why do we want to design that?” “What problem and/or need will our design ultimately be solving?” During this part of the design loop, engineers have to identify the target population.

10 Target Population An identified population, clients, or subjects intended to be served by a particular program. A group that will benefit from our project

11 Target Population Ask the following questions:
Is the target population one individual? A group of individuals? A specific community? Or a larger population? Is the target population from a specific location? Demographic (age/gender) Other identifying characteristics (health condition or employment) How is target population connected?

12 Requirements & Constraints
Constraint is a restriction on the degree of freedom one has in providing a solution to a problem /challenge/need. Requirement is a need or a necessity What a particular product or service should do While understanding the project need and the target population, you will identify the requirements and constraints of the project.

13 Example of Requirements & Constraints
You are asked to design shoes for children in an impoverished area at a cost of less than $20. After going through the design process, you determine that the only way to fulfill the requirement of costing less than $20 is to use recycled materials. The low cost is the constraint/requirement while the use of recycled materials is the solution.

14 Step 1: Identify the Need
Developing a project definition relates the project’s problem/need to our personal lives. You want to design something that would help you if you were experiencing the same problem/need of your target population.


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