Representatives from the Phoenix Mars Mission, Raytheon, Tufts University and the University of Arizona presented today about LEGO Robotics and Mindstorm activities in the classroom.
Professor Samuel Kounaves – Department of Chemistry, Tufts University
Phoenix Mars Mission Co-Investigator, Wet Chemistry Lab Lead, Chemical Analysis
More information about the lander and the unique science and engineering challenges. Robotics is a projection of human action by machines.
Craig Wittman – Raytheon Missile Systems
Craig is an engineering fellow with Raytheon and a coach in the FIRST LEGO League for grade-school age students.
In the near future, the U.S. will need an additional 70,000 States-based engineers to support national security.
Charlotte Ackerman Sunrise Drive Elementary
Programming Autonomous Learning: Robotics for Grades 2-5
LEGO activities offer a unique opportunity to engage students in critical thinking and analysis as well as creative problem solving with both LEGOs and computers.
The Arizona state stadards in science promote systems thinking, which is right up the ally of robotics. Robotics help to satisfy a list of other standards in a variety of content areas.
Students learn about multi-step tasks and missions which combine this knowledge to achieve goals like finding cracks in a pipeline.
Checklist task sheets help students to manage their progress autonomously. Tasks like learning goals, investigation, and demonstration are included. Short demos get students started, and then groups can run with the checklists with occasional support.
Teachers must find tasks for students that are difficult, but doable.
LEGO Robotics @ UA: Future Opportunities
Student-Teacher Outreach and Mentorship
Tufts partnered with U of A to introduce and support LEGO use in the classroom. They’re working on lessons aligned to the standards, classroom visits to support. The big goals for education hope to answer questions like “how can LEGOs help us learn?” and “how do LEGOs change classroom teaching?”
Lots of LEGO programs exist, but the U of A hopes to create programing specific to Arizona and it’s unique climate.
UA LEGO Robotics Outreach
Presentation of NXT and LEGO MINDSTORMS
Presented by Tufts University Representatives
Thinking like an engineer involves thinking systematically and thinking in drafts and revisions. The design process uses this thinking with creative problem solving and team-oriented analysis of data.
state the problem
Generate ideas
select a solution
build the item
evaluate
present results
Cool Kinder idea: challenge students to create a sturdy wall. Ask them to create a test to evaluate their design. They might drop their wall, or place a book on the wall. Another idea: create a chair for Mr. Bear.
Gender equality and diversity is a significant factor in LEGO engineering. Boys often benefit from competition, girls often benefit from context. In groups, a teacher might have individuals race to complete complementary parts of a larger robot. This engages many boys. Create a story with a problem to solve with robotics to engage many girls in the process of LEGO engineering.
Check out these links from the day’s presentations: