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Mobile Magnet Wall
$2,200.00
SKU: 100001
You can now move the Magnet Wall around the classroom, into the hallway, library, or large motor space! The Mobile Magnet Wall is an interactive play space that highlights slope, momentum, and gravity through hands-on experimentation. It is a wonderful tool for children of any age!
The Mobile Magnet wall can be used on both sides, making it a great value for your classroom and an efficient use of space!
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Description
Meet the Mobile Magnet Wall, the ultimate tool for STEM play in your classroom or beyond. This innovative, portable wall features two 34″ x 44″ magnetic panels mounted on a sturdy Baltic Birch stand with easy-to-lock castors. This gives teachers the freedom to move the wall around wherever it’s needed—be it the classroom, hallway, library, or large motor space.
The Mobile Magnetic Wall is one of the most flexible classroom teaching tools that allows the students to arrange magnetic ramps, rings, and other components to create cool vertical drops and pathways. Teaching Newton’s Laws of Motion to the little ones now became a whole lot engaging, fun, and interactive with this learning material.
The Mobile Magnet Wall is designed to be versatile. Both sides of the wall can be used for play, with the back featuring a brace bar that can act as a divider between play areas or a guide for sequential activities. The back also supports accessories like Wooden Gears, Words and Symbols, and Maker Magnets, making the wall a perfect addition to a classroom for children aged 3 and up.
With its portability and dual-sided functionality, the Mobile Magnet Wall is a fantastic investment for any learning environment!
The Mobile Magnet Wall is made up of:
A Baltic Birch Stand with locking castors
Two 34″ wide x 44″ tall magnetic metal panels
Two tubes and elbows (On either side of the Mobile Magnet Wall, for redirecting materials. Add 7″ width per side)
The Magnet Wall Fundamentals Pack is included!
4 magnetic ramps (one 3 ft, one 2 ft, and two 1 ft)
The Mobile Magnet Wall is 72 inches long x 31 inches wide x 51 inches high. This product requires assembly.
Please note: Removal of the plastic covers from the magnets will not only scratch the Magnet Wall panels but it will also void your warranty!We cannot be responsible for modifications to our products in the field without direct supervision and testing. The Magnet Wall is proudly made in the USA.
Appropriate for ages 3+
Ideas & Concepts
The Magnet Wall was developed to provide a hands-on, minds-on, open-ended means for experiencing Newton's Laws of Motion. A good first step for adults facilitating play with the Magnet Wall would be a quick review of those three fundamental laws.
Play will come naturally to children, you can be assured! All you need to do is place one ramp on the wall, and the children will be intrigued! Whether you have chosen the indoor or outdoor version, the following information from our teachers in the field should answer many of your questions and help you support children as they play. So keep reading!
IMPORTANT: Do not remove plastic caps from magnets! Doing so will cause severe scratching of the magnetic wall panels.
We cannot be responsible for modifying our products in the field without direct supervision and testing. The Magnet Wall is proudly made in the USA.
From The Kodo Classroom
When it comes to motion, Newton's Three Laws summarize everything you need to know about teaching young children how things move.
I. Every object in a uniform motion tends to remain in that state of motion unless an external force is applied to it.
II. The relationship between an object's mass m, its acceleration a, and the applied force F is F = ma. Acceleration and force are vectors (as indicated by their symbols being displayed in slant bold font); in this law, the direction of the force vector is the same as the direction of the acceleration vector.
III. For every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction.
In other words…
1. A moving object will keep moving in that direction until something physically pushes on it. So, if the ball rolls down the ramp and collides with something, its motion will change.
2. It takes more force to accelerate massive objects. If you placed a bowling ball on the ramp, its mass would be greater than the force pushing up from the ramp, which would cause the bowling ball to push the ramp down and probably hurt everyone's feet. So don't use a bowling ball! If you used a wooden ball on a ramp, the forces pushing on the ball, coupled with the mass of the ball, would make it move forward. If you used a tiny marble on the ramp, its small mass would cause it to accelerate down the ramp quickly because it has much less force than the other forces at work.
3. The third law refers to action and reaction pairs. My force is pushing down on the floor as the floor's force is pushing up on me. The same for the ball. It is pushing down on the ramp, and the ramp is pushing up on it.
Support for Newton's Laws of Motion
The challenge for those of us teaching young children is how to convey all this information to them. Our answer is, don't; it happens naturally! First, by playing and experimenting, your kids gain a deep understanding of how objects interact and move through space. They are learning about motion in a way that prepares them for learning these concepts later in primary and secondary grades. They will never truly understand the Laws of Motion until they have these experiences and see and feel the movement themselves.
Pick a few keywords to work with and incorporate them into the conversation whenever possible. "Did you see that ball whack the other ball?" "Wow, the momentum of that ball transferred a lot of energy to the other ball!" Use complex vocabulary repeatedly. Soon, your children will use "transfer of energy" and more on their own.
Setting Up the Magnet Wall
Initially, place one ramp on the wall and leave several ramps and balls in bins nearby. Place a few balls in the ball-catching tray at the bottom of the wall. Remove all the other parts and add them in after all the children have had a chance to play and move the ramps about. For some programs, this could be hours, days, or weeks. A big part of children's understanding comes with setting it up themselves. Without adults explaining anything, the children will make their own discoveries as they examine the ramps and watch one another play. It is helpful for adults to verbalize and make a record of the children's findings, such as...the ramps have magnets, the wall is magnetic (ferrous), and the ramps can be positioned in many ways.
Challenges for Children - Pose the following:
Make a pathway that includes a ball drop along the way.
Make a pathway that causes the ball to travel uphill at some point along the path.
Make a pathway that zig-zags down the wall, using as much vertical and horizontal space as possible.
Teachers can also add more variables by adding some loose parts. Cardboard mailing tubes, clear pipes, cars, and wooden eggs invite interest. Over time, introduce other types of balls: rubber balls, tennis balls, whiffle balls, golf balls, wool balls, bumpy balls, hacky sacks, and a few that light up.
Key Words
motion, travel, collision, momentum, force, energy, push, pull, forward, backward, speed, trajectory, energy, kinetic energy, accelerate, decelerate, quick, slow, crash, bump, velocity, increase, decrease, stop, rest, continue, pathway, course, system
Q's for children and adults
Do certain ramp positions work better than others?
How will you know if you are successful or if your idea works?
Does speed, slope, or both affect a ball's energy?
Do balls have energy when they are at rest?
How many ways are there to launch the ball?
Who was Sir Isaac Newton? What are the Three Laws of Motion?
What do the words force and momentum do with this magnetic wall and ramp system? Where in the school or library can we find out about these important words?