Educational Robots At Global Robot Expo

Global Robot Expo: Educational Robots, From Emotional Robots To Early Child Programming

Global Robot Expo: Educational Robots, From Emotional Robots To Early Child Programming

Global Robot Expo: Educational Robots, From Emotional Robots To Early Child Programming

Kazuhiko Koshikawa, Ambassador of Japan, surprised us with a perfect Castilian language. Then he left us perplexed: He began to speak about Juanelo Turriano, the watchmaker of the Court of Charles I, and his "Stick Man". Besides watchmaker, Juanelo was a mathematician, astronomer, engineer, architect... His real name was Gianello Torriani (he was born near Milan in 1501). The Milanese where he lived became part of the empire of Carlos I and V of Germany, and Gianello was called to Toledo by the ambassador to become the court watchmaker.

In addition to building a variety of clocks, some of which were complicated astronomy gadgets (it is said that Carlos I understood watches as truly scientific instruments), through his knowledge of mechanics and watchmakers, Juanelo also became builder of automatons, some of which are preserved in Europe. However, the most famous of them, the "Stick Man" has left no trace, to the point of becoming a legend. It is thought that it was installed around the street of "Stick Man" in Toledo (Spain), close to the cathedral. Apparently, it was burned by the Inquisition when it was decreed to be possessed by Evil. It is believed that its intention was to raise money, maybe for Juanelo itself, maybe for a charity hospital that was being built at that time.

It is said that the Stick Man had a slot where people could insert coins, and as a sign of gratitude, it genuflected. Some believe that he was led through the streets of Toledo by rail and others that it was winded and it walked on his own feet. Since there has been no trace of its planes, there is no way to confirm it. Since 1987, there is in Spain the Juanelo Turriano Foundation, responsible for keeping the memory of the Italian wise and his work.

500 years after that event, Kazuhiko Koshikawa recalls it to celebrate the appearance of the first humanoid in Spain, during the opening ceremony of the Global Robot Expo held in Madrid. Koshikawa considers that this first edition of the fair is the beginning of a cooperative relationship to share experiences and scientific knowledge between Japan and Spain in the field of robotics. "Even the longest journey begins with one small step", says Koshikawa, according to an old Japanese proverb.

Global Robot Expo: Kazuhiko Koshikawa and Takanori Shibata presenting PARO, the Educational Robot.

Then the ambassador presented to Professor Takanori Shibata, from the Tokyo Institute of Technology. Shibata hold in his hands the seal PARO robot, which might seem a simple stuffed baby seal, but it is actually a complex robot with an initial development cost of 15 million dollars. PARO is generally used for patients with dementia and Alzheimer palliative care, but also in some countries such as Denmark is being used in special education for children with autism.

This robot approved by the US FDA as a medical device, has 32 processors, 3 buses, 20 tactile sensors that cover its skin, sensitive whiskers to touch, and a system of motors that activate its fins and body silently. Responds to touch, to be caught in arms, to be looked at, to temperature and light changes, to sound and the direction it comes from, and it is able to remember names, faces, and actions that generate a positive reaction in humans. It can simulate emotions and moods such as surprise, happiness, and anger, which helps creating the illusion that a relationship with it is taking place. It also emulates the sound of a real baby seal. As with real animals company, it gives positive effects to alleviate depression and anxiety, but it is not necessary to feed it and it never dies (although you cannot machine wash it!).

More Emotional Robots

1. Aisoy Robotics. 

AISoy1 V5 is an emotional robot: It is based on social skills as a way to build an emotional bond between children and the robot, so that the child's learning experience gets to be more attractive and durable. You can keep an interaction with it just as the one that occurs between humans: It reacts to touch and to glances; it understands speech with some limitations, though we are reported from Aisoy Robotics that it is being debugged to improve understanding and to be able to maintain a more or less intelligent conversation with it; thus, it may be used as a tutor to be consulted, to respond reactively, or in a way that when it hears some issue, it would proactively request if the child would like to know more about it.

AISoy1 V5 can be used in two ways:

  1. Everything in free form programming, with very simple and visual programming algorithms, Scratch type, for 8-12 years children. For children a little older there is a Blockly version to be handled with a tablet; this version can also be used with more professional programming language with which to add all the ingredients for different purposes. Two interesting and different examples are the one from Valencia, where they are doing drama classes in 60 schools of various kinds, with transverse projects (in the sense that it is not only based on programming the robot, but on contextualizing the play, developing dialogues, costumes and scenery design and building, and then run the play..); and France, where they have used the robot in the installation of a home automation system. What they do there is to program the robot as a method of learning technology and programming.
  2. The other way is a self- learning mode, which has a proactive function, as mentioned before, but also reactive in the sense that they are developing a series of puzzles, mini -games, etc. to be proposed without programming, allowing to obtain pills of information and in some cases, to investigate a certain subject outside the robot, and then talk to it about what it has been discovered, so the robot can answer with a reinforcement, usually positive, or support if the child is required to improve.

Aisoy1 V5 Educational Robot Aisoy1 V5 Educational Robot rtec Educational Robot

2. Casual Robots. 

Casual Robots offers Reeti, a product that is being used a lot in education, because the most important thing about it is that it generates empathy. It has always been a difference between machines and people, where people identify the robot as a computer. From Casual Robots they try to prepare people, so that part or that utility gets more fun to work with.

