ERIKA—Early Robotics Introduction at Kindergarten Age

In this work, we report on our attempt to design and implement an early introduction to basic robotics principles for children at kindergarten age. One of the main challenges of this effort is to explain complex robotics contents in a way that pre-school children could follow the basic principles an...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Stefan Schiffer, Alexander Ferrein
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2018-09-01
Series:Multimodal Technologies and Interaction
Subjects:
ROS
HRI
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/2414-4088/2/4/64
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spelling doaj-7c5e283748394197b1455df550918a612020-11-24T20:59:04ZengMDPI AGMultimodal Technologies and Interaction2414-40882018-09-01246410.3390/mti2040064mti2040064ERIKA—Early Robotics Introduction at Kindergarten AgeStefan Schiffer0Alexander Ferrein1MASCOR Institute, FH Aachen University of Applied Sciences, Eupener Str. 70, 52066 Aachen, GermanyMASCOR Institute, FH Aachen University of Applied Sciences, Eupener Str. 70, 52066 Aachen, GermanyIn this work, we report on our attempt to design and implement an early introduction to basic robotics principles for children at kindergarten age. One of the main challenges of this effort is to explain complex robotics contents in a way that pre-school children could follow the basic principles and ideas using examples from their world of experience. What sets apart our effort from other work is that part of the lecturing is actually done by a robot itself and that a quiz at the end of the lesson is done using robots as well. The humanoid robot Pepper from Softbank, which is a great platform for human–robot interaction experiments, was used to present a lecture on robotics by reading out the contents to the children making use of its speech synthesis capability. A quiz in a Runaround-game-show style after the lecture activated the children to recap the contents they acquired about how mobile robots work in principle. In this quiz, two LEGO Mindstorm EV3 robots were used to implement a strongly interactive scenario. Besides the thrill of being exposed to a mobile robot that would also react to the children, they were very excited and at the same time very concentrated. We got very positive feedback from the children as well as from their educators. To the best of our knowledge, this is one of only few attempts to use a robot like Pepper not as a tele-teaching tool, but as the teacher itself in order to engage pre-school children with complex robotics contents.http://www.mdpi.com/2414-4088/2/4/64roboticskindergarteneducationrobot operating systemROSPepperhuman–robot interactionHRI
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Stefan Schiffer
Alexander Ferrein
spellingShingle Stefan Schiffer
Alexander Ferrein
ERIKA—Early Robotics Introduction at Kindergarten Age
Multimodal Technologies and Interaction
robotics
kindergarten
education
robot operating system
ROS
Pepper
human–robot interaction
HRI
author_facet Stefan Schiffer
Alexander Ferrein
author_sort Stefan Schiffer
title ERIKA—Early Robotics Introduction at Kindergarten Age
title_short ERIKA—Early Robotics Introduction at Kindergarten Age
title_full ERIKA—Early Robotics Introduction at Kindergarten Age
title_fullStr ERIKA—Early Robotics Introduction at Kindergarten Age
title_full_unstemmed ERIKA—Early Robotics Introduction at Kindergarten Age
title_sort erika—early robotics introduction at kindergarten age
publisher MDPI AG
series Multimodal Technologies and Interaction
issn 2414-4088
publishDate 2018-09-01
description In this work, we report on our attempt to design and implement an early introduction to basic robotics principles for children at kindergarten age. One of the main challenges of this effort is to explain complex robotics contents in a way that pre-school children could follow the basic principles and ideas using examples from their world of experience. What sets apart our effort from other work is that part of the lecturing is actually done by a robot itself and that a quiz at the end of the lesson is done using robots as well. The humanoid robot Pepper from Softbank, which is a great platform for human–robot interaction experiments, was used to present a lecture on robotics by reading out the contents to the children making use of its speech synthesis capability. A quiz in a Runaround-game-show style after the lecture activated the children to recap the contents they acquired about how mobile robots work in principle. In this quiz, two LEGO Mindstorm EV3 robots were used to implement a strongly interactive scenario. Besides the thrill of being exposed to a mobile robot that would also react to the children, they were very excited and at the same time very concentrated. We got very positive feedback from the children as well as from their educators. To the best of our knowledge, this is one of only few attempts to use a robot like Pepper not as a tele-teaching tool, but as the teacher itself in order to engage pre-school children with complex robotics contents.
topic robotics
kindergarten
education
robot operating system
ROS
Pepper
human–robot interaction
HRI
url http://www.mdpi.com/2414-4088/2/4/64
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