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Activity 002: SDS Reading and Emergency Response Drill

Activity ID: U2M2-ACT-002 Duration: 40 minutes Objective: Students will practice reading Safety Data Sheets for resin products and demonstrate correct emergency response procedures for common resin lab incidents. Group Size: 2-3 students per station Materials Cost: ~$0 (printed SDS documents, no consumables)

Overview

Students work through a structured SDS scavenger hunt to learn how to quickly find critical safety information, then participate in tabletop emergency response scenarios and a hands-on eyewash station drill. This activity ensures every student can respond correctly to resin-related incidents before they begin working with actual resin.

Materials & Equipment Needed

  • Printed SDS documents for 2-3 different resin products (different manufacturers)
  • Printed SDS for IPA (isopropyl alcohol)
  • SDS scavenger hunt worksheet
  • Emergency scenario cards (6 scenarios, printed and laminated)
  • Eyewash station (functional, for live drill)
  • Timer/stopwatch
  • Paper towels (for eyewash drill cleanup)

Instructions & Procedure

Phase 1: SDS Scavenger Hunt (15 min) 1. Distribute SDS documents and scavenger hunt worksheets 2. Students must find and record the following information for each product: - Section 1: Product name, manufacturer, emergency phone number - Section 2: GHS hazard pictograms, signal word, hazard statements - Section 4: First aid measures for each exposure route (skin, eye, inhalation, ingestion) - Section 5: Fire-fighting measures — what type of extinguisher is required? - Section 7: Storage conditions — temperature range, light sensitivity - Section 8: PPE requirements — glove material, eye protection type, ventilation requirements - Section 11: Health effects — acute and chronic 3. Compare answers between the 2-3 different resin products: - Are the hazard classifications the same or different? - Do different brands require different PPE? - Which product has the most severe hazard profile? 4. Time challenge: after completing the scavenger hunt, students must find the eye contact first aid procedure within 15 seconds (simulating an emergency)

Phase 2: Tabletop Emergency Scenarios (15 min) 5. Each group draws 3 emergency scenario cards from the deck (6 total scenarios available): - Scenario A: Student gets resin on bare hands while removing a print without gloves - Scenario B: IPA container is knocked over, spilling 200mL on the workbench near the printer - Scenario C: Student notices a rash on their wrists 24 hours after a resin session - Scenario D: Resin splashes into a student's eye while pouring into the vat - Scenario E: Strong chemical smell detected — ventilation fan is not running - Scenario F: Small flame observed on a paper towel soaked in IPA near the printer 6. For each scenario, the group must: - Identify the hazard type - List the emergency response steps in order (from the SDS and training) - Identify what PPE should have been worn to prevent the incident - Specify what documentation is required after the incident 7. Groups present their responses; instructor validates and corrects as needed

Phase 3: Eyewash Station Drill (10 min) 8. Instructor demonstrates proper eyewash station operation: - Locate the station (must be within 10 seconds walking distance of resin work area) - Activate the flow (pull handle, push lever, or squeeze trigger — depends on model) - Position head with eyes open in the stream - Demonstrate holding eyelids open with fingers - Time: minimum 15 minutes of continuous flushing 9. Each student performs a 30-second eyewash drill (hands-on practice): - Walk from the resin workstation to the eyewash station (instructor times the walk — must be <10 seconds) - Activate the eyewash - Position correctly (students use water on closed eyelids for safety — no actual eye flushing) - Demonstrate calling for help while flushing ("Someone call the instructor!") 10. Instructor verifies each student can activate the eyewash within 3 seconds of reaching it

Discussion Points

  • How quickly could you find the first aid section of the SDS in a real emergency? Is 15 seconds fast enough?
  • Why does the SDS specify soap and water for skin decontamination but NOT IPA?
  • In Scenario D (eye splash), why is the 15-minute flush time critical, not just a quick rinse?
  • How would your response change if the incident occurred outside of class hours (no instructor present)?

Expected Outcomes

  • Students should locate critical SDS information within 30 seconds per section
  • Emergency response steps should be provided in correct sequence for all scenarios
  • All students should activate the eyewash station within 3 seconds
  • Students should demonstrate understanding that prevention (correct PPE) is superior to emergency response

Assessment Rubric

Criterion Excellent (5) Proficient (3) Needs Improvement (1)
SDS Navigation Found all information in <20 sec per item; 15-sec challenge completed Found most information; some delay on 15-sec challenge Could not locate critical sections; failed time challenge
Scenario Response Correct response order for all 3 scenarios with complete PPE prevention analysis Mostly correct responses with minor sequence errors Incorrect response order or missing critical steps
Eyewash Drill Reached station in <10 sec, activated in <3 sec, correct positioning Met time requirements but positioning needed correction Failed time requirements or could not operate station
Overall Safety Awareness Demonstrated deep understanding of why procedures matter Understands procedures but not underlying reasoning Followed procedures mechanically without understanding

Safety Considerations

  • This activity uses NO actual resin or hazardous chemicals — it is a drill and training exercise
  • During eyewash drill, students flush water on CLOSED eyelids only (not into open eyes)
  • Ensure the eyewash station water has been flushed (run for 30 seconds weekly) to prevent bacterial buildup in stagnant water
  • Wet floor around eyewash station — place absorbent mat to prevent slipping

Last Updated: 2026-03-19