Robotics – 蜜桃影视 America's Education News Source Thu, 13 Feb 2025 21:27:19 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.2 /wp-content/uploads/2022/05/cropped-74_favicon-32x32.png Robotics – 蜜桃影视 32 32 Greensboro School Is First Public Gaming and Robotics School in the Country /article/guilford-county-schools-is-home-to-first-public-gaming-and-robotics-elementary-school-in-the-country/ Sat, 15 Feb 2025 13:30:00 +0000 /?post_type=article&p=740019 This article was originally published in

Historic Foust Elementary School has had a game changing start to the year. School and district leaders, parents, and community members were eager to get inside one of Greensboro鈥檚 newest elementary schools for their ribbon cutting ceremony on Feb. 3, 2025 to witness an innovative progression in the school鈥檚 history. They were greeted by students and the school鈥檚 robotic dog, Astro.

Foust Elementary School, part of (GCS), is the country鈥檚 first public gaming and robotics elementary school, according to the district. The school still sits on its original land, but the building has been rebuilt from the ground up. They began welcoming students into the new building at the start of 2025.

Foust Elementary School鈥檚 history goes all the way back to the 1960s. Foust student Nyla Parker read the following account at the ribbon cutting ceremony:


Get stories like this delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for 蜜桃影视 Newsletter


鈥淪ince its construction in 1965, Julius I Foust Elementary School has prided itself in serving the students and families of its community, with the goal of creating citizens who will leave this place with high character and academic excellence. 鈥 Now, almost 60 years later, we welcome you to the new chapter of Foust Gaming and Robotics Elementary School. As a student here at Foust, I am excited about various opportunities that will be offered to me as I learn more about exciting industries such as gaming, robotics, coding, and 2D plus 3D animation. Thank you to the voters of our community for saying yes to the 2020 bond that allowed this place to become a reality for me and my fellow classmates. Game on!鈥

Foust is a Title I school in a historically underinvested part of Guilford County. Several years ago, the district conducted a master facility study, which resulted in Foust getting on the list to receive an entirely new building.

鈥淔oust was one of the oldest buildings in the district and it was literally falling apart, so we were on the list to have a total new construction,鈥 said Kendrick Alston, principal of Foust.

鈥淒uring that time, we also talked with the district and really thought about, well, building a new school. What can we also do differently in terms of teaching and learning, instead of just building a new building?鈥

The mission of Foust is to 鈥渆nvision a future where students are equipped with the skills, knowledge, and tools to lead the new global economy,鈥 according to . The new global economy, featuring high projected growth in , was a driving factor for planners as they decided to focus the school on gaming and robotics.

There are many jobs that can come from learning the skills necessary to build video games and robots. Looking at recent labor market trends, many of those jobs are growing. Web developers and digital designers have an 8% projected growth rate from 2023-2033 with a median pay of $92,750 per year, according to the .

鈥淲e looked at a lot of studies, we looked at research, and one of the things that we looked at was something from the World Economic Forum that looked at the annual jobs report. We saw that STEM, engineering, those kinds of jobs, were some of the top fastest growing jobs across the world,鈥 said Alston. 鈥淲hen we think about school looking different for our students and being engaging, well, let鈥檚 make it something that鈥檚 relevant to them but is also giving them a skill set that they can be marketable in the global workforce as well.鈥

The team at Foust, including teachers and staff, have spent several months in specialized training on a new and unique curriculum designed to help prepare students for the ever evolving world of work. The building, designed to bring 21st century learning to life, is part of the first phase of schools constructed from .

鈥淚 am excited for what this new space is going to produce,鈥 said Hope Purcell, a teacher at Foust. 鈥淲ith the continued support from our robotics curriculum, students will have the opportunity to tap into a new world of discovery that will prepare them for the future.鈥

Many community and education leaders were present at the ribbon cutting, including several county commissioners and Guilford superintendent Whitney Oakley. Oakley shared excitement about the new school and reminded everyone that the leaders who came before her who advocated for the passing of the bond and were open to the vision of a school like Foust were a huge part of making this new school a reality.

鈥淭oday is not just about celebrating a building,鈥 Oakley said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 about celebrating what this building really represents, and that鈥檚 opportunity and access to the tools of modern K-12 education. It represents the culmination of years of planning and conversation and design to make sure that we can build a space that serves families and students for decades to come. The joy on the faces of the staff and the families and the students is just a reminder that teaching and learning is more effective when everybody has the resources that they need to thrive, and that should not be the exception, that should be the rule.鈥

Students sometimes need different levels of support and resources in order to thrive. Foust hopes to be a place where all students can succeed. Another school district in New Jersey, the , is using gaming and technology to engage students with cognitive and behavioral differences. They have designed specifically for students with cognitive challenges, like Autism Spectrum Disorder. This is just one example of how gaming can create an inclusive learning environment.

As Foust settles into its brand new building, they are already planning for new opportunities ahead, including partnerships with the University of North Carolina at Greensboro and North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University for innovative programming for students and parents.

This first appeared on and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.

]]>
Why Robots Are Not Effective Tools for Supporting Autistic People /article/why-robots-are-not-effective-tools-for-supporting-autistic-people/ Wed, 11 Dec 2024 17:30:00 +0000 /?post_type=article&p=736764 Even as the education technology industry rushes to develop robots that can deliver therapy to autistic children, research shows the devices are ineffective and unwanted, according to a new study released by researchers at the University of California Jacobs School of Engineering.

An autistic PhD candidate in computer science, Naba Rizvi is the lead author of published between 2016 and 2022 that focused on robots鈥 interactions with autistic people. She and her colleagues found that almost all of the research excludes the perspectives of the autistic subjects, pathologizes them by using an outdated understanding of the neurotype, and contains little, if any, evidence that therapies delivered by robots are effective. 

