Internet links
Cracking idea by Cambridgeshire school makes it best for innovation
A machine which automatically walks and feeds your dog designed by pupils at a Brampton school has come out on top in prestigious competition to find the inventors of the future.
The ‘Dog It All’ designed by Year Five pupils at Brampton Village Primary School has been chosen as the Midlands and East winner of the 2007 Cracking Ideas project. They will now battle it out with five other schools from around the country for the national title.
Cracking Ideas is fronted by Oscar® winning inventors Wallace & Gromit, and is the biggest government backed project of its type. The search is now on for the 2008 innovators.
During the summer term children and teachers around the UK were logging onto www.crackingideas.com
and following lessons plans linked with the national curriculum and designed to encourage innovation.
The classroom activities included a competition where the nine and ten-year-old pupils used everyday objects to create an invention – a solution to an everyday problem they had encountered.
The pupils from Brampton Village Primary came up with a model to make walking and feeding your dog a lot easier and one that is sure to appeal to Gromit. The invention takes the idea of an ordinary running machine a step further. There is a bar at the end with a bone to encourage the dog to keep going. Two large tanks dispense food and water when the Dog It All has stopped. Cling film, bottle tops and crisp containers have all been used for this machine.
The Cracking Ideas project was developed by the UK Intellectual Property Office which encourages innovation and processes patent and trade mark applications. The success of the competition means it will be run again this year.
Amongst Brampton Village Primary School’s prizes is a lap top computer. If they are successful in the national competition they will be presented with an original trophy by Aardman Animations, creator of Wallace & Gromit.
Jacqui Watkins, head teacher of Brampton Village Primary School, said the Year Five pupils had worked hard to come up with the winning entry.
"This was a fantastic initiative and a great way to bring learning to life and show children how important innovation is. We are really pleased to have won the regional competition and hope we have come up with the cracking idea that will win the national title," she said.
Intellectual Property and Quality Minister Lord Triesman, said the standard of entries was high.
"Cracking Ideas has successfully brought innovation into the classroom and has been a tremendous success."
"Brampton Village Primary has shown how primary school children can be great innovators and we are looking forward to seeing more of this in the future," he said.
More information on Cracking Ideas can be found at www.crackingideas.com ![]()
Date of release: 12 October 2007