- Module 12
Solar Oven
Computer Science/Environmental Science/Technology & Design
Module Identity
TitleSolar OvenSubject AreasScience (Energy/Heat) Mathematics Technology & DesignFormatHands-on engineering design project, physical construction with recycled materials, temperature data collection and graphing, material comparison experiments, H5P interactive activities, FOSSBot-guided instructions, collaborative group workTeacher Preparation Time45-60 minutes (includes gathering materials, preparing H5P activities, setting up FOSSBot instructions, testing solar conditions)Required Lesson Time45 minutesAge Range13-14 years (Grades 7-8, Secondary School)KeywordsSolar Energy, Renewable Energy, Heat Transfer, Greenhouse Effect, Reflection, Absorption, Insulation, Engineering Design Cycle, Temperature Measurement, Data Collection, Graphing, Sustainable Technology, Material Properties, FOSSBotSummaryThis hands-on engineering module transforms students into solar engineers, challenging them to design, build, and optimize functioning solar ovens using simple materials like cardboard boxes, aluminum foil, and plastic wrap. The module brilliantly combines physical construction with digital learning, as FOSSBot serves as both an instruction guide and data recording system. Students explore fundamental heat transfer principles—reflection, absorption, insulation, and the greenhouse effect—not through abstract theory but through tangible experimentation. They construct ovens following the engineering design cycle (plan→build→test→improve), measure temperature changes every 10 minutes, and graph their results to visualize solar energy conversion. The comparative experiments, where groups test different materials (foil vs. plain cardboard), provide immediate, visible proof of which design choices matter. By melting chocolate or softening marshmallows using only sunlight, students experience renewable energy's practical potential while developing skills in data collection, analysis, and evidence-based improvement—making sustainability both scientifically rigorous and deliciously memorable.
Introduction
Solar energy represents one of humanity's most abundant yet underutilized resources, with enough sunlight reaching Earth in one hour to power the entire planet for a year. This module transforms that abstract statistic into a tangible, personal experience by challenging students to harness solar power with nothing more than everyday materials. Through building and testing solar ovens, learners discover that renewable energy isn't just about high-tech solar panels—it's about understanding fundamental principles of energy conversion that can be applied using the simplest tools.
The engineering design approach at the heart of this module mirrors real-world problem-solving processes used by engineers and scientists. Students don't simply follow instructions; they engage in iterative design, testing hypotheses about which materials and configurations work best. When a team's plain cardboard oven reaches only 30°C while the foil-lined version hits 44°C, the principles of reflection and absorption become immediately apparent. This direct comparison eliminates abstraction—students can feel the temperature difference, see the chocolate melt at different rates, and understand viscerally why surface properties matter in energy capture.
The integration of FOSSBot and H5P activities elevates this from a simple craft project to a data-driven scientific investigation. As FOSSBot displays building instructions and records temperature readings, students learn that engineering involves precise measurement and documentation. The digital drag-and-drop activities connecting temperature ranges to cooking observations (25°C→"No cooking yet," 44°C→"Marshmallow melts") reinforce the relationship between quantitative data and qualitative outcomes. By the module's end, students haven't just built a solar oven—they've experienced the complete engineering cycle, understood heat transfer principles, collected and analyzed real data, and connected their learning to global sustainability challenges. This combination of hands-on construction, scientific measurement, and environmental consciousness creates a learning experience that resonates long after the marshmallows have been eaten.Basic Knowledge
- •Basic heat concepts (temperature, heat transfer, insulation)
- •Ability to read a thermometer and record measurements
- •Understanding of basic graphing (x-y axes, plotting points)
- •Familiarity with material properties (reflective, absorbent, transparent)
- •Basic craft skills (cutting, folding, taping)
- •Experience working safely with materials and following instructions
Learning Outcomes
By the end of this module, students will be able to:
Scientific Understanding
- ✓Explain how reflection, absorption, insulation, and transparent covers contribute to solar heating
- ✓Identify how reflectors collect light, black surfaces absorb heat, clear covers trap heat, and insulation retains warmth
- ✓Understand the greenhouse effect in practical applications
- ✓Describe heat transfer mechanisms in solar energy conversion
Engineering Design Skills
- ✓Define measurable design criteria (e.g., reach 60°C or soften chocolate in 10 minutes)
- ✓Build and operate a working solar oven with available materials
- ✓Work within constraints (materials, time, safety)
- ✓Apply the engineering design cycle: plan → build → test → improve
- ✓Propose evidence-based improvements to increase performance
Data Collection & Analysis
- ✓Collect, record, and graph temperature versus time data
- ✓Compare trials and analyze differences between designs
- ✓Interpret temperature-time data (locate start/rise/peak/plateau)
- ✓Draw conclusions from comparative experiments
Sustainability & Real-World Application
- ✓Connect solar cooking to renewable energy and sustainability
- ✓Identify everyday applications of solar energy principles
- ✓Understand the potential and limitations of solar technology
- ✓Apply energy-saving behaviors through idle-off practices
🔧 Construction Steps
- Prepare the box: Cut a flap in the lid, leaving 2-3 cm border
- Cover with foil: Line inside walls and flap with aluminum foil to reflect sunlight
- Place black paper: Line the bottom with black paper to absorb heat
- Seal with plastic: Cover opening with clear plastic wrap to trap heat
- Angle the flap: Adjust foil flap to reflect maximum sunlight into oven
- Ready to test: Place food inside and position in direct sunlight