More than 93% of the studies start with the now-controversial stance that autism is a condition that can and should be cured. Nearly all test the use of robots to diagnose the condition or to teach autistic children to interact in ways that make them seem more neurotypical, such as making eye contact.


Get stories like this delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for 蜜桃影视 Newsletter


While most research on human-robot interaction starts by asking the subjects what their needs are, nearly 90% of the researchers in Rizvi鈥檚 sample did not ask autistic people whether they want the technology. Fewer than 3% included autistic people in framing the theory being investigated, and just 5% incorporated their perspectives in designing research. 

鈥淓ven clinicians are not convinced of their effectiveness, and minimal progress has been made in making such robots clinically useful,鈥 Rizvi writes. 鈥淚n fact, research even suggests that this use of robots may be counterproductive and negatively impact the skills they are designed to hone in autistic end-users.鈥

Proponents reason that robots can not only deliver behavior therapy more cheaply but will appeal more to children than human therapists. Investors forecast the technology could become the centerpiece of a market that may soon be worth . Not yet common in special education classrooms, robots programmed to intervene with autistic children are being marketed to schools and even families.

Some of the early research the robotics industry has recently relied on in designing its experiments described autistic children as less human than chimpanzees, Rizvi adds: 鈥淭hese systems promote the idea that autistic people are 鈥榙eficient鈥 in their humanness, and that robots can teach them how to be more human-like. This echoes foundational work that has questioned the humanity of autistic people, and proposed non-human entities such as animals may be more human than them.鈥 

Most of the research the team reviewed was published in robotics journals, not autism reviews. Seventy-six of the studies used anthropomorphic or humanoid robots to teach social skills, while 15 relied on devices designed to look like animals. One used a robot to diagnose 鈥渁bnormal鈥 social interactions.

Less than 10% of human-robot interaction papers (shown in pink) included a representative sample of women and girls with autism in their studies. The majority (in yellow) did not report the participants’ gender demographics. (Naba Rizvi et. al. 2024)

Researchers leaned on harmful tropes that describe autistic people as robot-like 鈥 and robots as intrinsically autistic. Many of the papers reviewed also accept an old and controversial premise that autistic people are not motivated to interact socially with others. Less than 10% included representative samples of girls, whose autistic 鈥渂ehaviors鈥 are more likely to show up as depression and other mental health conditions. 

The report comes as a rift is widening between proponents of using behavioral therapy and autistic adults who say the intervention, commonly called applied behavior analysis, is inhumane. A growing body of research suggests that efforts to train autistic children to act and appear more like their neurotypical, or non-autistic, peers are ineffective and often traumatizing. 

In applied behavior analysis, a therapist uses positive and negative reinforcement to attempt to 鈥渆xtinguish鈥 mannerisms perceived as undesirable and to replace them with behaviors considered 鈥渘ormal.鈥 Therapists work one-on-one with a child, often 10 to40 hours a week. It is repetitive and expensive.

Many autistic adults who have undergone the therapy note that some of the mannerisms it attempts to eliminate, such as hand-flapping or rocking, are harmless ways to compensate for overstimulation or to express positive emotions. Nonetheless, the therapy is widely considered the 鈥済old standard鈥 of autism interventions. 

Rizvi says she鈥檚 dismayed but not surprised by the push to develop automated therapists. The use of robotics in medicine is exploding, and almost all of the researchers in her sample framed their work using what advocates call the 鈥渕edical model鈥 of disability. Historically, disabilities have been seen as medically diagnosable deficits to be treated or cured. 

Over the past couple of decades, however, people with disabilities have increasingly pushed for the adoption of a 鈥渟ocial model,鈥 which holds that a lack of inclusion in all realms of public life is the central issue. Autistic adults have advocated for better representation in research, so that more studies are geared toward making education, employment, housing and other sectors of society more accommodating.

Just 6% of the papers Rizvi and her colleagues reviewed start from a social model. This is problematic, they say, because many autistic people have needs that can be addressed by improved technology. Non-verbal students, for example, benefit from evolving 鈥渁ugmentative and assistive communication鈥 鈥 devices families often struggle to get schools to provide. 

Rizvi鈥檚 main research focus is on the development of ethical artificial intelligence. Because the datasets AI is 鈥渢rained鈥 on , so are the resulting algorithms, she explains. Research has shown, for example, that resumes that mention jobs in disability agencies or support capacities are automatically scored lower by AI than those that don鈥檛.

Another example is AI-enabled online content moderation. Social media posts and comments that mention disability-related topics are often rejected as toxic, Rizvi says. 

鈥淲hen it comes to content moderation the data sets don’t always represent the perspectives of the communities,鈥 she says. 鈥淎nd they do this thing where, say, if you have three people trying to agree on whether or not a sentence is ableist, the automatic assumption is that the majority vote is the right one.鈥

鈥淎re Robots Ready to Deliver Autism Inclusion? A Critical Review鈥 was presented at a recent . The presentation includes suggestions for ensuring research is inclusive and avoids harmful stereotypes and historical misrepresentations, which are on Rizvi鈥檚 own website. 

]]>
Robotics-Themed NYC High School Fills Roster in Inaugural Year /article/robotics-themed-nyc-high-school-fills-roster-in-inaugural-year/ Tue, 04 Apr 2023 11:15:00 +0000 /?post_type=article&p=706982 Like many students at Gotham Tech, a robotics-centered high school that welcomed its inaugural class in September, Veronica Fraczek, 14, felt a pull toward engineering at a young age, spending her childhood building cars from Legos. 

So when the new school opened, Fraczek was eager to sign on, in part because of its connection to Cornell Tech鈥檚 campus on Roosevelt Island: That鈥檚 where students spend a portion of each Friday designing, building and coding up to 18-inch-tall aluminum-based robots to enter into city-wide competitions. 

