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Low-Budget Electronics Projects For High School?

SciGuy writes "I am a physics teacher for 9th graders. I really want to teach them modern electronics (something beyond the light bulb and battery). My hope is for a project that: 1) Is fun 2) Teaches about circuits that are relevant to their life. 3) Doesn't rely too heavily on a black box microcontroller. Individual components would probably be better. (I realize that #2 and #3 are probably contradictory. They will already be programming in my class but I want them to understand the circuitry behind modern tech.) 4) It must be as cheap as possible. Yay, public school. Unless some of the parts can be scrounged or found at home, I would probably want to keep the project around $5." What would you build?

4 of 364 comments (clear)

  1. $5? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: -1, Troll

    Just take them to Subway and buy them lunch. They'll be better off.

  2. Jewish scum by Anonymous Coward · · Score: -1, Troll

    With Jews you lose so in order to win you must lose the jews, whitey.

  3. Re:Do they still Sell 100-in-1 kits? by Grishnakh · · Score: -1, Troll

    I disagree. Back when you were a kid, kids were not only smarter than kids now, but more inquisitive and interested in things like this.

    This whole project is just a big waste of time, assuming it's in America. Instead, stick with teaching kids about boring things like law and marketing or advertising, since that's what they're going to be doing when they grow up anyway (either that or working in fast-food).

  4. Re:555 Timer by Bakkster · · Score: 0, Troll

    The 555 timer is deader than dead. Might as well teach them how to use a vacuum tube, at least those are still used in some high-end audio amplifiers. The 555 died with the microcontroller, and will never come back.

    A simple transistor circuit seems much better, as it would use modern technology, and is useful. An amplifier would be nice, and could be as simple as 1-2 transistors, a potentiometer, and some resistors. If the kids chip in $2-3 each they could get 1/8" audio plugs and play their iPod through it to speakers. As a bonus project, the kids could make their own paper-cone speakers.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electronic_amplifier
    http://www.ecircuitcenter.com/Circuits/pushpull/pushpull.htm

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