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Student Notable

Design for Social Impact Award

Core77 Design Awards 2016

Results Announced for Community Choice Prize See All Winners

Arte Para Todos

Arte Para Todos was designed to help kids who have trouble with gripping drawing implements and holding them steady to draw independently. This device can also be used for physical therapy, as the stretching movement required to draw is necessary to keep kids with CP limber. This device was designed and fabricated at NuVu in Cambridge, Massachusetts. The students received feedback at Instituto Nuevo Amanecer from kids and physical therapists and then reworked their projects at Monterrey, Tec.

I am submitting this entry on behalf of Alea Laidlaw, Oliver Geller and Seth Isaacson NuVu for a trimester. I am a "Coach" (what we call teachers) at NuVu Studio, a full-time innovation school for middle and high school students in Cambridge, Massachusetts. Last winter, we worked with an organization in Monterrey, Mexico called Instituto Nuevo Amanecer to create devices and wearables to help kids with Cerebral Palsy. Javier Leal of Mas Libertad Menos Barreras and I ran the studio called "Easing Cerebral Palsy". The students spent two, two-week studios working full-time on this project at NuVu and then travelled to Monterrey for a week to work with kids with Cerebral Palsy. While in Monterrey, the studio collaborated with students at Monterrey Tec to progress their projects.

Seth, Alea and Oliver wrote the following:

Many people with cerebral palsy have difficulty grasping and accurately controlling writing implements due to their lack of fine motor controls, thus diminishing their ability to draw and write. In many cases, children with cerebral palsy have muscles which are constantly under tension. This is painful and makes fine motor control difficult and even impossible.

Our solution to this common problem was to create a user-friendly writing aid for children who lack fine motor control, especially those with cerebral palsy. Drawing and writing can be a very mentally rewarding process, and we wanted to give kids without fine motor control the ability to draw and potentially even write. Furthermore, the act of using this tool can be beneficial to users' physical health as it stresses the muscles which are often under tension.

Throughout the process of designing this writing aid, our primary goal was to create an adjustable and comfortable writing and drawing tool for people living with cerebral palsy. We wanted to allow users to select from a variety of mediums, including pencils, pens, markers, etcetera. By securing the user's arm into a brace, we aimed to assist reduce the effects of tremors. Also, this brace would allow the user to use their entire upper body to control the device instead of just their hand. This is useful for users who have gross motor control, but lack fine motor control. Finally, we aimed to provide a physically therapeutic experience to users by stretching out muscles which are often tense in severe cases of cerebral palsy.

Our design was primarily made up of a two dimensional tracking system which guides the movement of the user's arm using a rhombus of steel pipes. The joints between the pipes use rubber washers to provide adjustable resistance. At one end of this tracking system is an arm brace which secures the user's arm. Attached to the arm brace is a hand rest for added comfort and the pencil holder which can secure a wide range of writing utensils. Finally, there is a grip which the user's secondary hand can grasp for added leverage.

While we were at Instituto Nuevo Amanecer we had an amazing experience with one kid who hadn't been able to draw until we gave him the device.

Jury Commentary
We were drawn to how closely it was developed with its client/user, and the attention given to a specific need.
We can see this project being pushed into the market and loved the clever integration of simple components.
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Results Announced for Community Choice Prize See All Winners
  • Honoree

    Alea Laidlaw, Oliver Geller, Seth Isaacson

  • School

    NuVu Studio

  • Project Team

    Alea Laidlaw (Grade 11), Oliver Geller (Grade 10), Seth Isaacson (Grade 10)

  • Category

    Design for Social Impact

  • View More Information
    x Website

Design for Social Impact Award See All Honorees

Core77 Design Awards 2016

  • Winner

    WonderSphere

    By Bresslergroup

  • Runner Up

    Divas: A Teen-Centric Approach to Sexual Health Services

    By IDEO.org

  • Community Choice Prize
    Notable

    Ilima Primary School

    By MASS Design Group

  • Student Winner

    Skills Vest

    By Devin Lewtan and Noah Saldana

See All Honorees

Core77 Design Awards 2016

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