鈥淚t鈥檚 where you can be very creative and no one will judge you for it,鈥 said Fraczek, standing inside the robotics laboratory on a Friday afternoon, the hum of a laser printer and the buzz of several palm-sized motors filling the room. 鈥淭hey will just give you advice on what to do, how to fix it or make it better, which is very helpful.鈥

Veronica Fraczek, 14, felt a pull toward engineering at a young age and was eager to sign up for Gotham Tech, a new school designed to develop her STEM skills. (Jo Napolitano)

Gotham Tech, designed by NYC FIRST, a nonprofit that’s been running the city’s robotics competitions for more than 20 years, is located in Long Island City but will eventually take its spot inside a six-story, state-of-the-art facility currently under construction in Woodside, Queens. 

Northern Boulevard High School, which will bring to the long overcrowded borough, is slated to open in the fall of 2025 at a cost of around $178 million. It will include 94 classrooms, six resource rooms, a 550-seat auditorium, a library, full kitchen complex, and a competition-size gymnasium, according to the New York City Department of Education. 

The 93-student Gotham Tech could grow to up to 1,500 in its new home. The school is slated to receive hundreds of thousands of dollars as part of a $10 million, five-year grant agreement with XQ under the initiative. is Laurene Powell Jobs鈥檚 effort to promote high school innovation nationwide. Jobs inherited much of her from her husband, Apple cofounder Steve Jobs, who died in 2011.

Those enrolled at the current campus say they are thrilled with what the program offers because it鈥檚 helping them build on long-held interests 鈥 and not just during the school day. They can visit the NYC FIRST STEM Center located on Cornell Tech鈥檚 campus seven days a week to work on their projects. 

Amir Bristol, 14 and from Woodside, aspires to study software engineering or computer science at Stanford University. 

鈥淚鈥檝e been working my butt off to get good grades for it,鈥 he said, adding he has a 95 average. 

While NYC FIRST CEO Michael Zigman wants all students to reach their full academic potential, he made sure to open the school to nearly every child: There are no tests and no prior knowledge of robotics required for entry. He was overjoyed to beat the projected enrollment of 90.  

鈥淎 big part of it is the joy and the fun and engagement around robotics,鈥 he said, adding the partnership with NYC FIRST and Cornell Tech allows students, 鈥渁 safe space where they can take whatever is in their heads 鈥 and create it any day of the week, virtually any time.鈥 

Audrey Lu, 14 and from Forest Hills, Queens, is far more drawn to design than engineering. Teachers with NYC FIRST, a nonprofit that’s been running the city’s robotics competitions for more than 20 years, said students like Lu are invaluable to their program. (Jo Napolitano)

While some students are more focused on the mechanics of their project, Audrey Lu, 14 and from Forest Hills, Queens, is far more drawn to design. And Alex Lopez, 14 and from Astoria, who started tinkering with robotics kits during the pandemic when school was largely closed, enjoys the programming element, reveling in the moment he can make a robot complete a task. 

Each has a critical role in robotics, their teachers said. 

Dana Schwimmer, lead teacher with NYC FIRST at Cornell Tech, said the program offers students the chance to develop skills that will help them no matter what field they pursue. 

鈥淎 team in this competition works like a startup,鈥 she said, adding students work on design, mechanics, programming and outreach for fundraising, among other tasks. 鈥淵ou need to do a lot of things around it. There are many groups inside that team, so you can find your place 鈥 even if you are not into engineering.鈥

Eclipse Carbon, 14 and from the Mott Haven section of the Bronx, wasn鈥檛 entirely new to the robotics laboratory: She had participated in Cornell Tech鈥檚 winter AI program for middle schoolers and was looking forward to building on that experience. 

鈥淗aving the chance to come here to a place I鈥檓 familiar with but also put forth skills I鈥檝e never been able to use before 鈥 such as learning how to code and learning how to take apart or put back together phones and computers during my free time 鈥 Once I saw that I could do that here, I knew this place was going to be the best learning experience,鈥 she said. 

Carbon, who hopes to one day attend Cornell University and become an IT specialist or plant biologist, was well aware of the more prestigious and established schools in the New York City system, including Stuyvesant, Brooklyn Technical and The Bronx High School of Science. All are among the where admission is governed by a single test.

But they were not for her. 

鈥淚 want to be somewhere I know will help me with my future goals鈥 and also be fun,鈥 she said, which is why she never truly considered the more highly competitive campuses. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 have to be sad while learning.鈥

Gotham Tech, listed last year in an online guidebook for New York City students and their parents, also offered site visits at the NYC FIRST STEM Center. 

Kevin Bristol, Amir鈥檚 father, discovered the program while searching for specialized high schools for his son.  

鈥淲e were looking for something that matched his ambition,鈥 he said, adding his son took computer and coding classes in middle school. 鈥淟ooking forward to what the future holds, it looks like AI and robotics will be a field that will be great.鈥

The school鈥檚 relationship with Cornell Tech would only further his son鈥檚 chances to succeed in STEM as an adult, his father said. He wasn鈥檛 worried that the program didn鈥檛 have more of a track record: He saw its newness as an advantage. 

鈥淵ou are automatically a part of history if this school goes to where I think it should go,鈥 said the boy鈥檚 father, who attended Brooklyn Tech. 鈥淚 really see how it is helping him grow as an individual. The school I went to had so many kids: You get lost in that. His school is a lot smaller and he gets a lot of individual attention. I really like what I鈥檓 seeing.鈥

Onkar Dhillon, an 18-year-old former NYC FIRST alumnus, helps Gotham Tech freshman Roman Gonzalez with his robotics project inside Cornell Tech鈥檚 Roosevelt Island campus. Dhillon currently attends Adelphi University on Long Island. (Jo Napolitano)

Lisa Freed, STEM program manager at iRobot, a 1,100-person company based out of Bedford, Massachusetts, was delighted to hear about Gotham Tech, saying it will no doubt help students grow and discover their talents. 

“I think that鈥檚 fantastic,鈥 she said. 鈥淭he focus on robotics is super cool: It will give them a lot more skills than they realize.”

iRobot, creators of , the robot vacuum, has run its own student outreach program since 2009, working with children from pre-kindergarten through college. 

