Arizona students construct full-scale ENIAC replica, turning classroom into whale-sized tribute to early computing history


  • Large-scale cardboard ENIAC replica recreates historic computer layout using thousands of hand-crafted parts
  • Teacher Recognizes Dyscalculia-Driven Spatial Reasoning as Key Factor in Construction of Massive Classroom Buildings
  • Students construct nearly 300 square meters of cardboard structure matching original computer dimensions

A full-scale replica of one of the earliest programmable digital computers now fills an Arizona classroom, built almost entirely out of cardboard and wood by students working under a teacher who credits his own dyscalculia (the mathematical equivalent of dyslexia) for shaping how he develops.

Widely considered to be the world’s first programmable general purpose electronic computer, the natural recreation of ENIAC (Electronic Numerical Integrator and Computer) spans hundreds of square meters and reflects the layout of the original machine that once weighed around 30 short tons.

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