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Studying how glue is made turns materials science and joinery into a practical design and technology case study for middle and high school STEM. A focused reading passage with questions prepares students to learn about polymerization, compounding of resins and fillers, mixing, deaeration, filtration, packaging, and safety controls. Learners could compare PVA, epoxy, cyanoacrylate, hot melt, and pressure sensitive adhesives while analyzing viscosity, open time, cure, peel and shear strength. Prompts build the design cycle and data skills with lap shear tests, failure mode inspection, and trade off decisions on durability, flexibility, cost, and VOC impacts. This ready to use classroom reading supports prototyping, product testing, and sustainability thinking, giving students real world manufacturing insight and evidence based decision making. This process is a great one to learn about and so with that in mind, let's look into this topic with my useful resource here.
This How is it made? article provides the perfect grab and go, print and provide resource that can supplement lessons. It is an article with questions to check comprehension and inspire design and production thinking. I am very proud of this series of how is it made? articles and they are rich with information and wonder at the majesty of design, production and the manufacturing process.
Each how is it made? article includes a fun fact(s) to add to the knowledge gained from this article. Formatted in an easy to read and digest manner, each paragraph is numbered to help with referencing and each question answer has a paragraph reference number to point to the specific information (where applicable). Two images also to inspire students and get them interested in the subject topic.
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Please note: That the Doc versions are images with editable text boxes overlayed on top and this is the most effective way to keep the article sleek and well-designed and also that students cannot change things significantly.