While Freed applauds the creation of Gotham Tech, she said students should be introduced to robotics at a far younger age: Many high schoolers have already determined, often incorrectly, that they do not have a place in science, she said. They don鈥檛 know that not everyone who works in the field must graduate valedictorian or from the nation鈥檚 top colleges. 

Already, Gotham Tech students have faced 鈥 and overcome 鈥 serious challenges. Pandemic-related shutdowns left their social skills rusty, according to their teachers. Students in this first class had difficulty working together at the start of the year. And they didn鈥檛 have the benefit of older, more experienced classmates to teach them how to cooperate 鈥 or how to conceive of or build their robot. 

Few knew how to make the best use of their time in the lab: It wasn鈥檛 until their first competition in November, just two months after the school year began, that they started to take ownership of their work, their teachers said.聽

鈥淚t was this awakening moment,鈥 said Talya Stein, NYC FIRST STEM Center senior program manager. Coaches, she said, are required to have only a limited role in the competition. 鈥淭he students are forced to step up and are a part of a very dynamic community that is very engaged and really cares about the competition. The students now are showing more autonomy, taking charge and taking ownership.鈥

They鈥檝e had months to learn each other鈥檚 strengths and appreciate what every participant has to offer. A recent Friday class showed students were comfortable in their roles, whether they were tinkering with an engine, correcting a programming flaw or refining a logo. Students placed well in February competitions: Gotham Tech advanced from the city-wide semifinal to the final.

One of Gotham Tech鈥檚 teams, Demon Dogs, was the only rookie team from the entire city to make it to the NYC FIRST Tech Challenge championship. They earned the highest score of 251 points 鈥 aligned with Metrobotics, the best team in the league. 

鈥淚t’s a good shot in the arm this first year of the school’s existence,鈥 Zigman said.

Disclosure: XQ provides financial support to 蜜桃影视.

]]> 14-Year-Old Inventor Wins Prize For Robotic Hand He Built For Less Than $100 /article/video-14-year-old-inventor-wins-25000-prize-for-robotic-hand-he-built-for-less-than-100/ Tue, 07 Feb 2023 15:30:00 +0000 /?post_type=article&p=703639 Thomas Aldous happened upon a documentary about the 2011 Fukushima nuclear power plant disaster that was caused by a tsunami along coastal Japan. What piqued his interest most about the aftermath was the robots devised to inspect the damaged radioactive reactors. 

With that in mind, the 14-year-old from Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, built a robot hand controlled by a glove. 鈥淚t has a lot of applications,鈥 he says, 鈥渂ut primarily for search and rescue.鈥 The user鈥檚 movements are copied to the robot intuitively. And he built it all for less than $100. (See the robot in action right here)

For his invention, he won the Samueli Foundation Prize of $25,000 at the 2022 Broadcom MASTERS, a national science and engineering competition for middle school students. He says he鈥檒l use the prize for college tuition.


Get stories like this delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for 蜜桃影视 Newsletter


Share Thomas鈥檚 story 鈥 and check out this other recent coverage of teenagers breaking new ground in STEM: 

鈥擯roduced & Edited by Jim Fields

]]>
Opinion: Youth Sports Teach Valuable Skills But Robotics Helps Every Kid Go Pro /article/robotics-youth-sports-skill-development-via-stem-pandemic/ Thu, 20 Oct 2022 11:15:00 +0000 /?post_type=article&p=698421 The pandemic has cast a spotlight on students鈥 need for greater experiential learning opportunities both inside and outside the classroom. It has also demonstrated the importance of preparing students to be adept in handling the unexpected 鈥 and to feel empowered to tackle an uncertain future. 

Many parents have long seen youth sports as a conduit through which kids can learn and develop these key teamwork, collaboration, and problem-solving skills. But COVID鈥檚 disruptions exacerbated long-term trends showing some declining interest in youth athletics. A year into the pandemic, with kids in youth athletics said their child was no longer interested in playing sports and found a 32 percent attrition rate among student athletes in grades 8-12, with higher rates among those who are underserved and under-represented.

A new alternative, however, is rapidly emerging and offers students both hands-on experiences and opportunities to hone broader critical thinking skills: Robotics. Any parent who wants their child to have a clearer roadmap for an uncertain future should understand that youth robotics is the extracurricular that allows all participants to “go pro鈥 and find pathways to career success. It gives students the best of both worlds 鈥 teamwork-derived skills and STEM competency development 鈥 while combatting a trend that has accelerated during the pandemic: the loss of in-person social connection and hands-on skills development.


Get stories like this delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for 蜜桃影视 Newsletter


When parents select extracurriculars for their students, they are, in part, looking for opportunities to teach the values required for responsible citizenship. They want their students to learn how to prevent and navigate conflict, encourage balanced participation and inclusion, develop social competencies, build bridges among peoples and challenge assumptions and stereotypes. At the same time, American companies and governmental organizations are hungry for STEM-capable talent as the global business landscape continues to shift. Despite the continued growth of U.S. science and engineering enterprises, the country鈥檚 share of global research and development has since 2000 due in part to factors such as increased overseas competition.

This is where robotics shines, as these accessible programs teach not only academic concepts but many valuable social skills and competencies students will need to contribute to something larger than themselves. Robotics actively encourages students to produce high-quality work while giving them space to 鈥渇ail鈥 safely, recognize the value of others and respect both individuals and community. Like most sports, robotics relies almost entirely on collaboration and recognizes that each team member brings individual strengths that, when combined, buoy performance and learning outputs for everyone.

Engaging students in active, hands-on learning 鈥 and giving them increasing levels of responsibility over their education 鈥 is critical to their development into values-driven adults. Mistakes are allowed and even encouraged in robotics, which provides a space for positive learning where failure does not equal defeat.

