{"id":11931,"date":"2017-02-09T04:51:16","date_gmt":"2017-02-08T17:51:16","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/legoeng.local\/?p=11931"},"modified":"2022-07-18T15:40:43","modified_gmt":"2022-07-18T05:40:43","slug":"a-week-in-the-life-12-dr-es-challenges-robot-monsters","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/legoeng.local\/a-week-in-the-life-12-dr-es-challenges-robot-monsters\/","title":{"rendered":"A Week in the Life #12: Robot Monsters!"},"content":{"rendered":"

I teach an introductory course using the LEGO Mindstorms EV3 set. My students are 7th graders who are required to take the course and may not necessarily have any background in programming\/building. My school is on a trimester schedule so the course runs for thirteen weeks at a time. For this particular trimester I have one class of thirty-three students and one class of twenty-four students. I meet each class for one 50-minute period each day, five days a week. I have thirty-four computers in my classroom, and my school district also has a 1:1 iPad initiative for all students grades 2-12. We mainly use the iPads for programming. I also have one EV3 kit for every two students. I\u2019ve been teaching this class in its current form for three years, though I\u2019ve been teaching Robotics for seven all together.<\/em><\/p>\n

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Flames of Fury<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n
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Fire!<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n
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Up Close<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n

If you’ve been following this series, you may have noticed that I haven’t posted a new entry for a while. That’s because I tend to teach the same curriculum and had exhausted my best ideas already in this series. \ud83d\ude42 But I am always trying to incorporate new ideas and projects and this most recent trimester I hit upon using Dr. E’s Challenges<\/a>.<\/p>\n

Dr. E’s Challenges are designed to get students building, programming, and sharing their robots with a wide audience based around an ever changing theme. Originally designed by Dr. Ethan Danahy from Tufts University (Dr. E, get it? Yeah, neither did I for a full year and I know the guy) they are now run by Barbara Bratzel and have been running for two years in their current form.<\/p>\n

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Spider<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n
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Spuck<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n

Barbara has challenges for both LEGO WeDo and LEGO EV3\/NXT. The method is simple. Each month there is a challenge built around a theme (puppets, video games, insects, ball throwers, aviary, etc.). The challenges are simple and do not require an extensive amount of knowledge or skill. For example, the current challenge<\/a> for the month of February, reads like this:<\/p>\n

Goal: <\/strong>Create a mythical beast\u2014a dragon, a unicorn, a zombie, or any other imaginary animal. Show us something about your creature\u2014how it moves, what it eats, where it lives. <\/em><\/p><\/blockquote>\n

This is a joint challenge for both WeDo and NXT\/EV3. Anyone can join – it is not limited to students in a class setting (though it is aimed at kids and young teenagers). All you need to do is build and program a robot that meets the challenge, take pictures and videos of the robot, upload them and include a write up. And then in true social media fashion, vote for your favorite.<\/p>\n

Here’s a sample entry from one of my students:<\/p>\n

\"PostPic\"<\/a><\/p>\n

This group uploaded a video and gave a short write-up about their robot, though they did not include any extra pics. “Roawing!,” I suppose is a customized sound only this bot can make. You can also see below the video where Barbara left a comment; she did this with most of the entries, which is really nice as it’s coming from a stranger to my students and not from their teacher whose obligated to say nice things to them. \ud83d\ude42<\/p>\n

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Upside Down Widdow<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n
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Wally<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n
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Striker<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n

I had wanted to do Dr. E’s Challenges for a while, but could never find a way to fit them into my curriculum. I already knew what I was teaching and what projects I was assessing and couldn’t work in a monthly challenge. This year my school term started early, right at the end of August, which meant my second trimester began right at the end of November. I had time to run my students through an introduction to the EV3, had them build Damien Kee’s Riley Rover<\/a>, and taught them how to use the ultrasonic sensors. Then I had them all sign up for Dr. E’s Challenges – it takes about a day to get approved. And off we went.<\/p>\n

From the standpoint of a teacher this was really nice because the challenge and rules were written for me:<\/p>\n

Goal: <\/strong>For this monstrous challenge, create a MINDSTORMS monster. It can be big or small, scary or funny\u2014but it must respond to its environment in some way.<\/p>\n

Rules: <\/strong> In addition to an NXT or EV3, you may use sensors, motors, and pieces from the NXT or EV3 kits. You are also welcome to use multiple MINDSTORMS kits, additional LEGO pieces, third-party sensors, and non-LEGO materials.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n

I told them they could use any sensor they wanted but I figured most of them would want to use the ultrasonic sensor to “react to the environment” so that’s they one that I taught. If they wanted to use a different one, they could ask me for help.<\/p>\n

We started in about the second week of December and it took about three weeks to build, test, program, decorate, record a video, upload it and write about it on the website. Unfortunately winter vacation hit, so I emailed Barbara and asked for an extension and she was kind enough to push the close date back to Jan. 6.<\/p>\n

In that time about 80% of my students finished the entire task, while the remaining 20% took a little too long and had to settle with sending me a video of their robot. Below are a few of my favorites from the submissions:<\/p>\n