Sunday, June 12, 2022

Students Explore Engineering and Sustainability through the Future City Competition



The Future City Competition is an engaging, project-based activity that opens the door to middle school students in learning about engineering and sustainability. Students work on teams to design sustainable cities of the future, envisioning a world that they would like to live in. The project encourages creativity and problem solving. I have used it with my middle school students to teach the Next Generation Science Standards (NGSS) related to engineering practices and human impact.

The Future City Competition is open to students in grades six through eight. The season starts in the fall though the theme is announced in late spring. It's exciting to learn about the new theme and start to brainstorm ways of engaging students with it. 

I use the Future City Competition as part of the regular curriculum in seventh-grade science classes. Students start working on the project at the beginning of the school year. I put them in groups of three (four when needed). Groups begin with a team-building exercise such as a three-circle Venn diagram about themselves so that they get to know one another better (see link below). I review the new Future City Competition theme and introduce the deliverables that the teams will be working on. Students continue their work through early winter as they progress through the stages of the engineering design process.

The three main deliverables are an essay describing the design of the city, a physical scale model, and a presentation that uses the model. The model is always a student favorite. It is made primarily of recycled materials and requires creating one or more moving parts. The variety of the deliverables both highlight and develop diverse student strengths, including the ability to understand scientific and engineering concepts, competency in research and writing, the ability to create things with your hands, and presentation skills. Throughout the project, students develop teamwork, problem-solving, and project management skills. I tell students that each team member will bring different talents and strengths that will be helpful to their team at the various stages of the project. (I have recently simplified the city essay by requiring only an outline of the city design for teams not going to competition).

The Future City Competition has regional competitions, often for each state, and winners go on to the national competition. A regional competition may limit the number of teams sent by each school, so many schools have a school-level competition to select teams for the regional competition. Winning at the regional level and going on to the national competition is highly competitive, but there are more accessible prizes in multiple categories that teams may win. Teams from the Museum School have taken home several of these prizes.




Registration for Future City Competition opens in late spring and continues through the fall. Below is a link to get more information and to register.

Future City Competition

Here is a video of a team presenting their city design at the national Future City Competition:

Future City National Finals: Michigan

If you are looking for a team-building activity, follow this link to a blogpost on Venn diagrams:


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4 comments:

  1. I always wondered about those mini cities set out in the courtyard. Thanks for sharing Amy. And love the team building skills involved

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  2. Thanks for your interest in the project and for your feedback, Priscilla!

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  3. This is so wild- school is not like what is was when I was a kid! Very impressive, Amy!!

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  4. Thanks, Andrea! Yes, I'm glad that another teacher introduced me to this project because I think that the students get a lot out of it.

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