Robotics blends group-based activities with open-ended creativity: these programs often assign student teams a challenge which requires the construction and operation of a robot to complete it. The most effective programs outline the rules and basic requirements but allow great flexibility in design, fabrication, coding or other factors. Students will encounter lack of instruction and structure throughout their personal and professional lives, just as they will be asked to collaborate with peers, whether they are friends or new acquaintances, are from different backgrounds or possess varying levels of experience. Early exposure to this type of uninhibited team-based problem-solving allows them to learn from one another, believe in their ideas and recognize their own potential. These are all critical skills that students will need in future STEM careers, where being a well-rounded person is arguably as valuable as technical skill acquisition.

For teachers looking to incorporate relevant concepts into the classroom, robotics-based curricula should align with existing educational standards (Common Core, ISTE, CSTA, NGSS, CASEL SEL, etc.) but can be taught in untraditional ways. Robotics and lessons about its uses need not be reserved for engineering or coding classes 鈥 they can be integrated into existing courses such as career and technical (CTE) training pathways, beyond traditional science and math. With the right context, educators can help students understand robotics鈥 role in everything from automotive manufacturing and surgery to agriculture and shipping.

Educators can help students realize their own ability to solve problems in these areas by using current events and global challenges to inspire students to think creatively about STEM and discover its real-world uses, even theoretically. Teachers can assign their class a focus area 鈥 for example, recycling, animal health or water cycles 鈥 and ask them to brainstorm solutions to any problem under this umbrella. When elementary and middle school students competing in FIRST LEGO League were asked to think about transportation this past school year, they from an autonomous vaccine delivery drone to devices that sense fires in shipping containers.

FIRST

Teachers do not need to look beyond their own communities for opportunities to inspire students to use their STEM skills for others鈥 benefit. Be it so a teacher鈥檚 husband can walk their newborn or in the pandemic鈥檚 early days, robotics students understand they do not need to wait for their future careers to make a difference: they are already solving real-world problems and proactively seeking ways to make a difference through education.

When it comes to instruction, teaching robotics should not feel intimidating and there are countless resources available to help educators introduce it in the classroom. There are available for educator use and many robotics programs offer designed to meet specific STEM learning objectives through connected learning principles; these programs can be integrated to provide STEM learning across many contexts. Code.org also offers of third-party professional development and curricula opportunities recommended by the Computer Science Teachers Association.

To empower the next generation amid a complicated societal present and future, educators and parents need to reevaluate students鈥 extracurricular commitments and existing educational structures today to put the next generation on achievable paths. While few students will go on to play professional sports, every student is capable of 鈥済oing pro鈥 in STEM.

]]>
Community Raises $75,000 For Teen Robotics Team After Thieves Steal Gear /article/inclusive-austin-teen-robotics-team-victim-of-10000-robbery-hopes-to-raise-money-to-replace-stolen-equipment/ Thu, 11 Nov 2021 22:02:12 +0000 /?post_type=article&p=580675 Get essential education news and commentary delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up here for 蜜桃影视鈥檚 daily newsletter.

Updated Nov. 15

The Howdy Bots robotics team raised $75,000 at their annual telethon 鈥 well above the usual $40,000 the event usually brings in. 鈥淲e suffered a setback when thieves stole tools and electronics from the team,鈥 said coach Evan Marchman. 鈥淔inancially, this was something the team was unprepared to handle. Thanks to the tremendous outpouring of support from the community, the team raised more than $75,000… We are now able to replace the stolen items and made great progress towards fully funding our annual operating costs. Now we can focus on providing this high-quality STEM education program to more students.鈥 

When thieves stole $10,000 worth of equipment from the , Texas, they were stealing from kids 鈥 whether they knew it or not. 

All the things that make a robotics team function 鈥 laptops, cordless power tools, and electric crimpers  鈥 were among the items taken in October from the shop of the 18-member team.


Get stories like this delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for 蜜桃影视 Newsletter


鈥淭hat is a pretty hard hit for us,鈥 said coach Evan Marchman.

The team is looking to their annual 鈥淗owdython鈥 fundraiser this weekend not just to raise money to attend competitions: The Howdy Bots will be working hard raising money to replace what was stolen.

鈥淲e need tools,鈥 said 16-year-old team member Clay Tomaszewski. 鈥淧articularly like drills and other hand tools to actually assemble our robot. Without a drill, how do I make a hole in something that I need a certain size screw to fit in?”

Howdy Bots stands out in the ultra-competitive world of robotics. 

“Some teams prefer to have the smartest, most skilled students and will have tryouts for their programs,鈥 said Marchman, 鈥渂ut we accept students regardless of ability or disability, both physical or learning.鈥

鈥淎 core value of Howdy Bots is inclusion,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e do not turn away students based on grades, skill, lack of experience or school affiliation. Our team meets the student where they are and make any necessary accommodations with the ultimate goals of seeing them make progress in gaining skills and maturity.

鈥淥ur only requirements are engagement and commitment on the part of the student.鈥

Howdy Bots

Howdy Bot team members are not affiliated with any one school and may be home-schooled or don鈥檛 have a team at their school. 

Marchman said the team works to be diverse, and currently includes LGBTQ teens. The team is also about equal in its make-up of girls and boys.

Marchman said the focus of Howdy Bots is exposing students who might not otherwise have access to technology at home. Scholarships are offered for low-income students.

The team, which competes  across Texas and the world and includes students ages 13-18 in grades 9 through 12, design, program and build 120-pound robots in six weeks, during January and February each year. Competitions take place in March and April. 

In addition to robotics, the students also complete programming, computer-aided design, video editing, business and marketing tasks. The team meets all year, with students averaging more than 400 hours of STEM learning during the busiest four months of the year.

They are also introduced to industry veterans, as most of the mentors are engineers or programmers by day.

And it鈥檚 not just the tools that are needed: Rishisk Boddeti, 15, noted the team members doing marketing and programming need laptops. 

