Davis Creek Elementary LEGO Dacta Robotics
2001-2002
LEGO Dacta Cities and Transportation Sets at Davis Creek Elementary
November 5, 2001
October 15, 2001
Davis Creek Elementary
LEGO Dacta Haunted House Ride
Davis Creek Elementary Intelligent House
January 9, 2002
Bug and Glue Alarm
February 7, 2002
In the morning at Davis Creek
Elementary, students programmed and
activated their programs at Davis Creek and at the LEGO City.
Then for the rest of the day, while I was
at the LEGO City the monorails and
other vehicles seem to be going. It is
fascinating to see the RCX vehicle
move with out being the one operating them.
Happy Valentine's Day During the Olympics
at Davis Creek
from the skaters at the LEGO city at Marshall University
Sound Sensor for Control of Machine That Waves
Davis Creek
February 20, 2002
Light Sensor on Go Round
March 4, 2002 is like the one at the Windmill at the LEGO CITY
Crane Data
March 6, 2002
Davis Creek wrote a program for one of the cranes in the Space Day
project to
try out a data logging program for the LEGO SENSORSCITY.
Angle Sensor Data
March 11, 2002
This rover can log the angle rotation.
Line Follower
March 13, 2002
The Rover that went to the National Science Teacher's Convention
"explored" a Mars rock.
Rock conveyor
March 19, 2002
Red Rover, music, SENSORSCITY, and programing were all done in one
day.
Wall Hugger and Cave Explorer
April 25, 2002
With the light sensor up the robot can tell when it enters the cave.
Marble Grabber
April 29, 2002
We are planning on a big systems engineering project that will include
moving
marbles.
Flood Warning
May 24, 2002
Using an angle sensor, RoboLab, RCX make a way to warn if the water in
the river is rising high.
Marble Track
May 21, 2002
Two classes of fifth grade worked in groups to build and program
parts of the Marble Track.
Davis
Creek Elementary LEGO pages 2001-2002 on
LEGO
Links of Linda Hamilton hamilton@marshall.edu
Webpages and pictures on http://netapps.marshall.edu/lego
Web camera on http://legocamera.marshall.edu
NASA site of Remote Sensing on http://SENSORSCITY.marshall.edu