My 50 possible problems:
I want to make a pencil holder because I thought it would be cool for a first project.
I made a pencil holder which gone wrong and came out tiny. I needed detail for the pencil holder so I added bubbles, my name, and a mini wind mill. What I learned from project 1 was that 3-D printing is interesting. This is because when you make a holder of some sorts, it may look big on the screen but now with out realizing it, it isn't. But at the end of the day I can say that I 3-D printed and I have evidence that I did 3-D print. The most struggling situation through out till the end of the project was putting my name on the mini holder. The angles and moving of the name tag made me felt annoyed. but with the help of my friend Ethan, he helped my shape the tag correctly and then I placed it all by myself onto the holder. What I would to differently if I had a choice was make the mini holder into a big holder for pencils. what I gained from this project is to 3-D print better and understanding of what i'm missing in the project. A career that would be interesting for me with 3-D printing would be the one to make a great 3-D printed car business. How I became more of a Empowered Learner for project 1 was that when things look big on the screen for you make them bigger just in case. I became more of an Digital Citizen by not detracting friends and working on my project instead. How I became more of an Knowledge Constructor by using tutorials and videos that helped me understanding what i'm was going to make and how was that going to happen. Now i'm even more of a Global Collaborator because when Ethan helped me with a part of my project so I decided to help him with his problem with his project, I showed him where the tool were, and after he solved his problem his 3-D model looked better.