Las Vegas Review-Journal

CHILDREN LEARN WITH ROBOTS

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numbers. But many researcher­s and educators say that the focus on coding is misplaced and that the more important skills to teach have to do with playing with other children and nothing to do with machines: human skills that machines can’t easily replicate, like empathy, collaborat­ion and problem-solving.

“It’s a real misnomer that simply learning to code is the answer,” said Ken Goldberg, a chairman in engineerin­g at the University of California, Berkeley. “We don’t need everybody to be extremely capable Python coders. It’s a way of understand­ing what machines are good at and what they’re not good at — that’s something everybody needs to learn.”

It’s not that technology should be avoided; many researcher­s say children should be exposed to it. But we don’t know what machines will be able to do in two decades, let alone which programmin­g languages software engineers will use. And children learn better, they say, by playing and building instead of sitting behind screens.

“We don’t want all these young kids sitting in front of a computer,” said Marina Umaschi Bers, a professor of computer science and child developmen­t who directs the Tufts research group. “We want them to move around and work with each other.”

Umaschi Bers developed the Kibo robot that Declan was using and Scratchjr, a programmin­g language for the under-7 set. But she says the bigger point is to teach computatio­nal thinking. That essentiall­y means breaking down problems into smaller parts and creating plans to solve them — with prototypes, feedback and revisions — in all parts of life.

“That’s key for programmin­g, and it’s key for life,” she said. Her curriculum, used in schools nationwide and abroad, teaches skills like sharing and perseveran­ce, and is woven into all subjects in the school day: Children program robots to act out a story they’re reading, for example.

These ideas reach back five decades to Seymour Papert, a mathematic­ian and educationa­l theorist. Children learn best not when a teacher or computer feeds them knowledge, he said, but when following their curiosity and making things, whether a sand castle or a robot. In 2006, Jeannette Wing, a computer scientist at Columbia, revisited the notion of computatio­nal thinking as a skill for everyone to learn and use. “Computatio­nal thinking is a way humans solve problems,” she wrote. She gave everyday examples: “When your daughter goes to school in the morning, she puts in her backpack the things she needs for the day; that’s prefetchin­g and caching.”

At the Tufts summer camp, the children were programmin­g the robot — which has no screen but uses colored wooden blocks and a bar code scanner — by building a sequence of blocks labeled with commands like “turn right” or “spin.”

They had already learned an important piece of syntax: The program must begin with a green “begin” block and end with a red “end” one. Nico Luker, 6, decided to test what would happen if he scanned a program without the “end” block. “It won’t work without an end,” predicted Noam Webber, 6. Sure enough, the robot sat still.

Meanwhile, the children were learning about teamwork, failure and sharing. “Technology can be a vehicle to help people create and collaborat­e better, but at the end of the day, people need to learn to work with people,” Umaschi Bers said.

To begin, teachers place all the materials on tables, and children take what they need. Some try to take everything, prompting a conversati­on about sharing and ethical choices.

There’s a testing area, where children get points for how many times they try something that fails. “We don’t create an artificial environmen­t where everything will work,” Umaschi Bers said. “We let them find frustratio­n because they will only learn to manage frustratio­n if they encounter it.”

Teaching social and emotional skills is fashionabl­e in education right now, but it’s been part of high-quality teaching for decades, and randomized trials over time have shown how important it is to adult success, said Stephanie M. Jones, a professor of education at Harvard who studies social and emotional developmen­t.

“If you raise and educate kids to be flexible, problem solvers and good communicat­ors, they can adapt to a world that is new,” she said.

This is natural to the way preschoole­rs learn, said David Deming, a professor of public policy, economics and economics at Harvard. They flexibly move from the art area to the block area during free play; they build structures and make collages; andtheysha­retoysandt­ryagain when they mess up.

A big challenge is making sure this style of education is not lost in higher grades. Just as preschoole­rs learn math by operating a pretend store instead of doing work sheets, he said, high schoolers should learn government by staging a mock Congress rather than reading a textbook.

“You’re learning to work in groups and be creative, and that this problem you’re facing today looks like a problem you faced in a different context a year ago,” he said. “That is a process that is very hard for artificial intelligen­ce to replicate.”

 ?? KAYANA SZYMCZAK / THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? From left: Declan Lewis, 8, Elizabeth Sheldon, 7, and Violet Smith, 7, with a KIBO robot on July 24 at Devtech summer camp, Tufts University in Medford, Mass. The robot can light up and make sounds in response to a child’s building a line of code with...
KAYANA SZYMCZAK / THE NEW YORK TIMES From left: Declan Lewis, 8, Elizabeth Sheldon, 7, and Violet Smith, 7, with a KIBO robot on July 24 at Devtech summer camp, Tufts University in Medford, Mass. The robot can light up and make sounds in response to a child’s building a line of code with...

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