6th, 7th, 8th Grades  Project 1 week

Nest Quest: Build to Last

Ryan W
Updated
MS-LS2-5
6-8.AF.7.5
MS-LS2-5
6-8.AF.6.7
6-8.AF.6.6
+ 5 more
1-pager

Purpose

Students investigate how birds solve real survival challenges by using materials, shape, and placement to build nests that protect eggs and withstand environmental forces. Through a fast launch challenge, repeated testing, critique circles, and revision, they apply science and engineering ideas to design a functional nest that meets clear criteria for strength, safety, and comfort. The experience builds collaboration, communication, and self-direction as teams make shared decisions, respond to feedback, and explain how their design choices improved over time. It culminates in a public gallery and reflection circle where students showcase their final nest, design statement, and testing evidence.

Learning goals

Students will analyze how birds use materials, shape, and placement to create nests that protect eggs and support survival in different environments. They will apply the engineering design cycle to build, test, evaluate, and revise a nest using clear criteria for strength, safety, and comfort. Students will compare competing design solutions using evidence from wind, weight, and shake tests and explain how structure affects function. They will also strengthen collaboration, communication, and reflection skills by giving critique, making shared decisions, and presenting their final design and growth.

Standards
  • [Next Generation Science Standards] MS-LS2-5 - Evaluate competing design solutions for maintaining biodiversity and ecosystem services.
  • [Next Generation Science Standards] 6-8.AF.7.5 - Evaluate competing design solutions based on jointly developed and agreed-upon design criteria.
  • [Next Generation Science Standards] MS-LS2-5 - Evaluate competing design solutions for maintaining biodiversity and ecosystem services.
  • [Next Generation Science Standards] 6-8.AF.6.7 - Undertake a design project, engaging in the design cycle, to construct and/or implement a solution that meets specific design criteria and constraints.
  • [Next Generation Science Standards] 6-8.AF.6.6 - Apply scientific ideas or principles to design, construct, and/or test a design of an object, tool, process or system.
Competencies
  • Collaboration - Students co-design projects with peers, exercise shared-decision making, strengthen relational agency, resolve conflict, and assume leadership roles.
  • Effective Communication - Students practice listening to understand, communicating with empathy, and share their learning through exhibiting, presenting and reflecting on their work.
  • Critical Thinking & Problem Solving - Students consider a variety of innovative approaches to address and understand complex questions that are authentic and important to their communities.
  • Content Expertise - Students develop key competencies, skills, and dispositions with ample opportunities to apply knowledge and engage in work that matters to them.
  • Self Directed Learning - Students use teacher and peer feedback and self-reflection to monitor and direct their own learning while building self knowledge both in and out of the classroom.

Products

Students will create quick starter nests during the launch, then produce testing records such as annotated sketches, material lists, and photos showing how their designs changed after wind, weight, and shake challenges. Throughout the week, each team will add brief design statements and revision notes from critique circles to document one glow, one grow, and the improvement they made. By the end, each group will present a final functional bird nest designed to stay strong, safe, and comfortable, along with a photo or sketch of the testing process. These products will be displayed in a class nest gallery for the final showcase and reflection circle.

Launch

Kick off with a “Build, Test, Revise Blitz” in which teams use a limited set of natural and classroom materials to build a starter nest in 20–30 minutes for a model egg or small weight. Immediately test each nest with wind, weight, and shake challenges, then have teams make one quick redesign based on what failed and what held strong. After the blitz, students do a fast share-out comparing which materials, shapes, and structures best protected the egg, introducing the question of what makes a nest strong, safe, and comfortable. Close by showing images or short clips of real bird nests so students can connect their design choices to how birds solve similar survival problems in nature.

Exhibition

Host a “Build It to Last” gallery walk where each team displays its final nest, a short design statement, and a photo or sketch sequence showing how the nest changed through testing and revision. Invite classmates, families, or another middle school class to rotate through the exhibits, compare how different materials and structures met the design criteria, and ask questions about strength, safety, and comfort. During the event, each team gives a brief explanation of one design improvement they made after critique or testing, followed by a short reflection circle where students share one success, one setback, and one way their collaboration grew. This format celebrates the finished products while making student thinking, revision, and communication visible.