ニュース

Teachers across the country are taking robots beyond STEM classes and into lessons on history, literature, geography—and even art and music.
A small European study found that teachers think educational robots have benefits for students, but they're skeptical of fitting robots into the curriculum and using limited class time.
These robots would be able to identify facial expressions of children in a classroom and assess a child's brain and adapt teaching methods as per individual requirements.
The company that inspired Star Wars' BB-8 droid has already won the hearts and minds of K–12 students with a similar ball-shaped robot named Sphero.
The robots were also effective in teaching subjects other than English, the ministry said, citing the results of another project it conducted at 10 Seoul-based schools.
Her robots are helping some 11-13 year-olds with a geography lesson, teaching them to improve their map reading skills in a regular classroom environment.
Paul Beardsley from Disney Research Zurich explains how the 50 pixelbot robots work together in a swarm to create animations.
A school in Birmingham has been trialling a new way of teaching children with autism, by introducing robots into the classroom.
Two young coders find out about the instructions that tell robots what to do. This clip will be relevant for teaching Computing at Key Stage 1, Key Stage 2 and Second Level.
South Korea, known for its enthusiasm for technology, is “hiring” hundreds of robots as teacher aides and classroom playmates and is experimenting with robots that would teach English.