The Eco Fair Design Project is a five-week sustainability-focused design challenge in which students work collaboratively to research, design, and build a physical prototype that promotes environmental awareness and inspires positive behavioral change within the school community.
The project centers on the key concept of sustainability, with related concepts of systems, form, and function. Students explore how creative design solutions can address environmental challenges and raise awareness in their immediate community.
Students select one of eight sustainability topics:
Their task is to design and create a physical prototype (or video) that promotes awareness of their chosen topic and encourages positive action. Prototypes must:
Students document their work through the full design cycle:
Students work in house groups, participate in peer feedback rounds, and engage in a house-wide vote. The selected prototype represents the house at the Eco-Fair & Design Fair. Evaluation criteria include relevance, creativity, practicality, and impact.
Through research, collaboration, technical creation, and reflection, students learn how design thinking can be used to address real-world environmental issues and inspire change both inside and outside the school community.
1. Planning & Curriculum Materials
2. Research & Sustainability Resources
3. Design & Technical Resources
3. Feedback Forms
Students will critically analyze a selected sustainability issue (e.g., food, water, energy, pollution) by identifying at least three root causes and two measurable real-world impacts, supported by credible and properly cited research sources.
Students will develop a structured research plan that prioritizes at least two primary and two secondary research methods, demonstrating how the findings directly inform and strengthen their prototype design.
Students will design and construct a functional physical prototype that meets a minimum of four clearly defined success criteria (e.g., relevance, practicality, sustainability, visibility) while adhering to all project constraints and specifications.
Students will demonstrate effective teamwork by actively contributing to brainstorming sessions, integrating at least two pieces of peer feedback into revisions, and delivering a clear and engaging presentation of their prototype at the Eco-Fair.
Students will critically evaluate their final prototype by identifying at least two strengths and two specific areas for improvement, clearly explaining how feedback and iterative revisions enhanced the final design.
TBD
Prepare before launch (teacher setup)
Choose the project dates (5-week window) and block time for: research, ideation, building, feedback, revisions, and final presentations.
ECO FAIR – DESIGN PROJECT
Confirm tools/materials access (Fablab/makerspace, storage bins, 3D printer/laser cutter/Microbit if available).
ECO FAIR – DESIGN PROJECT
Print or share:
– project brief + success criteria/voting criteria
– design journal templates / evidence expectations
ECO FAIR – DESIGN PROJECT
Set up assessment: decide how you will grade (rubric or MYP criteria A–D) and share it with students early.
WEEK 1 — Research the problem + existing solutions
Teacher checkpoint: approve research plan + confirm topic clarity.
Brainstorm + sketch
Teacher checkpoint: approve final concept + materials plan.
Build prototype + feedback round 1
Teacher checkpoint: verify each group has feedback and a revision plan.
WEEK 4 — Improve prototype + house vote
WEEK 5 — Presentation (Eco-Fair & Design Fair)
After the fair — Evaluation & reflection
Students complete a short evaluation:
ECO FAIR – DESIGN PROJECT
Teacher provides final feedback (end-of-journal teacher feedback page).
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