
Standards Alignment Guide
Why Compressed Air Rockets Are Perfect for Standards-Based Learning
Compressed air rockets integrate physics, mathematics, and engineering design. Every launch generates real data. Every design choice has measurable consequences. Students don't just learn about Newton's Laws - they experience them.
Kindergarten through Grade 2
Ages 5-7Key Concepts Students Explore
- Pushes and pulls make things move
- Bigger push = goes farther/higher
- Comparing distances
- Basic cause and effect
- Design choices matter
- Counting and measuring
NGSS - Forces and Motion
| Code | Standard | How Rockets Address This |
|---|---|---|
| K-PS2-1 | Plan and conduct an investigation to compare the effects of different strengths or directions of pushes and pulls on an object's motion. | Students pump the launcher different numbers of times and observe effects on flight. |
| K-PS2-2 | Analyze data to determine if a design solution works as intended to change speed or direction of an object. | Students test different fin shapes and nose cones to see which rockets fly straighter. |
NGSS - Engineering Design
| Code | Standard | How Rockets Address This |
|---|---|---|
| K-2-ETS1-1 | Ask questions to define a simple problem that can be solved through development of a new object. | "How can we make a rocket that flies really far?" Students explore the challenge. |
| K-2-ETS1-2 | Develop a simple sketch or physical model to illustrate how an object's shape helps it function. | Students draw rocket designs and explain why they chose certain shapes. |
| K-2-ETS1-3 | Analyze data from tests of objects to determine if they work as intended. | Students compare which rockets flew farthest and discuss why. |
Common Core Math
| Code | Standard | How Rockets Address This |
|---|---|---|
| K.MD.1 | Describe measurable attributes of objects (length, weight, height). | Describe rockets: "This one is longer," "That one is heavier." |
| K.MD.2 | Directly compare two objects with a measurable attribute. | Compare flight distances: "Your rocket went farther than mine." |
| 1.MD.2 | Express the length of an object as a whole number of length units. | Measure flight distance using footsteps or blocks. |
| 2.MD.1 | Measure the length of an object using appropriate tools. | Use tape measures to record flight distances in feet or meters. |