Home /Research /Classroom applications of educational robots for inclusive teams of students with and without disabilities
MANIPULATION

Classroom applications of educational robots for inclusive teams of students with and without disabilities

Richard Howell, Stacy A. Martz, Carol Stanger

Year
1996
Citations
12

Abstract

A cooperative learning environment with disabled and non-disabled student research teams used a robotic system to investigate phenomena in a manipulation-rich science education environment. The setting was an .inclusive third/fourth grade classroom in a neighborhood school within a large midwestern city. An innovative science education curriculum was developed which emphasized an inquiry-based approach. The research design involved both pre-testing and post-testing of student perfor ance in both pencil-and-paper tests and an actual experimental setting. Results were mixed, with students not performing as well on paper-and-pencil tasks in contrast to excellent performance on a transfer task. The results of social validity sampling procedures indicated that both students and teachers saw benefits through the use of the robot as a science tool. The implications of the research are discussed in terms of increasing interactions between disabled and non-disabled students and the functionality of the robotic device as an assistive tool. The needs for a future generation of highly capable and flexible robotic tools is discussed and some suggestions are made for the future.

Keywords

Pencil (optics)CurriculumMathematics educationTask (project management)Special educationRobotComputer sciencePsychologyHuman–computer interactionEngineering

Related papers

Browse all MANIPULATION papers