TY - JOUR
T1 - A Collaborative Robot in the Classroom
T2 - Designing 21st Century Engineering Education Together
AU - Wolffgramm, Milan
AU - Tijink, Tom
AU - Geloven, Mirte Disberg Van
AU - Corporaal, Stephan
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2021, North American Business Press. All rights reserved.
PY - 2021/12/29
Y1 - 2021/12/29
N2 - New and interactive robot arms have found their way to the factory floor: the collaborative robots (cobots). Cobots execute simple and routine tasks with the accuracy and precision of tradional industrial robotics. Although cobots often operate highly autonomous, they require human interferance to function. Both production workers and engineers play an essential role in the creation and maintenance of these ‘human-cobot collaborations’. The rising number of cobots in industry increasingly calls for current and future generations of production workers and engineers who are capable of fulfilling their role in human-cobot collaboration. From a development point-of-view, engineering education is a powerful vehicle to prepare production workers and engineers for human-cobot collaboration. However, it is unclear what knowledge, skills, abilities, and other requirements (KSAOs) production workers and engineers need to create and maintain human-cobot collaboration and what engineering education allows the development of these KSAOs. Therefore, our goal was to investigate how engineering education could prepare future production workers and engineers for human-cobot collaboration. We used the O*NET Content Model to deductively analyse 60 interviews about human-cobot collaboration in Dutch industry. Results illustrate how 31 KSAOs were found relevant for the design, programming, operation, and repair of human-cobot collaboration and how these KSAOs were distributed amongst production workers and engineers. Together with a community of practice, we used these insights to design a 240-hour vocational education course on human-cobot collaboration. Key decisions, course content, learning dimensions, and examination compentents are elaborated upon.
AB - New and interactive robot arms have found their way to the factory floor: the collaborative robots (cobots). Cobots execute simple and routine tasks with the accuracy and precision of tradional industrial robotics. Although cobots often operate highly autonomous, they require human interferance to function. Both production workers and engineers play an essential role in the creation and maintenance of these ‘human-cobot collaborations’. The rising number of cobots in industry increasingly calls for current and future generations of production workers and engineers who are capable of fulfilling their role in human-cobot collaboration. From a development point-of-view, engineering education is a powerful vehicle to prepare production workers and engineers for human-cobot collaboration. However, it is unclear what knowledge, skills, abilities, and other requirements (KSAOs) production workers and engineers need to create and maintain human-cobot collaboration and what engineering education allows the development of these KSAOs. Therefore, our goal was to investigate how engineering education could prepare future production workers and engineers for human-cobot collaboration. We used the O*NET Content Model to deductively analyse 60 interviews about human-cobot collaboration in Dutch industry. Results illustrate how 31 KSAOs were found relevant for the design, programming, operation, and repair of human-cobot collaboration and how these KSAOs were distributed amongst production workers and engineers. Together with a community of practice, we used these insights to design a 240-hour vocational education course on human-cobot collaboration. Key decisions, course content, learning dimensions, and examination compentents are elaborated upon.
KW - Collaborative robots
KW - Course design
KW - Engineering education
KW - KSAOs
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85123101884&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.33423/jhetp.v21i16.4924
DO - 10.33423/jhetp.v21i16.4924
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85123101884
SN - 2158-3595
VL - 21
SP - 177
EP - 187
JO - Journal of Higher Education Theory and Practice
JF - Journal of Higher Education Theory and Practice
IS - 16
ER -