Toys, failures and fun: Inventor visits Kent school

Rick “Mr. Toymaker” Hartman

Rick “Mr. Toymaker” Hartman

One by one the signs appeared, all about science and inventing.

“Science is messy” read one.

“Doesn’t always work” read another.

But as Rick Hartman, also known as Mr. Toymaker, pulled out the 10 signs one by one, he placed them in a specific order on the large wooden structure at the front of the East Hill Elementary School gymnasium, the signs transformed into “The Gears of Invention,” urging kids to use science and math to create new inventions.

Hartman, a former teacher who holds several patents for toys he’s created, also told the kids tales of his own failures – and those of famous inventors – to encourage them to keep trying.

“The toys that I made didn’t start out in shiny packaging,” he told the more than 600 elementary school kids assembled for part of an all-day program that included toy-making in the morning and an evening session for families.

Hartman started by telling the tale of his first invention, an old can filled with dirt, water, glue and wire that he hoped would turn itself into a radio with which he could hear aliens.

It didn’t work, of course, but the students were enrapt, watching him squeeze glue onto the disgusting concoction.

And along with the messy fun, Hartman had a message.

“I didn’t realize there was any science going on in that crazy experiment,” he said, using it as an example of simply trying something new.

Later, he talked about how some “silly ideas” become great inventions.

“Sometimes you can have an idea that doesn’t work out, but it leads to another idea,” he said.

Before his show, Hartman said his goal was “integrating science and math in a fun, real-life context for kids.”

And throughout the performance, Hartman kept referring back to mathematical principles, like when he asked the kids if they noticed any patterns as he tried to get two gears to both spin at the same rate.

“Boys and girls, you just saw what we call a ‘fraction in action,’” he said.

By the end of the performance, all 10 gears were in place and Hartman pulled a student out of the audience to crank the “Everyone Invents” gear and turn all 10 signs at once.

This is the eighth year Hartman has done his show at East Hill, according to principal Kyle Good.

“We like to show kids there’s a link between math, science and literacy,” Good said.

Good said he hoped Hartman’s show inspired kids to be creative and build inventions of their own.

“Anyone can do it!” he said.

For more information on Rick Hartman, visit www.toyworkshop.com


Talk to us

Please share your story tips by emailing editor@kentreporter.com.

To share your opinion for publication, submit a letter through our website https://www.kentreporter.com/submit-letter/. Include your name, address and daytime phone number. (We’ll only publish your name and hometown.) Please keep letters to 300 words or less.

More in News

Capt. Brandon Minneman. COURTESY PHOTO, Puget Sound Fire
Procession set July 18 in Kent for fallen fire Capt. Brandon Minneman

Will go from 11:10 to 11:50 a.m. from Puget Sound Fire Station 75 to Renton church

File Photo, Kent Reporter
Kent Police arrest man as suspect in fatal shootings at apartment complex

Kent man, 51, taken into custody July 16 after man and woman killed July 14

Maleng Regional Justice Center in Kent. FILE PHOTO, Kent Reporter
Man found not guilty in Kent fatal shooting of mother’s boyfriend

Jury agrees with self-defense argument to aid his mother after son witnessed years of abuse

File Photo, Kent Reporter
Man, woman fatally shot at Kent apartment complex

Kent Police trying to determine what led up to shooting Monday night, July 14 on East Hill

t
New Veterans Drive tunnel under I-5 in Kent to open to traffic

Tunnel opens July 16 to give drivers another option rather than SR 516 interchange

St. Francis Hospital in Federal Way. Courtesy photo
Medicaid cuts projected to heavily impact, strain local hospitals

84 hospitals across the state — including those in Renton, Federal Way, Auburn, Snoqualmie, Enumclaw and more — are expected to continually lose millions in Medicaid revenue.

t
Man, 19, pleads guilty to 2024 crash that killed Kent baby

Faces sentence for vehicular homicide in death of 21-month-old boy along SR 18 in Maple Valley

t
Kent-based UTOPIA Washington partners with Seattle nonprofit

HealthierHere announces 4 new partnerships to help residents get essential health and social services

t
King County buys building for new Kent animal shelter

Plans to close current site in Kent and move 2 miles north in 2027 at cost of $19.5 million

Courtesy Photo, Kent Cornucopia Days
Street list closure for Kent Cornucopia Days

Downtown streets to close Thursday evening, July 10 through Sunday night, July 13

COURTESY PHOTO, ShoWare Center
The city-owned accesso ShoWare Center in Kent continues to lose money, including about $2.5 million over the last three years.
City of Kent-owned ShoWare Center loses $1 million in 2024

Record-high operating loss since arena opened in 2009; city covers losses from its general fund

Kent Police officers examine a black 2013 Chevrolet Camaro after it crashed July 7 into a day care facility along East Smith Street. COURTESY PHOTO, Puget Sound Fire
Man, 42, could face vehicular assault charge in Kent crash

Federal Way man driving westbound down Smith hill when Chevy Camaro crashed into building