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Designing An Undergraduate Robotics Engineering Curriculum: Unified Robotics I And Ii
Author(s) -
Michael Ciaraldi,
Eben Cobb,
F.J. Looft,
Robert E. Norton,
Taşkın Padır
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
2009 annual conference and exposition proceedings
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
DOI - 10.18260/1-2--5201
Subject(s) - robotics , artificial intelligence , curriculum , educational robotics , computer science , robot , psychology , pedagogy
Robotics Engineering (RBE) is a new undergraduate degree program at the Worcester Polytechnic Institute (WPI). As of the fall semester of 2008, the program is the fourth largest discipline at the institution in terms of freshman enrollment. At the core of the curriculum are four signature courses called Unified Robotics I-IV. The goal of these courses is to introduce students to the multidisciplinary theory and practice of robotics engineering, integrating the fields of computer science, electrical and computer engineering and mechanical engineering. The sophomore level courses, RBE 2001 and RBE 2002, introduce students to the foundational concepts of robotics such as kinematics, pneumatics, circuits, electric motors, sensors, signal processing and embedded system programming. The junior level courses, RBE 3001 and RBE 3002, build on this foundation to ensure that students understand the analysis of selected components and learn system-level design and development of a robotic system including embedded design. This paper discusses the development of a two-course sequence in undergraduate robotics education, Unified Robotics I and II, in detail. Learning outcomes and sample schedules illustrating our approach to designing a new robotics engineering program at the undergraduate level are presented. The paper exemplifies the robotics systems designed by the students within the scope of laboratory experiences and course projects. Finally, we discuss lessons learned, future directions, and student feedback. The initial observations and results are in favor of promoting robotics engineering as a new undergraduate engineering program.

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