ŠćÉ«app

Kent State Researchers Use LEGO Camps to Build Relationships With the Community

A special classroom at ŠćÉ«app turned into a LEGOĀ® city filled with roaring lions, speeding cars and spinning tops.

The moving creations are part of a unique summer camp, LEGO WeDoā„¢ Robotics, put on by the Research Center for Educational Technology in the College of Education, Health and Human Services.

It is one of many technology-based camps that the center offers as part of the Kent Stateā€™s commitment to reaching out and serving the community.

to watch a video on the camp.

During the school year, researchers at the center use a two-way mirror to study the effects of digital tools in the classroom. They take what they learn and apply it to the summer camps.

ā€œItā€™s just amazing to see what the children are able to develop with these tools and what itā€™s able to spark in them in regards to understanding some really key concepts related to programming and coding,ā€ said Annette Kratcoski, Ph.D., professor and director at Kent Stateā€™s Research Center for Educational Technology.

Students start by building a LEGO model of their choice. Then, they are introduced to robotics software used to learn a coding procedure, which allows them to drag and drop commands to move their model.

A simple USB cord connects the model to the computer. With the push of a button, the LEGO character wakes up and comes to life.

ā€œI like programming the LEGOS to do different things and making them make sounds,ā€ said 7-year-old student Emily Wrobel. ā€œBefore I came to this camp, I never knew LEGOS could be alive.ā€

ā€œItā€™s surprising and exciting to see that LEGOS do things,ā€ said student Sarah Jalli, who is 9 years old.

Besides having fun, the students are also learning physics, math, grids, angles and sequencing. They just do not know it.

ā€œAs theyā€™re sharing and talking with their friends, theyā€™re using terms like, ā€˜my tilt sensorā€™ and ā€˜this motorā€™ and ā€˜this gearā€™ is making the model move,ā€ Kratcoski said. 

For the students, it is a chance to take their creativity and digital skills to new levels.

For researchers, it is a way to take their data and share it with the community.

ā€œWe call it our bonding time,ā€ Kratcoski said. ā€œIt brings us closer to our own faculty and staff and also with our community.ā€

The next LEGOS WeDo Robotics camp begins on July 20, 2015.

For more information about Student Technology Camps at Kent Stateā€™s Research Center for Educational Technology, visit www.kent.edu/rcet/student-technology-camps

For more information about the Research Center for Educational Technology at Kent State, visit www.kent.edu/rcet.  

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Media Contacts:
Annette Kratcoski, akratcos@kent.edu, 330-672-3317
Kristin Anderson, kander63@kent.edu, 330-672-7907

 

POSTED: Wednesday, July 15, 2015 11:13 AM
Updated: Saturday, December 3, 2022 01:02 AM
WRITTEN BY:
Kristin Anderson