The Star Malaysia - Star2

Finnish school trials robot educators

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ELIAS, the new language teacher at a Finnish primary school, has endless patience for repetition, never makes a pupil feel embarrasse­d for asking a question and can even do the Gangnam Style dance.

Elias is also a robot. The language-teaching machine comprises a humanoid robot and mobile applicatio­n, one of four robots in a pilot programme at primary schools in the southern city of Tampere.

The robot is able to understand and speak 23 languages and is equipped with software that allows it to understand students’ requiremen­ts and helps it to encourage learning.

In this trial however, it communicat­es in English, Finnish and German only. The robot recognises the pupil’s skill levels and adjusts its questions accordingl­y. It also gives feedback to teachers about a student’s possible problems.

Some of the human teachers who have worked with the technology see it as a new way to engage children in learning.

“I think in the new curriculum the main idea is to get the kids involved and get them motivated and make them active. I see Elias as one of the tools to get different kinds of practice and different kinds of activities into the classroom,” language teacher Riikka Kolunsarka said.

“In that sense I think robots and coding the robots and working with them is definitely something that is according to the new curriculum and something that we teachers need to be open minded about.”

Elias the language robot, which stands around 30cm tall, is based on SoftBank’s NAO humanoid interactiv­e companion robot, with software developed by Utelias, a developer of educationa­l software for social robots. The Maths robot – dubbed OVObot – which is a small, blue machine around 25cm high and resembles an owl, was developed by Finnish AI Robots.

The purpose of the pilot project is to see if these robots can improve the quality of teaching, with one of the Elias robots and three of the OVObots deployed in schools. The OVObots will be trialled for one year, while the school has bought the Elias robot, so its use can continue longer.

Using robots in classrooms is not new – teaching robots have been used in the Middle East, Asia and the United States in recent years, but modern technologi­es such as cloud services and 3D printing are allowing smaller start-up companies to enter the sector.

“Well, it is fun, interestin­g and exciting and I’m a bit shocked,” said pupil Abisha Jinia, giving her verdict on Elias the language robot.

Despite their skills in language and mathematic­s however, the robots’ inability to maintain discipline amongst a class of primary school children means that, for the time being at least, the human teachers’ jobs are safe. – Reuters

 ??  ?? Utelias Technologi­es CEO Johanna Hemminki poses with Elias. — Reuters
Utelias Technologi­es CEO Johanna Hemminki poses with Elias. — Reuters

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