“Every child is an artist” – Pablo Picasso


Designing a Robot Chicken: Where Art Meets STEAM

This week in the art room, we engineered a chicken.

Not a fluffy farm chicken.

A blocky. Structural. Possibly-ready-for-liftoff robot chicken.

And yes — it was one of the best STEAM lessons we’ve done all year.


Step One: Think Like an Engineer

Before we ever talked about color, we talked about structure.

If you look at this robot chicken, you can see the build:

  • A cube head.
  • A rectangular prism body.
  • A projected beak module.
  • Stabilized leg supports.
  • A hinged side wing panel.

Nothing is random. Every part is constructed.

Students weren’t “drawing a chicken.”
They were designing a form using geometric solids.

That’s geometry in action:

  • Faces
  • Edges
  • Vertices
  • Parallel lines
  • Perpendicular intersections

But instead of filling out a worksheet, they were building something.


Science: How Would This Robot Stand?

We asked:

  • Where is the weight?
  • How wide do the feet need to be?
  • Does it look stable?

When students widened the feet or adjusted the legs, they were thinking about balance and center of gravity.

That’s physics sneaking into art class.

And they didn’t even flinch.


Technology: From Pixels to Paper

The Minecraft-style block design is rooted in digital modeling.

We talked about:

  • How 3D video game characters are built from simple forms.
  • How designers construct before they decorate.
  • How digital environments rely on consistent angles.

Students began to see that what they’re doing on dotted paper mirrors how game designers think in space.

Paper became their design software.


Engineering: Solve the Wing Problem

Look closely at that wing.

It’s not flat.

It’s constructed as its own 3D form attached to the body.

Students had to decide:

  • Where does it connect?
  • How far does it extend?
  • Which planes are visible?

That’s engineering design thinking:
Prototype.
Adjust.
Refine.

You can actually see the thinking in the lines.


Art: Bringing It to Life

Then comes the magic.

Once the structure is solid, we introduce value:

  • Top plane = lightest
  • Side plane = medium
  • Underside = darkest

Suddenly, the robot chicken has weight.

Dimension.

Presence.

The red background pushes it forward.
The shading gives it volume.
The beak looks like it could actually bump into something.

That’s visual storytelling layered on top of geometry.


Math Is Everywhere (But It Feels Like Building)

Students measured depth using the dotted paper.
They matched heights.
They aligned edges.
They counted units backward to create consistent perspective.

They were doing proportional reasoning constantly.

But they weren’t asking, “Is this math?”

They were asking, “Does this look right?”

That question is powerful.


Why STEAM Works So Naturally Here

This one project touched:

Science – balance, structure, light
Technology – digital design thinking
Engineering – construction and attachment
Art – composition, shading, creativity
Math – geometry and proportional reasoning

Not in forced ways.

In natural, visible ways.


The Real Win

The biggest shift wasn’t the shading.
It wasn’t the clean lines.

It was the thinking.

Students stopped outlining shapes and started constructing forms.

They weren’t decorating a chicken.

They were designing one.

And when students begin to see themselves as designers, engineers, and problem-solvers?

That’s where the real learning lives.


Rebecca
Growing creative, confident global thinkers through art and design.


Hello,

I inspire creativity, ignite curiosity, and cultivate a love of learning through art and design. My approach blends traditional skills with transdisciplinary and cross-cultural connections — all while keeping the classroom joyful, vibrant, and full of possibility.

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Connecting art and design with culture, STEAM, and inquiry to grow creative, confident global thinkers