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Educational Results of the Personal Exploration Rover Museum Exhibit

Illah Nourbakhsh, Emily Hamner, Brian Dunlavey, Debra Bernstein, Kevin Crowley

Year
2006
Citations
18

Abstract

The Personal Rover Project produces technology, curriculum and evaluation techniques for robotic educational use in formal and informal (after-school, out-of-school) learning environments. Our specific aim for this phase of the project is to create and evaluate human-robot interactions that educate members of the general public in an informal learning environment, specifically museums. Our educational goals are to further an appreciation and understanding of NASA's Mars Exploration Rovers (MERs), to illustrate the role of robotic rovers in scientific exploration, and to provide hands-on learning experiences that demonstrate robot autonomy. We have designed a new robot, the Personal Exploration Rover (PER) and the related interactive components of a museum exhibit to achieve these goals. Here we describe the exhibits developed and the formal evaluation results of the exhibits' educational impact and efficacy. These results suggest techniques by which learning can be measured and used as an indicator of successful human-robot interaction.

Keywords

AutonomyRobotCurriculumExploration of MarsPlanetary explorationMars Exploration ProgramComputer scienceInformal learningFormal learningHuman–robot interaction

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