Science Task Prescreen

Task Title: The Egg Drop Challenge: Minimizing Collision Forces

Grade: High School

Date: April 19, 2026

SEP: Constructing Explanations and Designing Solutions

DCI: PS2.A: Forces and Motion; ETS1.C: Optimizing the Design Solution

CCC: Cause and Effect

Task Purpose: To assess students’ ability to use scientific principles (impulse, momentum, energy) to design and refine a collision-mitigation device within a simulation environment.

Instructions

Prescreen Questionnaire

Question Yes No
1. Is there a phenomenon or problem driving the task? [X] [ ] 🚩
2. Can the majority of the task be answered without using information provided by the task scenario? [ ] 🚩 [X]
3. Can significant portions of the task be answered successfully by using rote knowledge (e.g., definitions, prescriptive or memorized procedure)? [ ] 🚩 [X]
4. Does the majority of the task require students to use reasoning to successfully complete the task? [X] [ ] 🚩
5. Does the task require students to use some understanding of disciplinary core ideas to successfully complete the task? [X] [ ] 🚩
6. Do students have to use at least one science and engineering practice to successfully complete the task? [X] [ ] 🚩
7. Are the dimensions assessed separately in the majority of the task? [ ] 🚩 [X]
8. Is the task coherent and comprehensible from the student perspective? [X] [ ] 🚩

Recommendation

Based on your assessment needs and the task purpose recorded above, make a recommendation about this task moving forward (choose one):

Summary

Summarize your evidence and reasoning:

The task is driven by a clear engineering problem (protecting a payload) that requires the use of a simulation to collect data. Students must reason through the relationship between material stiffness, compression distance (thickness), and peak force to design an optimal solution. It effectively integrates the SEP of designing solutions with the DCI of force and motion.