Abstract
This paper describes Electronic Blocks, a new robot construction element designed to allow children as young as age three to build and program robotic structures. The Electronic Blocks encapsulate input, output and logic concepts in tangible elements that young children can use to create a wide variety of physical agents. The children are able to determine the behavior of these agents by the choice of blocks and the manner in which they are connected. The Electronic Blocks allow children without any knowledge of mechanical design or computer programming to create and control physically embodied robots. They facilitate the development of technological capability by enabling children to design, construct, explore and evaluate dynamic robotics systems. A study of four and five year-old children using the Electronic Blocks has demonstrated that the interface is well suited to young children. The complexity of the implementation is hidden from the children, leaving the children free to autonomously explore the functionality of the blocks. As a consequence, children are free to move their focus beyond the technology. Instead they are free to focus on the construction process, and to work on goals related to the creation of robotic behaviors and interactions. As a resource for robot building, the blocks have proved to be effective in encouraging children to create robot structures, allowing children to design and program robot behaviors.
Chapter PDF
Similar content being viewed by others
References
Santrock, J.W.: Child development, 8th edn. McGraw Hill, Boston (1998)
Shaffer, D.R.: Developmental Psychology: Childhood and adolescence. Wadsworth Group, Belmont (2002)
Sheingold, K.: The microcomputer as a symbolic medium. In: Pea, R.D., Sheingold, K. (eds.) Mirrors of minds: Patterns of experience in educational computing, pp. 198–208. Ablex Publishing Corporation, Norwood (1987)
Yelland, N.: Technology: changing the way we think and learn or maintaining the status quo. Australian Educational Computing 12(1), 3–8 (1997)
Resnick, M.: New Paradigms for Computing, New Paradigms for Thinking. In: di Sessa, A., Hoyles, C., Noss, R. (eds.) Computers and Exploratory Learning, pp. 31–43. Springer, Berlin (1995)
Resnick, M., Ocko, S.: LEGO/Logo: Learning Through and About Design. In: Harel, I., Papert, S. (eds.) Constructionism, Ablex Publishing, Norwood (1991)
Martin, F., Mikhak, B., Resnick, M., Silverman, B., Berg, R.: To Mindstorms and Beyond: Evolution of a Construction Kit for Magical Machines. In: Druin, A., Hendler, J. (eds.) Robots for Kids: Exploring New Technologies for Learning Experiences, pp. 9–33. Morgan Kaufman, San Francisco (2000)
Resnick, M., Martin, F., Berg, R., Borovoy, R., Colella, V., Kramer, K., Silverman, B.: Digital Manipulatives: New Toys to Think With. In: Proceedings of the CHI 1998, pp. 281–287. ACM Press, Los Angeles (1998)
Resnick, M., Berg, R., Eisenberg, M.: Beyond Black Boxes: Bringing Transparency and Aesthetics Back to Scientific Investigation. Journal of the Learning Sciences 9(1), 7–30 (2000)
Frei, P., Su, V., Mikhak, B., Ishii, H.: curlybot: Designing a New Class of Computational Toys. In: Proceedings of CHI 2000, pp. 129–136. ACM Press, The Hague (2000)
Resnick, M., Bruckman, A., Martin, F.: Pianos not stereos: Creating computational construction kits. Interactions 3(5), 41–50 (1996)
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Editor information
Rights and permissions
Copyright information
© 2008 Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg
About this paper
Cite this paper
Wyeth, P., Wyeth, G. (2008). Robot Building for Preschoolers. In: Visser, U., Ribeiro, F., Ohashi, T., Dellaert, F. (eds) RoboCup 2007: Robot Soccer World Cup XI. RoboCup 2007. Lecture Notes in Computer Science(), vol 5001. Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-540-68847-1_11
Download citation
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-540-68847-1_11
Publisher Name: Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg
Print ISBN: 978-3-540-68846-4
Online ISBN: 978-3-540-68847-1
eBook Packages: Computer ScienceComputer Science (R0)