Gcse product design revision games
I printed the board in two halves and stuck them together. You can use anything you want for counters. I also printed a pack of cards for each team in the game There are 36 cards in a pack - each with 6 different DT Vocablulary words on - terms in a pack of cards - the chances of the same card coming up for the same colour each time was so low that it meant that they got a greater exposure to the vocabulary they need for the exam!
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A product that meets these standards can display the kitemark. Carbon Footprint. The amount of harmful greenhouse gases produced by manufacturing and using the product. Continuous production. Making large amounts of a product non-stop. Easy and comfortable for people to use. Ferrous metals are ones that contain iron.
Protect a product from dirt and damage and improve its looks. GRams per square meter, the way of showing the 'weight' of paper or board. Comes from trees with broad leaves mainly deciduous trees, eg. International Standards Organisation. They issue certificates to organisations that meet international standards of quality. Covered with a layer of another material. Market Pull. When a product is made due to consumer demand. How companies try to sell their products.
Mass production. Used to produce a large number of identical products on a production line. Matals that do not contain iron. One-off production. Making a single, often unique product. Orthographic projection.
A 2D scale drawing of an object showing the front, plan and end views. Legal protection that prevents people copying the design of a new invention. A full siez, working, one-off model of a design. A prototype is built to allow evaluation of the product before starting manufacturing in quantity. Quality Assurance. The system that is set up to make sure that high quality products are produced. Quality Control. The checks that are carried out on materials and products throughout production to make sure that standards are being met.
A renewable resource is one that can be replaced by natural processes as fast as it is consumed by humans. Smart Materials. A material that changes its properties in response to a change in the environment. Process or material that can be used without causing permananent damage to the environment or using up finite resources. Man made material. Technology Push. When advances in technology drive the design of new products and the redesign of old products.
Materials change colour with heat. Plastics that can be melted and remoulded over and over again. Plastics that undergo chemical changed when heated which makes them hard and rigid. They can't be remoulded.
The margin of error allowed for a measurement of part of a product. They are usally given as an upper and lower limit. Legal protection that prevents people copying the symbols, logos or slogans that represent a company. How a product works. Art Deco. Uses geometric shapes, bright and bold colours and expensive decorative techniques.
Clarice Cliff was a famouse designer of this design movement. Form should follow function. Modern materials and mass production methods were used. Arts and Crafts. William Morris founded this movement. Expensive materials and traditional techniques used to produce highly decorative products. Brand image. Identifies the company who made the product and gives a particular impression of its qualities.
No longer working or useful. Planned obsolescence. Companies deliberately plan to minimise the 'life' of a product in order to maintain sales or future products.
Continuous improvement. Making designs better. Recycle logo. A symbol used to specify different types of recycling destinations. Die cutting. A techniques used in the printing process, involving cutting through with a blade attached to a base. Blister packaging. Using a pre-formed plastic blister and a printed paperboard card which has a heat seal coating.
Exclusive design. Excluding people by failing to meet their needs. Most common form of commercial printing, and works on the principle that water and oil do not mix. Fairtrade products. Products that have been produced under acceptable working conditions and a fair price paid. Product Lifecycle. Explains the impact of a product on the environment, from its raw material through to its disposal. JIT Just-in-Time. Production organised so that the supply of materials is simultaneous with the need.
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