鈥淭he fundraiser is going to be very important to us this year,鈥 Tomaszewski said.

The event will run from 2 p.m. to 5 p.m. Central Time on Saturday. for more information and a direct link to Howdy Bots鈥 fundraiser live stream.


]]>
How Tesla, Reinvented Schools & Robotics Set Reno Up to Weather COVID Recession /article/recession-recovery-robotics-can-cte-and-renos-reinvented-schools-avert-a-covid-classroom-crisis/ Sat, 07 Aug 2021 00:01:00 +0000 /?post_type=article&p=575541

On Nov. 28, 2020, the COVID-19 infection rate in Washoe County, Nevada, crested at 113 new cases per 100,000 residents. What that grim statistic meant to residents of Reno, Tahoe and the county鈥檚 other small cities depended greatly on their socioeconomic status. 

Employment on that day, for instance, was down 1 percent over January 2020 鈥 low, but also deceptive. Employment among middle-income workers, those making $27,000 to $60,000 a year, was flat.

But among those making less than $27,000, it fell 22 percent. Meanwhile, for residents earning more than the area鈥檚 median income, employment actually rose an astonishing 19 percent.

That disparity is a glaring illustration of the so-called K-shaped economic recovery 鈥 one of the features of the pandemic recession that most troubles economists.

Past economic slumps have had more of a V-shape: an across-the-board dip followed by a relatively uniform and quick return to pre-recession conditions.

This time is different. For many high earners, those at the top of the K, COVID鈥檚 roiling effect on the economy was a blip. They may be working remotely, but they鈥檙e working. They are not, however, spending money the way they did before COVID-19, on restaurant meals, growlers, travel, mani-pedis, Uber rides 鈥 services their lower-income neighbors provide as they eke out a living.

The week that Reno鈥檚 case count peaked, small-business revenue in the area was down as much as 31 percent. But overall, consumer spending dropped as little as 8 percent. The money was still flowing 鈥 just not to the folks at the bottom of the K. 

It鈥檚 a problem nationwide, and , because many of the low-wage jobs lost since the start of the pandemic won鈥檛 be replaced, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. Jobs that will require a college or graduate degree, such as health care and technology occupations, are expected to grow. But those requiring a high school diploma or less 鈥 chief among them the restaurant, hotel and customer service jobs whose workers who have long been the spine of Reno鈥檚 economy 鈥 will continue to contract. Early indicators show COVID has accelerated this shift, which has broad implications for K-12 education. 

When the pandemic recession struck, economists John Friedman and Raj Chetty realized it looked different from previous downturns. While even small changes in the way money changes hands create ripples, COVID was a shockwave. Co-founders of 鈥 a team at Harvard University that researches income inequality and education鈥檚 potential to lift children out of poverty 鈥 they persuaded credit card companies, payroll processors and other businesses that track money as it moves through the economy in real time to turn over what are essentially trade secrets. Using that information, the researchers built a nationwide online pandemic tracker capable of providing a down-to-the-day snapshot of who is spending and who is struggling, by income level, city, state and county and, in some instances, by zip code.

The data quickly revealed stunning implications on virtually every front.

In Reno, as in many places, affluent residents at the top of the recession鈥檚 K shape bounced back right away 鈥 much more quickly than in a typical downturn. But their new spending patterns crippled the businesses that supported their lower-income neighbors; those impoverished families on the bottom continue to struggle disproportionately on every front, beset by challenges long proven to be detrimental to children’s ability to learn in school.

Researchers, Friedman told 蜜桃影视, fear the resulting losses 鈥 of jobs, of loved ones to COVID, of mental health supports and reliable food supplies 鈥 may have even more devastating impacts for children that schools were already failing to serve, with education鈥檚 potential for lifting a family out of poverty moving further out of reach. 

(Friedman and Chetty update the tracker as the underlying information changes. The data in this story was downloaded June 29, 2021.)

The Opportunity Insights tracker contains one academic dataset: student participation and progress on the math app Zearn, which one-fourth of the nation鈥檚 K-5 students have access to. Immediately after schools closed, use of the app among low-income students “completely dropped off,” notes Zearn CEO Shalinee Sharma. As they started logging on again, a yawning gap became apparent. A year into the pandemic, these students鈥 progress was behind where it should have been, while their wealthier peers were ahead 28 percent.

WATCH: Beth Hawkins details her latest investigation into COVID鈥檚 K-shaped recession and how the fallout will challenge America鈥檚 schools

New studies . and the nonprofit assessment concern found wide disparities between white/affluent students and their low-income peers/children of color. Depending on grade and subject, low-income students ended the 2020-21 school year with up to seven months of unfinished learning.

In many ways, because Reno鈥檚 economic development officials took steps after the Great Recession to address major shifts in the economy, the city is better positioned than most places to weather COVID鈥檚 economic shocks. In particular, the community鈥檚 leaders tapped the local school district to help train the workforce needed to fuel a clean energy hub, with its thousands of good jobs. 

The resulting ripples from that prescient decision are being felt as early as kindergarten. 

Gambling and quickie divorces

When Tesla announced it was to break ground in 2014 on a much-anticipated Gigafactory, where it would develop a new class of batteries that could free consumers from fossil fuels, the headlines wrote themselves.

鈥淩eno, Nevada, may have just won one of the most coveted economic prizes in America,鈥 declared the San Francisco Chronicle鈥檚 “” blog. 

鈥淭esla Motors鈥 $5 billion Gigafactory may be the best thing to happen to northern Nevada since the silver rush of the 1850s,鈥 . 

The $1.2 billion state incentive package that sealed the deal was a “” on lessening Nevada鈥檚 dependence on casinos, according to the magazine Area Development Site and Facility Planning. 

The anticipated jackpot 鈥 $100 billion in economic growth over the next two decades 鈥 “,” quipped the news site Teslarati.

