After years of hype, robot teachers have finally rolled into the classrooms. The Daegu Office of Education introduced 29 robot teachers for English classes in 21 elementary schools - one of the largest rollouts in the world - and the bots strutted their stuff at a demonstration at Hakjung Elementary School yesterday, with about 150 government officials coming to get a look at the technology employed. The 1-meter (3.28 feet) egg-shaped robot, named ‘Engkey’ (an abbreviation of English key), spoke, asked questions and conversed in English with students, and even entertained the crowd by dancing to music. In fact, the robo-teachers aren’t mere chips, wheels and gears. Within each of them, in a sense, is a real human teacher controlling the machine by remote from the Philippines.
The teachers in the Philippines have cameras to record their faces - which show up on a flat panel screen that forms the robo-teacher’s face - and they can also see the Korean students through a camera installed in the robot. Basically, the robot is a rolling Internet link between students and teacher, although the human teacher can also command the robot to make human gestures with its arms and wheels. The education office said Korean teachers can use the robots as assistant teachers for English classes, too. The robots were invented by the Center for Intelligent Robotics under the Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology, and the Daegu city government, the Daegu Office of Education and the Ministry of Knowledge and Economy spent roughly 1.6 billion won ($1.39 million) for the units.
More information:
http://joongangdaily.joins.com/article/view.asp?aid=2930207
More information:
http://joongangdaily.joins.com/article/view.asp?aid=2930207