How To Make Paper Airplanes That Go Far

We looked through all of our designs, picked one to start with, and my daughter and I sat down and followed the directions for the first airplane. If you’ve ever made origami, it’s the same approach. Most of the steps were easy enough for her four-year old hands and mind, but I had to help her with a few of the trickier folds. If you find instructions that are too complicated for you, then skip them and find another plane to make. Once we got the hang of it, N thought our six-year old neighbor would enjoy this project and we invited him over to join us. Either that or misery loves company. We each started with another sheet of paper and while we folded, the kids educated each other on hamburger and hot dog folds.
If you don’t have a neighbor to teach, teach a parent, babysitter, or grandparent. This step does wonders for building confidence. Once that first airplane was complete, it was interesting to see where the kids took the project next. My daughter, a designer to the core, got busy decorating her plane with markers. Her friend, a tinkerer at heart who has a soft spot for Legos, began iterating on the design to improve it! As we folded, he asked me questions like, “On your Eagle, how did you make the wing tips, ” And then he proceeded to invent his own series of planes with pointed noses, flat noses, and wing tips.
When my daughter jumped in to help him, I commented that they were iterating. I actually said, “Hey you guys are iterating! Do you know that word, It means that you’re building a lot of planes to test new ideas and in order to figure out how to make it better. Can you say ‘iterate, ” And then of course, they obliged me. I swear, the teacher thing will probably never leave my soul! Do you ever find yourself in that mode, They tested their planes in the house and once they amassed a small fleet of planes, I heard, “Let’s have an airplane show! ” So we took it outdoors to see what the planes could do. Did you ever make paper airplanes as a child, Where did you learn how to make them, And how did they fly, You're now signed up for TinkerLab love notes and you'll be the first to know about our next free 5-day challenge. There was an error submitting your subscription.