KIBO Robots
What works best in early childhoodβhands-on experience with physical manipulatives and playful opportunities for self-directed knowledge constructionβalso works best for teaching AI. KIBO provides a research-proven method to explore computer science, engineering, and now AI concepts in early childhood STEM education. With KIBO, advanced and abstract concept like AI become accessible to young kids.
This new (and free!) AI curriculum, Thinking with KIBO: Introducing Artificial Intelligence (AI) in Early Grades, is designed to help students in grades 1β3 understand how artificial intelligence works, what its limitations are and how to think critically about how these tools can improve lives in their communities.
Featuring five lessons, students explore fundamental ideas about AI through activities with the hands-on and screen-free KIBO robot. Thinking with KIBO engages with computer science concepts in Kβ5, alongside evolving content standards in artificial intelligence. The curriculum is ideal for a 5β6 week unit in computer science or technology/media classes, as well as afterschool programs, enrichment centers, libraries, makerspaces, and more.
The curriculumβs core learning objectives include:
β’ AI is a tool made by people.
β’ AI systems (and robots!) make decisions based on input and rules.
β’ AI doesnβt think like people do, and itβs not alive.
β’ AI can help people solve difficult problems.
Based on 20+ years of early child development research by co-founder, Dr. Marina Bers, KIBO engages young students to learn STEAM concepts through play and creative self-expression. KIBO provides developmentally appropriate robotics and coding to young learners: teaching computer science, engineering, and computational thinking.
For these reasons and more, KIBO Robots is a Cool Tool Award Winner for βBest Robotics (for Learning, Education) Solutionβ as part of The EdTech Awards 2024 from EdTech Digest. Learn more.Β
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