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Local middle schoolers showcase inventions at Bethesda’s KID Museum meant to improve life on Earth

KID Museum
Photo of the KID Museum in Bethesda, Maryland. (海角精品黑料/Grace Newton)
Middle schoolers at KID Museum
Hundreds of middle schoolers from across the D.C. region gathered at the KID Museum in Bethesda, Maryland. (海角精品黑料/Grace Newton)
鈥淰DRS Super Drone鈥 design made by students
One group of students invented what they call a 鈥淰DRS Super Drone鈥 designed to clear trash from marketplaces in India. (海角精品黑料/Grace Newton)
Homeless shelter made from cardboard
Another group invented a mobile homeless shelter to be used in New York which they named 鈥淵ello Billy.鈥 The cardboard prototype features solar panels, a refrigerator, a bed and bathroom and a telephone 鈥渇or calling loved ones,鈥 according to the student engineers. (海角精品黑料/Grace Newton)
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KID Museum
Middle schoolers at KID Museum
鈥淰DRS Super Drone鈥 design made by students
Homeless shelter made from cardboard

Hundreds of middle schoolers from across the D.C. region gathered at the KID Museum in Bethesda, Maryland, Sunday to showcase their inventions meant to improve life on Earth.

The annual 鈥淚nvent the Future Expo鈥 allows students, most of whom are middle schoolers within Montgomery County Public Schools, the opportunity to spend a semester researching, prototyping and ultimately building an invention centered around the challenge question: 鈥淲hat will you make to improve life on this planet?鈥

鈥淲e have examples of kids who are figuring out how to reduce pollution by creating more access to green roofs. We have kids who are solving social problems and improving mental health for their classmates,鈥 said Cara Lesser, founder and executive director of KID Museum.

鈥淪o it’s really an incredible array and shows what’s on kids’ minds and what things that they’re working to solve.鈥

Around 650 students, split into 120 teams, had their projects judged for an opportunity to win prizes. As students showcased their projects, the expo also featured industry leaders presenting innovations including virtual reality, rocket simulators and even a robot dog.

Enlin Xu, a teacher at Parkland Middle School who鈥檚 been working with the Invent the Future Expo for about five years, said the students keep a digital engineering notebook detailing every step throughout the semester.

He said students go through a lot of prototyping, redoing and sometimes scraping the entire project and starting over before creating a final product.

鈥淢y favorite part of watching these kids do the Invent the Future challenge is definitely when they start feeling like something’s coming together,” Xu said.

“They really start seeing it physically in front of them and then especially their reaction when they realize just how big this event is and how big the engineering world is.鈥

One group of Xu鈥檚 students invented what they call a 鈥淰DRS Super Drone鈥 designed to clear trash from marketplaces in India.

鈥淲e could see trash on the market streets, so we decided to make an invention that could pick up that trash without needing human help [ 鈥 we put a claw on the drone that works with electricity, and it works with solar energy, with like the solar panels, and it has an air filter to clean out the air,鈥 one student engineer said.

In their presentations, some students detailed challenges they were forced to work around. For example, the VDRS Super Drone group said they worked on a few different claw designs before landing on the right one for their drone.

Another group invented a mobile homeless shelter to be used in New York, which they named 鈥淵ello Billy.鈥 The cardboard prototype features solar panels, a refrigerator, a bed and bathroom and a telephone 鈥渇or calling loved ones,鈥 according to the student engineers.

鈥淎t the end of the day, what we are about is helping kids to develop a mindset, what we call the 鈥榤ind of a maker.鈥 It’s really about understanding that you learn through trial and error, that you learn by taking on new challenges, and you learn by stopping and reflecting and understanding what you can do with tech,鈥 Lesser said.

“What are the human pieces you need to bring to complement tech and how you can make an impact on the world.鈥

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Grace Newton

Grace Newton is an Associate Producer at 海角精品黑料. She also works as an associate producer for NPR Newscast. Grace was born and raised in North Carolina but has lived in D.C. since 2018. Grace graduated from American University with a bachelor鈥檚 degree in journalism and minor in art history in 2022.

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