Wednesday, 17 December 2014

ICE Bridge in Whitley Bay High School October 2014

In the third week of October 2014 the bridge activity was hosted in Whitley Bay High School. As always, it was visible how the students were becoming interested and excited about the activity as they saw the impressive size of the bridge and learned more about the importance of the civil engineering profession and the potential future employment opportunities from the preliminary talk. Understanding of the duties and responsibilities of civil engineers, the benefits of the job and the requirements that engineers have to satisfy to be competent and successful is encouraged by providing examples of well-known engineering projects and structures and the systems that have become an essential part of the civilised world. Our expert demonstrators often discuss the projects that they have worked on too! The activity is also a unique opportunity for the students to ask a wide range of questions related to the possible career paths, best engineering courses and how prepare for them.

The students in Whitley Bay High School worked excellently and can really be proud about the way they worked together in teams. Effective team work is one of the main requirements of the exercise given that each of the sessions, including the presentations, construction and deconstruction, normally takes around around 75 min.

Friday, 16 May 2014

ICE President's Visit


The ICE President Geoff French came to see the bridge in action on 1st April at Durham Highschool for girls. He was joined by Amy Wright, an old pupil of the school who was highly commended in this year's NCE Graduate Awards. Geoff shares our passion for engaging future engineers and we were very pleased to show him the work that we have been doing with the help of ICE graduates and students. You can see the ICE press release here.



With plenty of time scheduled and some very bright students, we were able to add in another activity to explain more about the day to day job of a civil engineer. The pupils were split into two groups and given large maps of Durham city centre and asked to suggest locations for a new bridge. They had to think about where it would be needed and hazards that might be encountered. There were some really good points raised which were shared with everyone at the end of the exercise.


Now for the fun part! Every session went very smoothly with some excellent displays of teamwork. The President even got roped into some heavy lifting and volunteered to be the first test subject when the scaffolding was removed.
A big thank you to the school, all the helpers visitors across the day and particularly to NCE for the photos (much better than our usual lot).
Please let us know if you would be interested in volunteering. More photos below!









Monday, 17 February 2014

Fordley Primary School

This week we were in Dudley with the North Tyneside Education Business Partnership again, building the bridge with year 3/4's and 5/6's. They showed some excellent teamwork in quite large groups. Half term is now upon us and the bridge is out of action until March so we're going to explain one of the most important parts of the bridge, the deck!
Pin

Scaffolding 
Deck
To put the deck up, every child has a particular job: they work in pairs to carry a piece of the deck, some are in charge of the pins used to hold the pieces together and some make sure that the scaffolding is in the right place. Everything must happen in the right order and be dismantled in the exact opposite way.


1. A pair of pins are put into place on the base plate of the bridge. 

2. Slide the piece of deck onto the pins. You can see the hollow metal tubes to the side where they slide together.

3. Before the children let go of the deck, there must be a piece of scaffolding under it to make sure the bridge is supported as it is being constructed (we use blocks of foam).

4. The two middle piece are different to the rest. One side has in-built pins that slide out to join the two halves together.

5. Once all the pieces are fully joined up, the cables can be attached.