A Great Project for kids of any age: Make a Catapult
Posted: Friday, January 18, 2008
by Will Kalif
Kalif Publishing
There are three reasons why making a catapult is a great project to do with your child. In this article I explain these reasons and give you some great ideas for catapults that you can make with kids of any age.
Build, Play, and learn
Catapult making is first of all a great hands-on craft type project. And it is scalable because there are great projects suitable for children from ages 5 to 25. I will go over some of these project ideas by age group. Secondly there is the play aspect to a catapult. Once it is completed it does something. It is not a static project. You can use it to create games or to send safe projectiles across the room or yard. Thirdly it is a learning project. You can easily leverage it into a learning process that explores the basics of engineering or that delves into the history of the Middle Ages and siege engines.
For younger children a Popsicle stick catapult is a perfect project to make. It is small, easy to manage, and uses materials that children are familiar with. Seven sticks, a small piece of paper, a rubber band, and some masking tape are all that you need. You can then expand this project into any variety of tabletop games where children compete by sending small paper balls into or at various targets while keeping score.
A great mid-level project, which takes a bit of woodworking, is a tabletop sized catapult. A project like this takes an assortment of wood pieces, some sturdy rubber bands, and the axle from an old toy car. It also takes some wood glue or screws and nails. This type of project is very rewarding and I recommend it for children over the age of ten. It is also a project that will take most of a Saturday to make. But by the end of the day you should be firing it off.
For older kids in the teenager range and above you could really take your project making to a weekend builder type project and make a catapult that is as much as three to six feet in size. This kind of project can be done with any variety of materials ranging from wood to PVC piping. With a project like this you could also delve a bit into some of the principles of engineering.
Making a catapult with a child is extremely rewarding because it covers so many different creative areas. It is first of all a great hands-on type project with the added dimension of doing something when it is completed. This makes it a great creative toy where you can think up lots of little games you can use it for. Finally, catapult making is a great way to introduce engineering skills and history lessons to a child. And this kind of a project is perfectly scalable in that you can tailor the type of project to the age of the child. You also get the bonus of it being a fun project for you too. Go ahead and have some fun!
Lots of free tutorials, videos, and catapult making projects on the authors website here:
Make a Catapult
Make a Catapult
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Top-level comments on this article: (10 total)On a Tuesday night my sixth grader told me she needed to make a catapult by Friday. Many sites wanted to sell me plans or a kit (no time to order either) but this site gave us plans and very clear, illustrated step by step instructions. Thanks for saving the day!
You are very welcome! Thanks for visiting! It was a fun project for me too.
This web page is amazing!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!You were very clever to think of something this good!!
Thanks! If you think of any other great projects I would be happy to make them!
Me with the sixth grader again. We just finished our table top catapult and have been shooting objects all over the house. She can't wait to take it to school tomorrow. Thanks again. Your instructions were perfect and we had no trouble even though I consider myself a fairly "crafts impaired" mom.hahahahaha funny! not. :(
Tuesday night here in New Zealand and my Year six boychild tells me he needs a catapult by Friday. Sound familiar? *laughs* Thank you SO much for such clear, simple projects that even this mum can do! Rachelle :-)
At shool I had to make a catapult for my Technology unit.I think this site is great for that!
i dont know its for a science assignment -
This website wasn't much help. You need to tell us how to make a catapult and give us step by step instructions.
i didnt very clearly understand :(
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