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Building With Spaghetti

Student Project .

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Building With Spaghetti

Jet Propulsion Laboratory https://www.jpl.nasa.gov/ Last Updated: Oct. 15, 2024
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Subject
Engineering
Time Required
30 - 60 mins
Grade Levels
K-8
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Standards .
Science Standards (NGSS)
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Generate and compare multiple possible solutions to a problem based on how well each is likely to meet the criteria and constraints of the problem.

Evaluate competing design solutions using a systematic process to determine how well they meet the criteria and constraints of the problem.

Analyze data from tests of two objects designed to solve the same problem to compare the strengths and weaknesses of how each performs.

Starting to build a spaghetti tower

Use spaghetti to build a tower modeled after the giant structures NASA uses to talk to spacecraft. Then, turn it into a challenge to build the tallest structure in a limited amount of time.

› Educators, explore how to turn this into a standards-aligned lesson for students

Materials

Activity materials
  • 20 sticks of uncooked, thick spaghetti
  • Large marshmallow (full size), crumpled-up paper towel OR other object of a similar size and weight
  • 100 cm (1 m, or about three feet) of tape (use masking tape, if available)
  • Scissors
  • Notebook or loose paper
  • Pencil
  • Meter stick or metric tape measure
  • Stopwatch, kitchen timer, smartphone timer OR online timer
  • *Don’t worry if you don’t have all of the materials. Get creative and substitute materials with what you have! It’s all part of the design process.

Project Steps

  1. Step 1: Get inspiration from NASA

    Step 1: Get inspiration from NASA

    NASA builds giant antennas to talk to spacecraft across the solar system. These structures, which form NASA's Deep Space Network, must support the weight of massive dishes and stand up to strong winds. See for yourself what it’s like to build a structure that has to withstand the forces of wind and gravity in this activity.

    About the image: In the images on the left, workers build one of the 34-meter (about 112-foot) antennas NASA uses to talk to distant spacecraft. On the right is an image of a completed 34-meter antenna.

  2. Step 2: Design your structure

    Step 2: Design your structure

    Your challenge is to use a limited amount of spaghetti and tape to build a structure that will support a marshmallow – making it as tall as you can in only 18 minutes!

    Brainstorm ideas for a structure that you think will support your marshmallow (or an object of a similar size and weight). Sketch out your ideas.

  3. Step 3: Let the countdown begin

    Step 3: Let the countdown begin

    Set a timer for 18 minutes. Start the timer, and begin building your spaghetti structure! Refer to the design you drew in the previous step.

  4. Step 4: Test your structure

    Step 4: Test your structure

    When your structure is complete, test it by putting the marshmallow on top to see if it will stay in place for 15 seconds.

  5. Step 5: Improve your design

    Step 5: Improve your design

    If your structure doesn’t support the marshmallow for 15 seconds, evaluate what is good about your design and what could be improved. Redesign and rebuild your structure.

    If your structure supports the marshmallow for 15 seconds, measure how high the marshmallow sits on your structure, and see if you can improve your design so the marshmallow sits at a higher height.

    Measure how high your marshmallow is at the end of the 18 minutes.

  6. Step 6: Challenge your friends and family

    Invite friends and family to build a structure. Who can build the tallest spaghetti structure?

  7. Step 7: Explore more

    Step 7: Explore more

    Play the DSN Uplink-Downlink game from NASA’s Space Place to explore more about the giant structures used to talk to spacecraft across the solar system.

Lesson Last Updated: Oct. 15, 2024

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