Teachers' Domain®
 

Organization:

Forgot Your Password?

Already have a TD account?

If you are already a Teachers' Domain user, sign in now to connect your Teachers' Domain and  accounts.

Your ID:  not your account?

Organization:

Forgot Your Password?

Signing in now will connect your  and Teachers' Domain accounts, so that in the future you will automatically be signed into Teachers' Domain when you come from .

Not yet registered?

Register now to download, share, and save resources. It's simple, safe, and free! Learn More

First time here?

As a  user, you may browse Teachers' Domain and view as many resources as you wish without registering.

However, for access to all fo the features of Teachers' Domain, we'll need a little more information. Learn More

You are now "Test Driving" Teachers' Domain

You may view up to 7 resources in this limited trial period.

You have 6 views remaining. Register now for unlimited free access and to download, share, and save resources. Learn More

You are now "Test Driving" Teachers' Domain

As a user, you may view as many resources as you like without registering.

Register now to download, share, and save resources. Learn more

About Registration:

Registering with Teachers' Domain is free and allows you to:

  • • View as many resources as you like
  • • Save, sort, and share resources using My Folders and My Groups
  • • Download resources to your desktop
  • • See standards correlations for your state

Thank you for "Test Driving" Teachers' Domain

You have viewed all seven resources permitted in this limited trial period. You may continue to browse the site, but to view, download, share, and save resources, you must register now. Registration is simple, safe, and free.

For more information:

Learn about our online Professional Development Courses, or review our Privacy Policy.

If you still have questions, please contact us.

Topic: Engineering Mechanics

Resource Grade Level Media Type
Aerodynamics: What Causes Lift?  

Aerodynamics: What Causes Lift?
How does an airplane stay aloft when upside down? This media-rich essay from the NOVA Web site offers an explanation based on Newton's third law of motion.

6-12 HTML Interactive
Air Bag Design  

Air Bag Design
Using automobile crash test footage, this video segment adapted from NOVA shows some of the challenges in designing the air bag.

3-12 QuickTime Video
Arch Bridge  

Arch Bridge
This video segment adapted from Building Big illustrates the strength of the arch in bridge design and construction.

3-12 QuickTime Video
Build a Bridge  

Build a Bridge
Survey potential bridge sites, research bridge design, and select the right bridge for the right location in this interactive activity from the NOVA Web site.

6-12 Shockwave Interactive
Citigroup Skyscraper Design Problem  

Citigroup Skyscraper Design Problem
This video segment adapted from Building Big looks at the challenges faced by structural engineer William LeMessurier in designing a new skyscraper and how he very closely averted disaster.

6-12 QuickTime Video
Clifton Suspension Bridge  

Clifton Suspension Bridge
This video segment from Building Big illustrates the basic design principles of the Clifton Suspension Bridge in Bristol, England.

3-12 QuickTime Video
Collecting Data Below the Earth's Surface  

Collecting Data Below the Earth's Surface
This video segment adapted from Discovering Women demonstrates how scientists use sound waves to collect data about the structure of Earth's crust.

6-12 QuickTime Video
Demolition Woman  

Demolition Woman
Find out how controlled explosions are used to demolish multi-story buildings in this interview from the NOVA Web site.

6-12 HTML Document
Design Inspired by Nature  

Design Inspired by Nature
In this stills collage produced for Teachers' Domain, see several examples of everyday inventions that were either inspired by nature or are similar in form and function to plants or animals.

3-12 Flash Image
Energy Transfer in a Trebuchet  

Energy Transfer in a Trebuchet
On NOVA, a team of carpenters, timber framers, engineers, and historians recreate a medieval throwing machine called a trebuchet. This adapted video segment explores how understanding energy transfer informs their design.

6-12 QuickTime Video
Firth of Forth Cantilever Bridge  

Firth of Forth Cantilever Bridge
This video segment from Building Big: "Bridges" demonstrates the basic design of a cantilever bridge by looking at Scotland's Firth of Forth Railway Bridge.

3-12 QuickTime Video
Geodesic Dome  

Geodesic Dome
This video segment adapted from Building Big highlights the evolution of the geodesic dome, designed by legendary architect and inventor, Buckminster Fuller.

6-12 QuickTime Video
Hoover Dam  

Hoover Dam
This video segment from Building Big: "Dams," demonstrates the basic principals at work in the Hoover Dam, a concrete gravity dam that also makes use of the properties of the arch.

3-12 QuickTime Video
How Do You Get to the Moon?  

How Do You Get to the Moon?
This video, adapted from NOVA, showcases the competing engineering plans designed for landing a person on the Moon for the first time.

6-12 QuickTime Video
Levers: Raising the Moai on Easter Island  

Levers: Raising the Moai on Easter Island
In this video segment adapted from NOVA, a team of archaeologists and engineers explores different uses of the lever by recreating the engineering feats of the ancient Easter Island peoples.

3-12 QuickTime Video
Mars Dead or Alive: Where to Land?  

Mars Dead or Alive: Where to Land?
In this video segment from NOVA, engineers and scientists designing the Spirit and Opportunity rovers struggle to choose landing spots both safe enough for landing and geologically promising.

6-12 QuickTime Video
Materials Lab  

Materials Lab
This interactive activity from the Building Big Web site explores the properties of different types of building materials.

3-12 Flash Interactive
Newton's Third Law of Motion: Astronauts in Outer Space  

Newton's Third Law of Motion: Astronauts in Outer Space
In this video segment adapted from NOVA, NASA learns hard lessons from the first American attempt to do work while "walking" in space. The video also explores Newton's third law of motion.

3-12 QuickTime Video
Pantheon Dome  

Pantheon Dome
This video segment adapted from Building Big: "Domes" illustrates how the design of the Pantheon Dome emerged out of another form, the arch.

3-12 QuickTime Video
Raising an Obelisk: An Engineering Puzzle  

Raising an Obelisk: An Engineering Puzzle
This video segment adapted from NOVA follows two teams as they each test a different engineering design in an effort to explain how ancient Egyptians raised a giant stone obelisk.

3-12 QuickTime Video
Robofly  

Robofly
Featuring slow-motion footage of insects in flight, this video adapted from NOVA explores the engineering challenge of designing a robotic aerial vehicle that flies like a bug.

6-12 QuickTime Video
RoboSnail  

RoboSnail
In this video segment adapted from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, a team from the Mechanical Engineering Department studies snail movement for inspiration that may lead to new forms of robotic locomotion.

6-12 QuickTime Video
Segway Technology: What's Newton Got to Do with It?  

Segway Technology: What's Newton Got to Do with It?
What do the laws of physics have to do with engineering? Find out in this video segment featuring inventor Dean Kamen and his inventions, the IBOT and the Segway.

6-12 QuickTime Video
Train Truss Animation  

Train Truss Animation
This animated video segment from Building Big: "Bridges" demonstrates how a truss bridge is designed to balance the weight of a train as it travels over it.

3-12 QuickTime Video
Transforming the Future of Flight  

Transforming the Future of Flight
In this video segment adapted from NASA, learn how engineers are transforming the future of flight by designing airplanes based on principles found in nature.

3-12 QuickTime Video