How would you feel if your child was taught by a robot?
Social robots – robots that can speak and mimic human emotion – have been introduced into classrooms around the world. Researchers have used them to read stories to preschoolers in Singapore, to help 12-year-olds in Iran learn English, to improve handwriting among young children in Switzerland and to help students with autism in England to teach appropriate physical distance during social interactions.
Some experts believe that these robots could become “as common as paper, whiteboards and tablet computers” in schools.
Because social robots have a body, people react to them differently than we do to a computer screen. Studies have shown that young children sometimes accept social robots as peers. For example, in the handwriting study, a 5-year-old boy continued to send letters to the robot months after the interactions ended.
As an education professor, I study the different ways teachers around the world do their jobs. To understand how social robots might affect teaching, graduate student Raisa Gray and I introduced a 4-foot-tall humanoid robot called “Pepper” into a public elementary and middle school in the U.S. Reveal our research many problems with the current generation of social robots. , making it unlikely that social robots will be running classrooms anytime soon.
It’s not ready for prime time
Much of the research on social robots in schools is done in very limited ways. Children and social robots are not allowed to interact freely with each other without the help, or intervention, of researchers. Only a few studies have used social robots in real-life classroom settings.
Also, robotics researchers often use “Wizard of Oz” techniques in classroom settings. That means a person is operating the robot remotely, which implies that the robot can actually talk to people.
Limited social skills
Robots must be quiet.
Background noise of any kind – class change bells, loudspeaker announcements or other conversations – can interfere with the bot’s ability to follow a conversation. This is one of the major problems facing the integration of robots in schools.
It is extremely difficult for programmers to create software and hardware systems that can achieve what humans do unconsciously. For example, the current generation of social robots cannot interact with a small group and, for example, track the facial expressions of multiple people. If a person is talking to two other people about their favorite football team and one of the listeners is crying or rolling their eyes, it’s likely that someone will get it.
A robot will not.
Also, unless a barcode or other identification device is used, today’s social robots cannot identify individuals. So they are less likely to have realistic social interactions. Facial recognition software is difficult to use in a room full of moving and shifting people, and it also raises serious ethical questions about keeping students’ personal information safe.