Category Archives: Safety

Teacher Tip: First Aid Kit & Safety Equipment

I live a blessed life.  In the past eight quarters as a woodshop teacher (and going on one quarter as a chemistry/biology/mad science teacher) I have had four injury reports.  Not the best record, but not the worst.  During set-up this year, I ordered first aid kit for all the tool-heavy classrooms – gardening center, woodshop, chemistry/science lab & art class.  I also re-fitted my own space (my shop first aid kit keeps becoming the house’s first aid kit) with some important new tools and the accompanying pieces of safety equipment.

So what safety equipment do I use?

Home Workshop:

School Workshop:

  • Smocks
  • Safety Glasses
  • Work Gloves
  • Hearing Protection
  • First Aid Kit

Science Lab/Electronic Hackspace:

  • Goggles
  • Lab Gloves
  • Sharps/Glassware Garbage Can
  • First Aid Kit
  • Eye Wash

I’ve linked up to the more exotic workshop helpers.  I figure the other items are self-explanatory.  If I’m missing something, please comment and help me out!

Make it same & keep the rubberside down this week!

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This Week in the Shop: Fixing a Broken Jet Table Saw Fence

In the classroom, I stress safety at all times.  After a few incidents my first year as a woodworking teacher, I changed the way I teach sawing.  This year, as I’m teaching brand-new students to woodworking, I’m starting from scratch.  At home, I apply the same principle.  This blog post, though, revolves around a fact of woodworking:  it is a risky activity, even when you do everything right.

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Parenting: On Making Kids Who Make Stuff

1. Determine your child’s level of interest. A child who’s fascinated by tools or electrical equipment typically demonstrates an almost obsessive interest in them, pays attention, takes direction well, and instinctively focuses on the job at hand. I’ve taught soldering to children as young as eight, and their ability to concentrate is astonishing.

If you’re a DIY enthusiast have a basement tool-and-gadget area, let your child see the fruits of working with these objects and identify with what Mom or Dad does to fix or make things. If you sense your child’s delight in imagining similar creative endeavors, then buying a kit could be a good idea.

via MAKE | 5 Safety Tips for Your Child’s First Tool and Electronic Kits.

Some interesting advice from the folks over at Make a few weeks ago on how to get a kid interested in “making” endeavors.  They have some great advice on how to create parent/child connections involving the electronics hobby.  The advice works for almost any “making” type hobby – building cars to soldering lines to writing computer code to crafting quilts or woodworking.

I am chuckling a bit to myself about the description of a kid who’s “interested” in electronics.  He’s not describing most children – he’s describing kid with an already well-developed, probably two or three year long love affair with a hobby or activity, the type of kid who turns these childhood obsessions into careers (well, look who’s blogging!  I’m willing to bet his description is as much the kids he’s taught as a autobiographical account of his childhood).

My experience tells me it’s a rare child or teen who has a true steady interest in anything.  Children burn through hobbies, interests, book genres, authors, music styles, clothing styles, hair styles, friends and academic success like wildfires through California in a drought with high winds.

Children are made to experiment with themselves – the selves they make now become the self they will be.  Your kid may like Thomas the Tank Engine for months, but when you finish the Thomas the Tank Engine bed, he’s become a nut for dragons  and monsters.  Maybe your sweet teen comes home with a sweet mohawk and some new friends with sweet sense of punk rock.  Your eight year old quits experimenting with being a victim of bullying and experiments being the bully.  Perhaps your son has always loved playing in the garage and suddenly finds a passion in the kitchen.

These changes are normal.  Nothing to sweat too much over, nothing we can do to change it.  Our job, as I see it, is to make the experiment worth something.  If a kid tries learning electronics, they learn skills – logic, perseverance, soldering and debugging – which they can take into other endeavors.  The teen sees the world as an outcast and maybe becomes more accepting of differences.  The child becomes repulsed by their actions and becomes an advocate for playground fairness and justice.  As an adult, both as a teacher, parent and maker-mentor, my job so often is to help my students find the value in their experiences, not judge the experience from my own set of semi-settled values.

