One of our favorite ways to increase student engagement is with STEM, and one of our favorite STEM activities is building a turkey trap. Follow these step-by-step instructions to engage your students in this real-world STEM challenge!
The Thanksgiving season provides a perfect opportunity to engage students in an exciting, real-world STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering, and Math) challenge. Around Thanksgiving, students’ minds turn to turkeys, so designing a hands-on activity around catching or containing a turkey allows kids to flex their creative STEM muscles. With the right materials and parameters, students will eagerly tackle this engaging turkey-themed engineering project.
Why a Turkey STEM Challenge?
A Thanksgiving turkey STEM challenge hits all the right notes for student engagement It ties into a holiday they are already excited about, giving their efforts immediate relevance. Turkey traps and cages also align with many STEM curriculum standards involving engineering design, project planning, prototyping, and improvement
Students must utilize problem-solving skills, teamwork, creativity, and knowledge of structures and mechanics to complete the challenge. A fun story like a turkey on the loose before a school Thanksgiving play provides context and an imaginative element to get students invested in the project
Designing an Effective Turkey STEM Challenge
When designing a STEM challenge around capturing turkeys, keep these tips in mind:
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Define the challenge – Provide clear goals and constraints. Explain the problem students need to solve like containing a certain number of turkeys.
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Brainstorm first – Have students plan designs and approaches before building. This thoughtful step improves outcomes.
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Limit materials – Too many material choices can overwhelm students. Pick 2-3 items like pipe cleaners, cardboard, and string.
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Encourage iteration – After initial construction, discuss improvements students would make to better meet criteria.
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Test designs – Have students demonstrate how their turkey traps or cages work using fake turkeys. Apply gentle pressure to test stability.
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Focus on teamwork – Collaboration and communication should be emphasized over competition.
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Circulate and assist – Provide guidance during construction by asking questions rather than giving direct instructions.
Turkey STEM Challenge Materials and Set-up
The materials provided will significantly impact the types of solutions students will design. Here are some potential item combinations:
Option 1
- Pipe cleaners
- Cardboard
- String
- Tape
Option 2
- Straws
- Paper or foam cups
- Rubber bands
- Paper clips
Option 3
- Toothpicks
- Marshmallows
- Paper plates
- Chenille stems
In terms of set-up, provide enough table space for each group to construct their trap or cage. Lay out all materials in a central location for accessibility. Print design templates, planning pages, and self-evaluation forms to structure the activity. Establish clear timelines for planning, building, and testing.
Execution Tips and Tricks
Here are some tips for smoothly executing a turkey STEM challenge:
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Time limits prevent endless tinkering and keep students on track.
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Join in the activity by building your own prototype to demonstrate the engineering process.
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Encourage students to explain how their designs work when testing is complete.
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Have students write or draw reflections on the challenge. What worked? What was challenging?
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Take photos of students’ completed projects to memorialize and document their designs.
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Display the turkey cages and traps in the classroom afterwards as a celebration of students’ efforts.
Inspiring Turkey STEM Challenge Examples
To see inspiring turkey STEM challenge examples in action, below are two wonderful online resources:
How to Catch a Turkey STEM Activity provides step-by-step instructions and free printable planning pages to structure the project.
Thanksgiving Turkey Cage STEM Challenge includes photos of sample cages and a downloadable turkeys template.
Both examples demonstrate how fun and engaging this seasonal STEM activity can be!
Takeaways
Around Thanksgiving time, try challenging your students to catch a turkey with imaginative traps or sturdy cages. This hands-on STEM activity engages kids’ creativity, problem-solving, collaboration, and engineering skills. With the right framework and materials, students will eagerly tackle this holiday-themed challenge and learn key science, technology, engineering, and math concepts along the way.
HOW TO CATCH A TURKEY STEM CHALLENGE
Material List:
- 12 inches of masking tape
- 5 pipe cleaners
- 1 yd of string
- cardboard
- scissors
- How to Catch a Turkey by Adam Wallace (optional)
Divide students into groups of 3-4. Explain to students the following scenario:
Your family forgot to get a turkey for Thanksgiving and the stores are all sold out! In order to get a turkey for your Thanksgiving feast, you are going to have to design and build a turkey trap to catch a turkey.
Allow students time to plan out their designs individually and as a team. Give students approximately 30 minutes to build their turkey traps.
Sit back and watch as students engage in real-world problem solving! At the end of the activity, be sure to have students describe and demonstrate how their trap works.
This activity is always a huge hit with students during the Thanksgiving season! For more information, in depth teacher instructions, student handouts, a STEM journal, and student planning and reflection pages, view the full resource HERE.
How to Catch a Turkey STEM Activity
FAQ
How do you build a turkey stem activity?
How do you capture a turkey?
How do you catch a turkey series?
How to catch a turkey summary?
How long does it take to build a turkey trap?
Give students approximately 30 minutes to build their turkey traps. Sit back and watch as students engage in real-world problem solving! At the end of the activity, be sure to have students describe and demonstrate how their trap works.
Can You Hold 3 turkeys in a cage?
If you decide to use marshmallows and toothpicks like us, here is a potential cage design for holding 3 turkeys. My kids first started building the cage by constructing a fence around the turkey. They realized that the fence was not very tall and that the turkeys could jump over it.
How do you win a turkey race?
An untied balloon propels the turkey down the track, and the first to reach the end is the winner! Don’t be surprised if everyone wants to race their turkeys again and again.