5 children’s books that teach valuable engineering lessons

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5 children’s books that teach valuable engineering lessons

Engineering lessons can be found in many books kids already have at home or their local library. Craig F. Walker/The Boston Globe via Getty Images

Michelle Forsythe, Texas State University and Julie Jackson, Texas State University

Most people think of the children’s classic “Charlotte’s Web” as a story of devoted friendship between a spider and a pig. But it can also be read as a story of a budding engineer – Charlotte – who prototypes, builds, tests and revises her web to solve a problem.

As teacher educators, we use children’s books to make lessons about science and engineering accessible to children of all ages.

Through books, children can experience how engineers use design-based thinking, which focuses on creative and innovative solutions, to solve problems. They can also explore the history of things that they use every day, such as crayons, bridges and cars. And they can expand their image of who can be an engineer or inventor.

Our work suggests that picture books and biographies for young adult readers can be particularly effective for introducing children to the engineering design process. These are the actions – ask, imagine, plan, create, test and improve – that engineers take to design a solution to a problem. They also help children understand engineering habits of mind. These are the traits, such as creativity and persistence, that help engineers successfully solve problems.

Here are five of our favorite science, technology, engineering and math (STEM) books for children, and some of the engineering lessons that they teach.

Children's book cover with man holding water gun
The man who made water guns awesome.

1. ‘Whoosh! Lonnie Johnson’s Super-Soaking Stream of Inventions

Lonnie Johnson was always curious about how things worked. One day, while trying to figure out a way to replace the harmful chemicals found in refrigerators and air conditioners, he connected a pump with a nozzle to his bathroom faucet. When he turned the faucet on, water blasted across the room. Johnson had invented a water gun! Johnson tested and redesigned his new invention until it became the perfect summer toy – the Super Soaker.

This picture-book biography introduces young readers to the prototype-test-redesign process that is central to engineering.

Children's book cover with man holding strings to parade balloon
Marionette strings inspired the famous parade balloons.

2. ’Balloons Over Broadway: The True Story of the Puppeteer of Macy’s Parade

Grab a front-row seat to the story of how Tony Sarg, an immigrant from Western Europe, created one of America’s most iconic holiday traditions – the giant balloons of Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade.

This picture-book biography highlights how engineers draw on imagination and inspiration to improve their designs. After reading, children can use these same traits to create their own Indonesian rod puppets. These puppets inspired Sarg to flip his marionette strings upside-down so that his famous balloons could soar.

Children's book cover of woman watching birds fly
Greatness often starts with failure.

3. ‘Wood, Wire, Wings: Emma Lilian Todd Invents an Airplane

Lilian Todd – a self-taught inventor, engineer and contemporary of the Wright brothers – worked to improve airplane designs in the early 1900s. This picture-book biography of her life illustrates how an engineer’s designs frequently fail. And it uses quotes from Todd’s perspective – “There is no work so discouraging, so exasperating, so delightful … so exhilarating as building aeroplanes” – to capture her resilience in overcoming these challenges.

As children often face similar obstacles in their own STEM journeys, Todd’s story provides a model for how children can prepare for, reflect on and move forward from moments of failure.

Children's book cover of server in an ice cream parlor
Life wasn’t always so sweet for the young chocolatier.

4. ’Milton Hershey: Young Chocolatier

We’ve all eaten Hershey’s chocolate bars and Hershey’s Kisses. However, the road to commercial success for Milton Hershey was circuitous, and he failed many times before he succeeded.

This biography, written for ages 8-12, highlights the power of persistence and the design axiom: “Fail often so you can succeed sooner.”

Children's book cover of boy standing on a windmill
Kamkwamba used old bike parts to power his family’s home.

5. ‘The Boy Who Harnessed the Wind

This biography, written for ages 10-13, tells how teenaged William Kamkwamba built a wind turbine to produce electricity for his family in Malawi. The story shows how anyone, of any age, anywhere in the world can be an engineer.

This book is a great selection for a family or multi-age book club as it is also available as a picture book, a biography for adults and even a movie. Everyone can pick the version that is best for them and gather in person or via video chat to talk about lessons learned from Kamkwamba’s dream, determination and design.

Other books

Many books that are already in homes, schools and local libraries can also be used to introduce the engineering design process and habits of mind. We recommend looking for the following story features when choosing a book to explore design-based thinking with children.

First, the story presents a problem in a real-life context. Second, the story describes a design plan or way to solve the problem. Third, a character creates, tests and evaluates a prototype of this design. And finally, a character improves the design and applies the revised solution.

Parents and teachers can find more high-quality STEM books on the National Science Teaching Association’s Best STEM Books K-12 or our own expanded list of favorites.

[Get our best science, health and technology stories. Sign up for The Conversation’s science newsletter.]The Conversation

Michelle Forsythe, Assistant Professor of STEM Education, Texas State University and Julie Jackson, Associate Professor of Curriculum and Instruction, Texas State University

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.


The views and opinions expressed in the article are solely those of their authors, and do not necessarily reflect the opinions and beliefs of UDiversity.com.


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