The city, the stories noted, beat out glitzier locations because of its easy freeway and rail access to Tesla鈥檚 flagship Bay Area facilities, its lack of corporate income taxes and even its status as the jumping-off spot for the Burning Man. The pundits weren鈥檛 kidding about this last selling point: Like lots of Silicon Valley technocrati, Tesla founder Elon Musk himself is a 鈥淏urner鈥 鈥 a moniker analysts explained earnestly in auto industry publications. 

But in the same breath where they mentioned the good jobs the tech boom would create, the pundits decried the poor state of Nevada鈥檚 education systems. The deal the state and Musk eventually arrived at would require that half the jobs under Tesla鈥檚 control 鈥 6,500 permanent positions and thousands more to build the Gigafactory 鈥 be filled by Nevada residents. But the state鈥檚 schools were not graduating students with the necessary skills. 

Nevada has the smallest higher education system in the nation, with a correspondingly low rate of postsecondary enrollment. Last year, Nevada students posted the nation鈥檚 lowest average score on the ACT college entrance exam, at 17.9. On the most recent National Assessment of Educational Progress, often referred to as the nation鈥檚 report card, Nevada students outperformed only their peers in Louisiana, New Mexico, Alaska and Washington, D.C. 

Historically, state leaders felt little urgency to confront the problem. An economy centered on gambling and quickie divorces put no pressure on public education institutions at any level to graduate students with skills beyond those needed to work in the gaming and hospitality industries. 

鈥淭here was 鈥 a demand side to the problem,鈥 Elliot Parker, then the head of the Department of Economics at the University of Nevada, Reno, wrote in the in the wake of the Great Recession of 2008. 鈥淪ince before the crash, many young people without a degree could earn above-average wages working in casinos or construction, at least for a while.鈥

For 50 years, a near-monopoly on legal gambling helped the state weather economic swings. Even after the number of Native American casinos began to rise elsewhere, Las Vegas continued to appeal to tourists. But not Reno. 

In 2000, Californians voted to allow tribal casinos to offer slot machines and card games, paving the way for them to build resorts. No longer was there a compelling reason for northern Californians, Reno鈥檚 chief visitors, to make the trip across the state line. The region鈥檚 gambling revenue fell by two-thirds, a big drop at any time but especially hard to overcome once the Great Recession struck in 2008. Unemployment soared to 14 percent in 2010 鈥 the worst in the country. By 2011, home values had fallen by 58 percent, leaving 70 percent of mortgage holders underwater and devastating construction, until then the metro area鈥檚 other major source of jobs.

In 2012, then-Gov. Brian Sandoval for diversifying the state鈥檚 economy. He proposed investments in higher education but said that wouldn鈥檛 be enough. Apprenticeships and other programs to provide job skills certification to students not necessarily seeking a college degree would be an important part of broadening the state鈥檚 employment base. 

To that end, he asked the state鈥檚 underperforming K-12 schools to work with regional economic development agencies to bolster career and technical education, or CTE, and make sure the training programs actually taught the skills needed by the employers that regional officials were trying to entice.

As an example of the kind of strategy needed, Sandoval singled out Washoe County Public Schools鈥 , then a relatively new initiative to offer four-year high school programs with specific career focuses. Students who choose one of the themed courses of study can earn college credit and industry-approved job credentials in fields such as agriculture, engineering, information technology and health sciences.

Tesla Gigafactory (Smnt/Wikimedia Commons)

In creating CTE programs, districts and states face several pitfalls, says Anthony Carnevale, director of the Georgetown University Center on Education and the Workforce. The first is ensuring that offerings both engage students and are aligned to employers鈥 needs 鈥 an effort that is now required under the federal . Programs that achieve this, he says, are relatively rare. The second is avoiding the biased tracking of generations past, when schools placed disproportionate numbers of economically disadvantaged students and youth of color in vocational training programs to prepare them for low-wage jobs, rather than advanced academics that led to higher education. 

In Washoe County Public Schools, the district that includes Reno, shows that boys make up 52 percent of enrollment and 56 percent of CTE participants. Some 44 percent of students are white, as are 48 percent of program participants, while Latino students are 37 percent of CTE enrollment and 43 percent of the overall student body.

The district offers 36 CTE programs in 12 high schools, falling into six broad groupings: agriculture and natural resources; information technology and media; health science and public safety; business and marketing; education, hospitality and human services; and skilled and technical sciences. In many of the programs, seniors have the opportunity to earn an industry certification or other job credential, or complete an internship. Nearly one-fourth of 2020 12th-graders 鈥 1,229 graduates 鈥 finished the three or more years of study in a particular field needed to be considered a 鈥淐TE completer.鈥

Washoe鈥檚 arts and communications programs are still its most popular CTE tracks, with more than 1,500 students participating in the 2019-20 school year. Information technology is a close second. While the number of students enrolled in traditional career programs such as education and hospitality remains high, interest in more cutting-edge offerings is growing. Programs geared toward the region鈥檚 economic development efforts include manufacturing, with 800 participants; transportation and logistics, with 575; science, technology, engineering and math (STEM) with 550, and 900 in health sciences.

High school offerings are planned using economic development data that in most states guides decisions about whom public colleges and universities should train, and for what jobs. The Economic Development Agency of Western Nevada provides the district with weekly reports on job openings, the wages those jobs are likely to pay and which fields are poised to grow or shrink. 

The nearly 8,000 students in Washoe鈥檚 CTE programs can study clean energy technologies like wind, solar, geothermal and hydropower, automation, greenhouse management, environmental engineering, manufacturing and, of course, automotive technology. Opened in 2002, the Academy of Arts, Careers and Technologies is entirely career-focused and enrolls students from anywhere in the county. A second all-CTE high school is scheduled to open in fall 2023. 

Before the pandemic, two-thirds of district elementary schools had robotics clubs, with offerings ranging from simple computer coding games to First Lego League and First Robotics, a competition in which students have a short time to build an industrial-size robot that will compete against other teams in a field game.

