Robots dressed in female attire turn teachers in Bengaluru school


Bengaluru, Sep 1 (IANS): Disruptive technologies and Artificial Intelligence (AI) are making their way into classrooms as humanoid robots to teach students and interact with them as teachers do, at a school in Bengaluru.

"Our robots impart lessons daily in five subjects to about 300 students in Classes 7-9 in four sections by turns. They also interact with them and respond to questions in the subjects," Indus International School's Chief Design Officer, Vignesh Rao, told IANS here.

Though the 5 foot 7 inch robots, dressed in formal female attire, do not replace real teachers, they complement them in teaching lessons in the subjects and reply to FAQs (frequently asked questions) from students.

"We have programmed the interactive robots to answer questions students frequently ask on the subjects and related to them. With AI in play, the robots are able to respond to questions and doubts of our wards after a lesson is taught," said Rao.

The private international day-cum-boarding school has 25 co-ed students in each of the four sections for Classes 7-9. It is affiliated to the Geneva-based International Baccalaureate (IB) Institute and follows its syllabus, which is recognized worldwide.

"The AI-enabled robots teach lessons in Biology, Chemistry, Geography, History and Physics to Classes 7-9. As per the Collaborative Learning Model (CLM), the man-machine team, comprising a teacher, students and the robot, collaborate in the classroom to deliver a lesson. The teacher collaborates with the robot and brings out the key concepts, relevance and application of the lesson being taught," said Rao, who also heads the project.

Rao and his 17-member team have designed and built the three robots in-house from light-weight 3D-printed materials with imported smart servo motors. These robots emulate human-like gestures while delivering the lessons in the classroom.

"It has taken our team nearly two years to design and develop these robots with software, hardware and AI to make them teaching assistants and allowing the human teacher to be more relevant in the classroom so that they can focus on the child and not the subject alone," he added.

The team consists of teachers in the respective subjects - programmers, content developers, graphic designers and hardware engineers who built the mobile robots, weighing 45 kgs each.

Though the team did not rope-in any manufacturer to make the robots, it sourced hardware and software components from the best players in the industry to assemble them in-house at a cost of Rs eight lakh each.

"The response of students to a robot teaching them is positive and encouraging. They feel the collaboration between a human teacher and a robot enhances learning. It makes the human teacher focus on the child and personalise learning," Indus Trust Chief Executive Lt. General (retd) Arjun Ray told IANS.

Touted as the first-of-its-kind, the school plans to scale the pilot project to roll out more robots for other classes and more subjects in future.

The school is also in the process of applying for an international patent to protect the IP (intellectual property) of its Eagle 2.0 version humanoid robot.

"The CLM purpose is to make human teachers more creative in the education sector. Robots will not replace their human counterparts but will work collaboratively with teachers as a tool or assistant to enhance the learning experience for the students in the classroom," added Lt. General Ray.

Anvi Kurade, a Class 8 student in the school here, said it was fascinating to watch a robot taking classes and teaching lessons in as many as five subjects.

The Indus Trust has 14 educational institutions across the country, including three top-ranked K-12 international day-cum-boarding schools, eight early learning centres, Indus Training and Research Institute, Indus School of Leadership and Indus International Community Schools in Bengaluru and Belagavi in Karnataka, Chennai, Hyderabad and Pune.

About 4,000 students from 38 countries are enrolled in the Indus School and its branches, which have 520 teaching faculty.

  

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Comment on this article

  • Rita, Germany

    Mon, Sep 02 2019

    Somehow they are maschines.Prepared by humans.when something goes wrong then one has to look into sky.out of programmed lesson you dont have touch with a human being with heart and soul.No touch of humanity.like a roboter cleaner.At the corner you have to bend your backbone.when no power have to self take a broom.I prefer a human teacher for children to bring them a proper lesson.And this way more jobs too .Robo takes away the job.

    DisAgree Agree [2] Reply Report Abuse

  • Jossey Saldanha, Nashville

    Mon, Sep 02 2019

    Unemployment has already read the lowest in last 72 Years ...

    DisAgree [4] Agree [6] Reply Report Abuse

  • John Tauro, M'luru

    Mon, Sep 02 2019

    Here human teachers cannot be replaced by robots. These robots can just lessen the burden of teachers.

    DisAgree Agree [1] Reply Report Abuse

  • Jai India, Mangalore

    Sun, Sep 01 2019

    Soon there will be Robotic Life Partner with suitable complexion, texture and manoeuvrability. Program it any way you want. Problems solved for holy persons. gay- lesbians, rowdies and old & sick.

    DisAgree Agree [12] Reply Report Abuse

  • Charles D'Mello, Pangala

    Sun, Sep 01 2019

    Although it is a Good move, I have objection about attire.....!!!!!

    DisAgree [1] Agree [8] Reply Report Abuse

  • Ahmed K. C., Mangalore

    Sun, Sep 01 2019

    Means, more jobs cut ???

    DisAgree Agree [19] Reply Report Abuse

  • Prakash, Mangalore

    Sun, Sep 01 2019

    I wish i had these teachers in my school time... was too shy and afraid to ask questions.........

    DisAgree [3] Agree [10] Reply Report Abuse

  • LAN.........,, Belman / Washington, DC.

    Sun, Sep 01 2019

    We need Robot Minister's ...No Corruption...No Nepotism and No Favoritism....unlike We humans...

    ...Tak...Takk...

    DisAgree [3] Agree [57] Reply Report Abuse

  • Jai India, Mangalore

    Sun, Sep 01 2019

    Your idea is very naive but at the end of the day it's humans who program the robots. When EVMs can be programmed to favour one party then why can't robots rule the same way????!!!!.....

    DisAgree [10] Agree [34] Reply Report Abuse

  • Charles D'Mello, Pangala

    Sun, Sep 01 2019

    Lancy...these robots has to be programmed by human beings....That too under the guidance of corrupt politicians...!!!!!

    DisAgree Agree [14] Reply Report Abuse

  • Mangalurian, Mangaluru

    Sun, Sep 01 2019

    Programmable machines that deal almost solely on FAQs are no much different to online resources.

    The students of the future do not need a school. If sufficient materials can be provided to them online, the schools are no more needed. Imagine how free the roads will be with no students having a need to travel to/from school!

    DisAgree [1] Agree [19] Reply Report Abuse


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