Apparently a little engineering know-how and a lot of free time is all it takes to turn what was previously sci-fi fantasy into real-world reality. Japan's Sakakibara Kikai has created a mechanical suit, not unlike the one worn by Sigourney Weaver's character Ellen Ripley in the film Aliens.
While the feat of engineering is impressive, the fact that is specifically designed for children to use makes every single Christmas gift ever given pale in comparison.
As reported by CNet, the suit, dubbed the Kid's Walker Cyclops, is "an 800-pound, 7-foot-tall drivable mecha suit with a cockpit and moving arms. The front of the machine opens to become a ladder to the cockpit. As seen in the vid below, one hand has a hook to grapple foes and the other has a power drill to smite obstacles. The weapons are controlled by rotating the handles in the cockpit, which has room for one child. The battery-operated mecha has wheels under its feet but moves in a shuffling motion."
Education World®
Copyright © 2013 Education World
“Most children are taught early on that thinking is dangerous,” (Hooks, 2010, p.8).
Please answer the following questions on a sheet of paper or mentally if you prefer:
I have always been fascinated in Amelia Earhart. Earhart was one of the first biographies I remember reading in grade school. She was such a role model as I was growing up. She showed that a woman was capable of doing anything she set her mind to doing!
Over the years I have been following Richard Gillespie’s TIGHAR (The International Group for Historic Aircraft Recovery) attempts to discover what happened to Earhart and her co-pilot, Fred Noonan, when they disappeared somewhere over...
It was on November 4, 1922, that Howard Carter uncovered the tomb of Tutankhamun!
Lord Carnarvon was bitten by a mosquito, while in Egypt and died days later. It is said that the lights in Cairo, Egypt, went out when Carnarvon died. Also, back in London, his dog is said to have...
In last week’s post, I covered the four authority bases that teachers use to influence student behavior. This week, I will further the discussion by presenting three different models of classroom discipline. By learning and understanding these three very different models, you can examine your own practices, comparing them to see where they “fall” in relationship to the models, and possibly make...
![]()
How do school communities best support teachers, students, and parents in their efforts to promote healthy, happy learners? Is learning more productive in communities that are promoting well-being for all? An OECD/PISA study...
![]()
The 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development calls on countries to begin efforts to achieve the 17 SDGs over the next 15 years. Sustainable Development Goal No. 4 advocates for inclusive and equitable quality education and lifelong learning opportunities for all.
Youth unemployment...
As a teacher, have you ever expected students to listen to you just because you’re the teacher? They’re supposed to listen to the teacher, you think. Or maybe you expect them to pay attention because you know your content so well. You have a master’s degree in math or science instruction. You might have noticed that certain students listen and behave better for you after you began to know them better. You invited them to lunch, praised them in class then they...

Amazing Pumpkin Facts!
by Gail Skroback Hennessey
Click here for a downloadable version: https://www.teacherspayteachers.com/Product/PUMPKIN-FACTS-1482068
![]()
![]()
What can we learn from the teaching and learning practices of mathematics —...