Traner Middle School student Sergio worked with teachers and Caroline Hanson, regional robotics coordinator for the Economic Development Authority of Western Nevada, (center) during a robotics teacher training program. (Emmeline Zhao for 蜜桃影视)

Incorporating economic forecasting into school planning has been a game-changer, says Josh Hartzog, the director of the department in charge of the programs: 鈥淲here do our schools need to be positioned 10, 20, 30 years from now, given that we have no idea what the economy will look like?鈥

Equipping today鈥檚 students with career credentials is terrific, he says. But the real key to future prosperity is to make sure they graduate with skills like critical-thinking, problem-solving, entrepreneurial drive and ability to refine ideas that will increase the odds they will create their own high-tech innovation or start their own businesses.

The robotics club effect

As the Gigafactory began to rise from the desert, Tesla founder Musk was vocal about whom he wanted working in it. A track record of 鈥渆xceptional achievement鈥 was his chief qualification. “There’s no need even to have a college degree at all, or even high school,” Musk 鈥 鈥 told the . “If somebody graduated from a great university, that may be an indication that they will be capable of great things, but it’s not necessarily the case.鈥

Still under construction, the plant may, at 10 million square feet, eventually be the world鈥檚 largest building. Right now, the facility is about 30 percent complete, with the remainder to be designed around innovations gleaned from the work taking place inside now. Musk hopes his exceptional achievers can conjure the Holy Grail of clean, renewable energy: batteries that are greener, cheaper, smaller and capable of powering everything from cell phones to cars to homes.

When Tesla鈥檚 first electric cars were introduced in 2008, their price tags 鈥 often six figures 鈥 put them out of reach of most customers. One reason the cars were so expensive was the cost of producing the lithium-ion batteries they run on. If the company could reduce the cost of the batteries by 30 percent by bringing research and production under one roof, Tesla could produce cars for middle-class drivers. Indeed, the first $35,000 Model 3 rolled off the assembly line in 2017.

The batteries are cheaper, but inside the Gigafactory, the quest for better ones not reliant on cobalt 鈥 expensive and problematic to mine 鈥 continues, with the first production lines . A host of high-tech employers including Google, Apple, Panasonic and Intuit have set up shop in the Gigafactory鈥檚 shadow, hoping to capitalize on similar innovations and creating fierce competition for skilled labor. 

The feedback loop created by the new employers, the region鈥檚 economic development officials and the K-12 school system could be a positive departure from past CTE practices, which too often result in re-creating the low-skill vo-tech programming of the post-World War II era, says Carnevale. 

鈥淓mployer involvement is great, but it鈥檚 kind of like love,鈥 he says. 鈥淓veryone wants it and there is never enough. They鈥檙e very fickle. They don鈥檛 work for you.鈥 

One reason he鈥檚 optimistic about Washoe鈥檚 programs is that instead of focusing on job training per se, the partnership is capitalizing on hands-on experiences to motivate students to develop the traits and intellectual abilities that will ensure they leave high school ready for college or a skilled career.

As part of its agreement with the state, Tesla agreed to spend $37.5 million on K-12 education. As people started working in the Gigafactory, the company analyzed the performance evaluations of its most effective workers. What it found was that many had participated in robotics clubs as kids. 

Reno is awash in robots, says Amy Fleming, until recently the economic development agency鈥檚 director of workforce development and now with the Governor鈥檚 Office of Workforce Innovation. Visitors to Tesla鈥檚 campus encounter self-driving vehicles, which stop to let them pass. One of the area’s employers makes robots that make other robots. Students who learn robotics and other high-tech manufacturing skills in high school will have no problem finding a good job. 

But as Tesla鈥檚 executives probed further into its high-performers鈥 experiences with the clubs, they found something else. The clubs’ competitive aspect teaches students to solve problems on the fly. They鈥檙e fun for kids of any age and draw a diverse array of participants, . Students compete, but they work together to do so. 

Participants in Tesla鈥檚 teacher externship program (Economic Development Authority of Western Nevada)

Accordingly, one of the things Tesla has funded is a robotics coordinator for Washoe schools.

In 2019, students at Reed High School won a $10,000 grant from the Lemelson-MIT Program, which rewards student inventors. Their proposal: to create a flywheel that would extract cigarette butts from storm sewers, preventing toxins within from poisoning fish in a nearby lake.

The senior who conceived of the idea went to the school鈥檚 energy technology classes to recruit volunteers. Many of those who joined the effort had participated in robotics clubs since middle school. The students used the grant money to test and refine the idea. 

鈥淥nce you identify that thread and start pulling on it, it鈥檚 like, 鈥極h, of course, this makes sense,鈥 says Fleming. 鈥淚t鈥檚 that engineer鈥檚 curiosity.鈥 Students taught to continuously test and refine their creations, whether an invention or a process, she points out, are going to drive the innovations that will shape the economy in the years to come 鈥 and in the process, secure jobs that will place them firmly at the top of the K.

Reno鈥檚 success in reinventing itself as a high-tech hub and attracting associated growing industries is great, she says. But looking further out, the key to true long-term economic health is whether regional officials 鈥 and the school system 鈥 can nourish Reno鈥檚 blossoming startup sector. The same problem-solving and collaboration skills that make robotics club participants prized members of Tesla鈥檚 current workforce, Fleming says, will make today鈥檚 high school graduates the entrepreneurs whose innovations will keep the local economy nimble.

鈥淣orthern Nevada has made progress transitioning from service to production,鈥 says Fleming. 鈥淎s your community transitions from production to a knowledge-based economy, that鈥檚 crucial.鈥 

This article is part of a series examining COVID’s K-shaped recession and what it means for America鈥檚 schools. Read the full series here.

Disclosure: The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and Chan Zuckerberg Initiative provide financial support to Opportunity Insights and 蜜桃影视.


Lead images: Getty Images

]]>