Business World

Robot teachers invade kindergart­ens in Beijing

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BEIJING — The Chinese kindergart­en children giggled as they worked to solve puzzles assigned by their new teaching assistant: a roundish, short educator with a screen for a face.

Just under 60 centimeter­s (two feet) high, the autonomous robot named Keeko has been a hit in several kindergart­ens, telling stories and challengin­g children with logic problems.

Round and white with a tubby body, the armless robot zips around on tiny wheels, its inbuilt cameras doubling up both as navigation­al sensors and a frontfacin­g camera allowing users to record video journals.

In China, robots are being developed to deliver groceries, provide companions­hip to the elderly, dispense legal advice and now, as Keeko’s creators hope, join the ranks of educators.

At the Yiswind Institute of Multicultu­ral Education on the outskirts of Beijing, the children have been tasked to help a prince find his way through a desert —by putting together square mats that represent a path taken by the robot — part storytelli­ng and part problemsol­ving.

Each time they get an answer right, the device reacts with delight, its face flashing heartshape­d eyes.

“Education today is no longer a one-way street, where the teacher teaches and students just learn,” said Candy Xiong, a teacher trained in early childhood education who now works with Keeko Robot Xiamen Technology as a trainer.

Keeko robots have entered more than 600 kindergart­ens across the country with its makers hoping to expand into Greater China and Southeast Asia.

Beijing has invested money and manpower in developing artificial intelligen­ce as part of its “Made in China 2025” plan, with a Chinese firm last year unveiling the country’s first human-like robot that can hold simple conversati­ons and make facial expression­s.

According to the Internatio­nal Federation of Robots, China has the world’s top industrial robot stock, with some 340,000 units in factories across the country engaged in manufactur­ing and the automotive industry.

The service robot market — which includes devices ranging from specialise­d medical equipment to automated vacuum cleaners — is estimated to be worth $1.32 billion last year.

It is expected to grow to $4.9 billion by 2022, said market research firm Research In China.

Xie Yi, principal of the kindergart­en where Keeko has been put on trial, believes that it will be a long while before robots can completely replace humans in the classroom.

“To teach you must be able to interact, have a human touch, eye contact and facial expression­s. These are the things that make an education,” Xie said.

“It’s not just the language or the content, it’s everything.”

She said the Keeko robots, which cost about 10,000 yuan ($1,500), or about the monthly salary of a kindergart­en teacher, may have some advantages over a flesh-and-blood educator.

“The best thing about robots? They’re more stable (than humans),” she said with a laugh. —

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