Saturday, November 27, 2021

Student Robotics to " Protect Our Animals" ....Received in my In Box, the 2021 MWRC Global Online Finals

 

Join and Protect Our Animals

After three months of trials and competitions, the 2021 MWRC Global Online Finals was successfully concluded. More than 200 teams from around the world engaged in the competition, including Mainland China, Singapore, Japan, Russia, Ukraine, the United States, Canada, Finland, Hong Kong (China), UAE and Australia, etc.

In this competition, which was themed [Join and Protect Our Animals], children from all over the world created various animal protection plans by combining wonderful ideas with the topic Environmental Protection and using their own coding works. That was amazing


Competition Review

The young contestants were ingenious and their division of work was clear. They used paper, brushes, Lego blocks and other readily available materials to create a conservancy in their own minds.

 

Little Matatalab guardians can be seen everywhere, whether in the jungle, in the desert or on the glacier. 

 

Some were cleaning up garbage over and over on the wavy seashore. 

 

Some were secretly patrolling in the jungle. 

 

Some were walking between volcanoes and glaciers.

 

Some were cleaning up plastic garbage in the conservancy.

 

Members of each team participating in the competition worked hard and cooperated quite skillfully. It can be seen at a glance that they have practiced a lot. No wonder the works presented were so amazing.

 

We are so proud to see the smiling faces of the children from worldwide! 

 

Winners 

There were so many participating teams, and wonderful works were emerging one after another. Which teams would then finally stand out and win the honors of the year?

Wednesday, November 24, 2021

Create a Robot Library

 

How to Create a Robot Library
"As soon as you bring a robot into a classroom, kids are already curious and wondering and excited," says Shawn Abele, instructional technology coordinator for Gilbert Public Schools in Arizona. However, Abele and Jon Castelhano, the district's executive director of technology, also know that sometimes robotics in the classroom is used merely as a fun way to pass the time and keep kids entertained rather than an educational tool. So when their district purchased a number of robotics kits in 2020 to loan out to various schools and classrooms in the district, they were determined to avoid using the devices as a gimmick.
Full Story: Tech & Learning (11/24)