DocumentCode
78178
Title
Using Multi-Robot Systems for Engineering Education: Teaching and Outreach With Large Numbers of an Advanced, Low-Cost Robot
Author
McLurkin, James ; Rykowski, Jarogniew ; John, Michael ; Kaseman, Quillan ; Lynch, A.J.
Author_Institution
Comput. Sci. Dept., Rice Univ., Houston, TX, USA
Volume
56
Issue
1
fYear
2013
fDate
Feb. 2013
Firstpage
24
Lastpage
33
Abstract
This paper describes the experiences of using an advanced, low-cost robot in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) education. It presents three innovations: It is a powerful, cheap, robust, and small advanced personal robot; it forms the foundation of a problem-based learning curriculum; and it enables a novel multi-robot curriculum while fostering collaborative team work on assignments. The robot design has many features specific to educators: It is advanced enough for academic research, has a broad feature set to support a wide range of curricula, and is inexpensive enough to be an effective outreach tool. The low cost allows each student to have their own robot for the semester, so they can work on activities outside the classroom. This robot was used in three different classes in which it was the foundation for an innovative problem-based learning curriculum. In particular, the robot has specialized sensors and a communications system that supports novel multi-robot curricula, which encourage student interaction in new ways. The results are promising; the robot was a big success in graduate, undergraduate, and outreach activities. Finally, student assessments indicate a greater interest and understanding of engineering and other STEM majors, and class evaluations were consistently above average.
Keywords
control engineering education; educational courses; educational robots; further education; multi-robot systems; teaching; STEM education; STEM majors; academic research; advanced personal robot; collaborative team work; engineering education; low-cost robot; multirobot curricula; multirobot curriculum; multirobot systems; outreach activity; outreach tool; problem-based learning curriculum; robot design; science-technology-engineering and mathematics education; student assessments; student interaction; teaching; undergraduate activity; Education; Educational robots; Hardware; Robot kinematics; Robot sensing systems; Engineering; multi-robot systems; outreach; problem-based learning; robotics education;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Education, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0018-9359
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TE.2012.2222646
Filename
6363493
Link To Document