Assemble Before Use

3. Artec. 

Artec is a Japanese company which works as a supplier since 1960. It offers the construction of figures with parts (lego type) that are programmed in Arduino style. It has three different types of programming, from the simplest to the most complex. It allows to learn how to program step by step. The largest model available (Robotist Advanced) shows up to eight different shapes, as an example of what it could be created, because this package is fully programmable and allows to build anything imaginable.

Artec Educational Robot

Artec Special Needs Educational Robot

Ready To Start

4. BQ. 

To bring technology closer to people, it is necessary that children can see how things are done and find out what's inside. Zowi is a robot from BQ that from the first moment right out of the box is working, and it moves, and interacts with you. It has the basic functions: It walks, it dances... But these functions, after a time, get the child bored. So you can drive it from the tablet or phone with a remote-control application. It is also programmable. Projects introduced at the application each time will unlock, so the kid will be doing increasingly more and more things. It does not end there; if a child is very interested in programming, he or she can go to Bitbloq tool, a BQ Web-based Scratch programming type page, which is simpler language they can easily understand. If they also are very interested in technology and want to learn more about the robot, it can be opened, you can see what's inside, you can see the plate, the sensors, you can connect or disconnect it, to understand why it works that way. To understand technology, you need to have access to it. Not only is intended that children use or play with technology, but also that they learn to create technology. This is a project for younger children, aged 8 years.

Programmable Robots

5. Aldebaran Robotics. 

At Aldebaran, they are programming NAO, which is very simple. It is widely programmable, from a very basic level. They are like little boxes, which are chained. Tasks can be done in series and sometimes in parallel. For instance, it is not possible to get up and sit at a time, because they are movements that get in conflict, but you can make it look to someone or something while it is sitting, for example. This would be simple. Then you can program in Python, which would be another step for boys and girls in primary or secondary. Python also includes roboticists.

6. Midland. 

In Midland, the educational issue is twofold: The humanoid robot, which is programmed with certain movements, and then using the software that is passed from the website of the manufacturer, with which it is possible to make all movements that can we wished. It consist on developing everyone’s imagination.

With the humanoid, it is possible to learn other things besides programming skills. For example, if you want the robot to lift one leg, it will have to tilt the body to compensate for the weight and avoid falling down.

Training In Robotics

7. Camp Tecnológico. 

Camp Tecnológico provides training in Spain. They have a coordinator in Madrid and the headquarters are in Bilbao. They provide monitors and educational materials, although they are not developers of robotics products. They use educational content for ages 4 to 17 years. They work as a preschool for schools, as education modules and weekend camps. They use robots that give a first approach to technology, so that children will understand the proper mindset to develop something like this, as a sequential thought. The next step is to move to Scratch, a programming block, and already knowing Scratch a whole world of possibilities opens up. The idea is to start from the very basic, understanding main ideas and concepts, and then to make a complexity design towards more difficult concepts, such as Arduino, and above all, teaching them technology and then after posing them challenges, so children will have to think about how to perform them. A problem arises and they seek the solution. Technology comes first and then we propose a challenge to see what they have learned and how this technology is applied.

Camp Tecnológico, Educational Provider in Robotics

New Technology, Programming, And Robotics Subject

From the academic year 2015-2016, it has implemented the new Technology, Programming, and Robotics subject in the curriculum of the Community of Madrid for first and third courses of ESO, expanding to second and fourth ESO courses in the 2016-2017 year. If the trend was bilingualism before, now that all institutes are bilingual by 80-90% in Madrid and other Spanish communities, the new trend is becoming bilingual and technologic. It is an open market in which you can work.

8. Crea Robótica Educativa.  

Crea Robótica Educativa offers courses of all kinds: For students, after-school, curriculum and teacher training. Hey range from 3 to 18 years with different robotics kits and 3D printing. they usually work with Parents Associations, the school gives them the space and they organize extra-curricular classes, so they go to the center to teach their classes.

9. Ildesoft. 

Ildesoft presents Dash & Dots, a robot for children to learn to program. It is designed in the US. Ildesoft import them throughout Europe. You can handle a robot from a tablet without knowing how to read or write, but it can get complicated as far as the imagination of the child scope (since picking the house, to train the dog).

From technology and the way of thinking that programming has, which is based on dividing a large problem into multiple small ones, it helps not only to learn programming but learning many other subjects. There are multiple studies in the US that show that children who have had contact with programming have better grades than children who did not.

In Spain, according to one study, children spend about an hour and a half a day to study and one and a half to play. This allows us to do both simultaneously.

88 % of parents interviewed by Ildesoft in Spain think their children should have access to this type of education, but only 25% have real access through extracurricular activities or academies. Mothers are more interested in their children getting into this world, but then, when going to buy the toy, it is chosen by the father. It's not a toy for boys or girls. Amazon, for instance, has made ​​a very wise decision, and it is not allowed to select the toys by gender, there are no toys for boys and girls. It is a toy that in the case of Ildesoft, has a higher rate in girls than in boys. When creating the toy, they attended a convention of toy in the US and worked with them as importers, raising questions such as: Should we do it with more wheels, or less? We want I to look more like a car or not? Ildesoft target all audiences, they want "less princesses and more engineers".

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