HEXBUG Maze Design

In this lesson, the children will observe different HEXBUGS to predict how they might move through a block maze.

Learning Goals:

This lesson will help children meet the following educational standards:

  • Develop beginning skills in the use of science and engineering practices such as observing, asking questions, solving problems, and drawing conclusions
  • Explore the physical properties of objects
  • Explore the concepts of force and motion

Learning Targets:

After this lesson, children should be more proficient at:

  • Developing and using models to represent their ideas, observations and explanations through approaches such as drawing and building
  • Drawing meaning from experience and information by describing, talking and thinking about what happened during an investigation
  • Identifying, describing and comparing the physical properties of objects
  • Exploring the effect of force on objects in and outside of the early childhood environment

Step 1: Gather materials.

  • HEXBUGS (or similar simple battery-powered machines that move)
  • Paper
  • Unit Blocks
  • Whiteboard or chart paper

Step 2: Introduce activity.

  1. Gather the children together in a large group and introduce the HEXBUGS.
  2. Ask the children what they know about HEXBUGS and what they might do.
  3. Write down the children's ideas on chart paper or a whiteboard.
  4. Demonstrate how to turn the HEXBUGS on.
  5. Invite the children to make predictions about how different HEXBUGS might move as they travel on the floor.
  6. Discuss how we can use unit blocks to make mazes for the HEXBUGS to travel through and how we can draw a plan for what the maze might look like.

Step 3: Engage children in lesson activities.

  1. In small groups, review what the children recall from their large-group discussion about how the HEXBUGS move.
  2. Invite the children to test and observe the movements of two HEXBUGS.
  3. Discuss how the movements of the HEXBUGS might be related to the characteristics of the different HEXBUGS (e.g., HEXBUGS with round wheels or feet versus straight legs).
  4. Invite the children to draw ideas for a maze that the HEXBUGS can travel through. You may want to model this process if the children are unfamiliar with drawing up plans.
  5. Based on the children's plans, invite them to construct one maze using unit blocks on a table.
  6. After they have constructed a maze, ask them to predict how each HEXBUG might get through the maze.
  7. Invite the children to test out their predictions by releasing the HEXBUGS into the maze to find out what will happen.
  8. After testing, invite the children to share their ideas about what occurred and draw conclusions about how different HEXBUGS move through the maze.

Step 4: Engineering vocabulary

  • Characteristic: A feature or attribute of an object
  • Conclude: To make statements about what was learned after an observation or an experiment
  • Predict: To guess what might happen next
Suggested Books
  • When I Build with Blocks  by Niki Ailing
  • Rosie Revere, Engineer  by Andrea Beaty
  • Roberto, the Insect Architect  by Nina Laden
Music and Movement

Outdoor Connections
  • Observe real bugs outside and compare them to the HEXBUGS.
  • Take the HEXBUGS outside to test their movements on different outdoor surfaces such as dirt, sand and concrete.
Web Resources

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