Traditionally, April in Washington D.C. means cherry blossoms and students arriving for their spring trips to our nation’s capital. One of the hallmark stops for these school visits is the Draper Spark!Lab located in the Smithsonian’s National Museum of American History where kids can spend time playing and inventing with hands-on activities. While at Spark!Lab, visitors are empowered to believe that everyone is inventive in some way. At a time when staying home is essential to public health, distance learning has become the norm, with educators, parents and students alike looking to online resources as essential ways to learn, play, and explore. And the Spark!Lab is no different!

Located in the Smithsonian’s National Museum of American History, kids visit the Spark!Lab to play and invent through hands-on activities. Currently, all museum spaces are indefinitely closed.
Tinkercad users can also create their own designs using some of the most famous Smithsonian artifacts. This past February, the Smithsonian contributed hundreds of 3D scans of historical artifacts into the Creative Commons through the Smithsonian Open Access Initiative. Autodesk collaborated with the Smithsonian to include a portion of this collection inside Tinkercad’s 3D editor. Now, users can access the woolly mammoth, Morse telegraph, Apollo 11 command module, and more, all from the editor’s dropdown list – just look for the Smithsonian label.

From a woolly mammoth to the Apollo 11 command module, kids can bring some of the most famous Smithsonian artifacts into their designs.
Beyond the new invention lessons from Spark!Lab and the Smithsonian collection in Tinkercad, Autodesk has curated additional resources for educators, students, and parents to support distance learning, including online instruction that can be seamlessly integrated into an educator’s curriculum, self-paced courses, and projects to supplement classwork.