Quantcast The Chronicle
College Media Network


Local kids, Dukies team up for robotics contest

By: Christina Patsiokas

Issue date: 3/26/07 Section: News
Last update: 3/26/07 at 6:24 AM EST
Sixth-to-eighth graders from two local schools took part in a robotics competition at the LSRC Saturday.
Media Credit: SARA GUERRERO
Sixth-to-eighth graders from two local schools took part in a robotics competition at the LSRC Saturday.

The chicken dance is not just for uniting humans of all ages in the spirit of synchronized hand-clamping: It's for robots, too.

Middle schoolers descended on the Levine Science Research Center Saturday for the RoboCupJunior regional competition.

The contest is part of a larger initiative in the Durham area to engage college students with children in sixth to eighth grades through robotics projects.

"Kids love robotics. It's amazing how much they can do with them," said Jeff Forbes, assistant professor of the practice of computer science.

The RoboCupJunior competition involved teams from two area middle schools, Chewning and Apex, as well as more than 60 students from Durham middle schools who came as spectators.

The International RoboCupJunior competition offers three challenges, explained Tom Settle, the robotics coach for Apex Middle School. Students can develop robots to dance to a chosen song, cooperate with other robots or perform a search and rescue by navigating a simulated disaster field.

Throughout the day, Duke students, most of whom belong to the National Society of Black Engineers, helped run the event and assisted the students with the design and programming of the robots.

Before the actual competition-held in the afternoon-Duke students offered robotics education for the participants.

The morning consisted of demonstrations and breakfast as well as a workshop run by junior Chris Bryant.

"We actually have a program that we do every Thursday-we'll go and have them do some sort of robot challenge in programming or something," Bryant said.

The program is a service learning course taught by Forbes called Computer Science Education Research Seminar. The small group of students enrolled in the course visit Chewning Middle School in northeast Durham weekly.

"Chewning is a school that has a large number of 'at-risk' children," Forbes said.

The Department of Computer Science decided to pilot the service learning program with Chewning last year, and offers the volunteering-based course as a half-credit every semester.

Other area middle schoolers who attended the RoboCupJunior competition came as part of Students Making Another Science Success Story, a program run out of North Carolina Central University.
Page 1 of 2 next >

Article Tools

Be the first to comment on this story

  • NOTE: Email address will not be published

Type your comment below (html not allowed)

  I understand posting spam or other comments that are unrelated to this article will cause my comment to be flagged for deletion and possibly cause my IP address to be permanently banned from this server.

Advertisement



Read the current issue online



Also in this issue:


Advertisement

Become a fan or join our group discussion on Facebook today!


Read the current issue online




Ad Supplements

Senior Ad