A Better Use for Rain Project Challenge

This project asks students to research local rainfall conditions, develop an understanding of the problems associated with too much or too little rain, identify a specific problem they want to address, and work toward developing a solution.

Throughout the project, they will use the Engineering Design Process (a series of steps that is helpful to solve a problem) and Project Management (the use of knowledge, skills, tools, and techniques to deliver a product or result) to develop their solution.

Better Use of Rain Challenge Project Image

Overview

Introduction

How can we make better use of rainwater? Right now, engineers all around the world are grappling with this very challenge. Rainfall patterns are shifting; in general, rain is falling less frequently but more intensely. Our changing climate is causing traditionally wet areas to be much wetter and more likely to flood, and it’s turning dry areas into places with lengthy droughts.

Changes in rainfall are revealing other problems. One is that our cities and suburbs are not built to allow rain to follow a natural course. When rain falls moderately and predictably, our storm drains, ditches, and pipes channel rainfall (and other forms of precipitation) without much problem. But these human-made channels don’t recharge aquifers—the permeable layers of rock that hold and filter groundwater. So when huge amounts of rain fall suddenly, flash floods and landslides overwhelm human systems. We are also not prepared to salvage as much rain as possible in places where very little is falling and much of the year has no rain at all.

There’s a lot we can do to use rain for our benefit while lessening its destructive power. After all, we depend on rain! Engineers are learning new ways to manage it by observing natural processes. They are designing porous concrete, rain gardens, swales, and bioretention ponds, among other inventions. And there’s a lot we can do to make better use of scant rain, like harvesting fog.

Your challenge: Identify a problem involving rainfall in your community and design a solution to address it.

 

 

Download Instructions & Project Management Templates

Academic Standards & UN Sustainable Development Goals

This project meets the following Next Gen Science Standards:

  • HS-LS2-7 Ecosystems: Interactions, Energy, and Dynamics

Design, evaluate, and refine a solution for reducing the impacts of human activities on the environment and biodiversity.

  • HS-ESS3-4 Earth and Human Activity

Evaluate or refine a technological solution that reduces impacts of human activities on natural systems.

  • HS-ETS1-2 Engineering Design

Design a solution to a complex real-world problem by breaking it down into smaller, more manageable problems that can be solved through engineering.

  • HS-ETS1-3 Engineering Design

Evaluate a solution to a complex real-world problem based on prioritized criteria and trade-offs that account for a range of constraints, including cost, safety, reliability, and aesthetics as well as possible social, cultural, and environmental impacts.

This project is aligned with the following United Nation’s Sustainable Development Goals:

This activity was developed through the support of the Project Management Institute Educational Foundation.

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