So, to sum it up.  When your kid wants to give woodworking or whichever hobby you participate in, be grateful they asked.   Show them what you do.  Then don’t be surprised if she or he changes his mind.  Just be happy for the moments you steal away from the drumbeat of family for the swish of a chisel.

Make it safe & keep the rubberside down this week.

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This Week in the Shop: Plywood Storage & Lights & New Workbench

Since I moved into my new digs in April, my shop has undergone a number of changes.  I blogged about the move-in and of course I went and changed it immediately.

First, a couple bright spots.  Not long after I unloaded everything I realized two very important things about home ownership.  One, you can put holes in whichever wall you want, where ever you want, when you want.  Two, it’s expensive.  But not these lights.  Remember to buy the bulbs and make sure you wire’m up according to  fire code.  I’m a midnight rider now.

My new bench looks a bit beaten in today, but it works great for three months of use.  I made some terrible looking mortise-and-tenon joints at each leg, but 3/4″ pegs have kept it tight and square.  The top is very light – only one sheet of 3/4″ oak ply – so I used 1″ pine strips as reinforcement.  My cheap vise completes the look.  I never really meant to build this bench.  I mean to build a Roubo handtool bench before next summer.  I mean to build my wife a  Craftsmen-style bench.  I mean to do a lot of things.  Which means I’ll have this bench for the next ten years…

Last, but most importantly, new storage for lumber.  I don’t make a lot of things (at least compared to retired guys and professionals) and what I do make tends to be salvaged lumber.  I needed a small place to store lumber for two or three months worth of projects at a time.  Something mobile, something easily organized, something limited.  I’ve always admired the one at work, so I built my own.  You can find plans for a similar cart here.

Make it safe & keep the rubber side down this weekend.

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Student-Built Seesaw (He see-d, he saw-ed, he fell down)

Yesterday, we completed a physics demonstration: The adjustable see-saw.  This seesaw has holes drilled into the balancing beam, allowing students/users to experiment with the capabilities of numerous levers.  You just shift its position along the beam and viola!  Instantly, a foolish grin hits your face as you try to balance anew.

More pictures after the jump…

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Safety in the Shop: Other People’s Tools

This weekend I attended a welding class.  I’m trying to get some practice laying beads with a MIG welder.  A major safety hazard of welding is being “flashed” by the spark of electricity between the machine and workpiece.  “Flashing” means the brightness of the arc has burned your retinas and can cause severe eye irritation, temporary blindness, redness, etc.  You avoid this by wearing a proper welding helmet and warning bystanders that you will start welding.

I, of course, got flashed this weekend.

The fault wasn’t “my own”.  Meaning it wasn’t my personal action which cause the flash.  I kept my eyes away from the arc and such.  But I failed to examine my helmet – someone had “repaired” the helmet using zip-ties to hold the visor in place.  Which meant holes and such in the lens, which meant that as I welded parts together….I flashed myself.

In a way though, the fault was my own.  It’s my responsibility to examine my tools and equipment before I use them.  It’s my job to protect myself from injury.  So always examine your tools and equipment – especially if some other yokel uses it or owns it.

Make it safe & keep the rubber side down this weekend.

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Community Watch: Lie Nielson Toolworks Show, Oct. 21st-22nd

I took my students to the Lie-Nielson Toolworks show being held at the Kellogg Furniture Studio on Fri, Oct. 21st.  My students were able to use some pretty expensive and sweet-working tools from Lie-Nielson and Glen-Drake tools were there.  I especially got a thrill watching a student get pointers from the man that created the tool…

Make it safe and keep the rubber side down this weekend.

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Current Projects: The Butterfly Chair

One of my woodshop classes have ended for the week, so I took the opportunity to document the progress:

David Marsh eat your heart out! I'll get a better picture when the piece is finished

And this is what happens when a student ticks me off! (ok, ok, I was pulling a big nail with a small hammer…)

Sete Peeger: The Pete Seeger Knock-Off or Why Children Wear Safety Glasses While Hammering

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Teaching New Techniques in the Woodshop

In the Masterclass, I had the oppurtunity to bring out my rasps. What a successful technique for my students to make matched part! I usually have to show a technique two or three times before a student picks it up – but this was pretty intuitive. I’m defnetely reworking the tool list: should I add Nicholson or Auriou?

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