Aim:
To create a meaningful drone design based on a real-world use case using empathy and creativity.
Requirements:
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Chart paper or A3 drawing sheet
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Sketch pencils, colors, and markers
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Brainstorm worksheet (for listing user challenges)
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Reference images of real drones (optional)
Steps:
Step 1 – Choose Your User
Pick one user category:
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Farmer
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Doctor
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Delivery agent
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Rescue worker
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Environmentalist
Think: What problems does this person face every day?
Example: A doctor may struggle to reach patients during floods.
Step 2 – Identify the Challenge
List 2–3 problems your user faces.
Example for a farmer:
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Fields are too large to inspect daily.
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Pesticide spraying is time-consuming and unsafe.
Engineers start by understanding pain points before designing.
Step 3 – Imagine Your Drone
Think of how a drone could solve one or more of these problems.
Ask yourself:
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What should my drone be able to do? (deliver, spray, map, lift)
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What special features will it have? (camera, sensor, hook, thermal scanner)
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What size and shape will it be?
Step 4 – Sketch the Concept
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Draw your drone with labeled parts and functions.
Example: Propellers, camera, delivery box, sensors, GPS module. -
Write a short paragraph describing how it works.
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Add color or shading to make it visual and clear.
Tip: Label every innovation feature (like “foldable arms” or “solar-powered battery”).
Step 5 – Present to Class
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Share your drone design and tell your classmates:
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Who it helps.
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What problem it solves.
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Why it’s meaningful.
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Optionally, vote for the most creative or useful idea.
Example Concept: “AgroFly 3000”
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User: Farmer
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Problem: Manual crop spraying is time-consuming and unsafe.
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Solution: AgroFly 3000 uses sensors to detect crop health and spray pesticide evenly.
Features: Solar charging, auto-return, weather sensors.