A boot kicks a bowling ball, rolling it down a ramp. The ball knocks over a bowling pin, tugging a rope that swings open a birdcage. More objects bump, crash, and roll, one after another. Finally, a weight drops on a scale, lifting a hand that flips a light switch. Ta-da!
Sound complicated? That’s the point. This wacky device is a Rube Goldberg machine. That’s a contraption engineered to perform a simple task—like flipping a light switch—in a ridiculously complicated way. And every spring, thousands of students compete to build the best ones in Rube Goldberg Machine Contests, held online and at sites around the country.
At Cornerstone Christian Academy in Willoughby, Ohio, two teams of middle school students enter the online contest every year. Seventh-grader Mia Cocca is on one of them. In 2016, her team built a machine that took 45 steps to open an umbrella! They carefully designed every step. “There are so many things you have to get right,” says Mia.
A boot kicks a bowling ball. It rolls down a ramp. The ball knocks over a bowling pin. The pin tugs a rope. That swings open a birdcage. More objects bump, crash, and roll, one after another. Finally, a weight falls on a scale. That makes a hand rise and flip on a light switch. Ta-da!
Sound complicated? That’s the point. This wacky device is a Rube Goldberg machine. This type of gadget is built to perform a simple task, like flipping a light switch. But it does the task in a very complicated way. Rube Goldberg Machine Contests are held online and at sites around the country every spring. Thousands of students compete to build the best ones.
Seventh-grader Mia Cocca is on a team that enters the contest every year. Mia goes to Cornerstone Christian Academy in Willoughby, Ohio. In 2016, her team built a machine that took 45 steps to open an umbrella! They carefully designed every step. “There are so many things you have to get right,” says Mia.