Kid Inventors
Kid Inventors - Whiz kid inventors, If you thought kids were only good at inventing excuses to avoid chores, think again. These teens and tweens are the minds behind some revolutionary products from household staples to cool niche novelties to an entire method of communicating.
Joseph-Armand Bombardier
Hailing from the Great White North, this young mechanics fanatic designed a prototype to help navigate the local terrain: a snowmobile. What scraps did he use to make it?
Louis Braille
Blinded at an early age (how'd it happen?), Braille devised the well-known system of reading and writing for the visually impaired in 1824.
Sarah Buckel
Buckel's idea magnetic locker wallpaper gave students a boost of schoolhouse style, put her dad's biz on the map and helped her earn some serious pocket change.
Frank Epperson
Summers got a lot cooler thanks to Epperson's accidental 1905 invention, the Popsicle.
Philo Farnsworth
Talk about extra credit: In the early 1920s, farm boy Farnsworth showed his chemistry teacher a bright idea, a stepping-stone for making the first electronic television.
Chester Greenwood
Though he didn't acquire a patent until 1877, Greenwood created earmuffs in 1873, when he was still wet behind the ears. His hometown became the Earmuff Capital of the World.
Param Jaggi
Jaggi thought about more than just joyrides when he looked at cars; he designed the Algae-Mobile 3 to help make them more eco-friendly
Elizabeth Nathan & Gabriella Pollack
This New York City dynamic duo came up with their nonreusable syringe in 1995 to help curb a major health issue.
Ryan Patterson
Patterson got the idea for the sign language translator glove in 2002 while he was getting "brain food"
Tharon Trujillo
Trujillo's Lock-N-Block Safety Gate was inspired by an in-home incident. Find out what happened.
Joseph-Armand Bombardier
Hailing from the Great White North, this young mechanics fanatic designed a prototype to help navigate the local terrain: a snowmobile. What scraps did he use to make it?
Louis Braille
Blinded at an early age (how'd it happen?), Braille devised the well-known system of reading and writing for the visually impaired in 1824.
Sarah Buckel
Buckel's idea magnetic locker wallpaper gave students a boost of schoolhouse style, put her dad's biz on the map and helped her earn some serious pocket change.
Frank Epperson
Summers got a lot cooler thanks to Epperson's accidental 1905 invention, the Popsicle.
Philo Farnsworth
Talk about extra credit: In the early 1920s, farm boy Farnsworth showed his chemistry teacher a bright idea, a stepping-stone for making the first electronic television.
Chester Greenwood
Though he didn't acquire a patent until 1877, Greenwood created earmuffs in 1873, when he was still wet behind the ears. His hometown became the Earmuff Capital of the World.
Param Jaggi
Jaggi thought about more than just joyrides when he looked at cars; he designed the Algae-Mobile 3 to help make them more eco-friendly
Elizabeth Nathan & Gabriella Pollack
This New York City dynamic duo came up with their nonreusable syringe in 1995 to help curb a major health issue.
Ryan Patterson
Patterson got the idea for the sign language translator glove in 2002 while he was getting "brain food"
Tharon Trujillo
Trujillo's Lock-N-Block Safety Gate was inspired by an in-home incident. Find out what happened.
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