Thymio

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Thymio

Thymio ist ein kleiner, mobiler Roboter, der über zwei Wege selbst programmierbar ist und für pädagogische Zwecke konzipiert wurde. Die Programmierung ist einfach zu erlernen, da die Programmiersprache Aseba übersichtlich und logisch aufgebaut ist. Thymio richtet sich vor allem an Kinder und junge Menschen, die das Programmieren anschaulich und schnell erlernen möchten. rdf:langString
Thymio II est un robot éducatif open source qui a été créé à l'école polytechnique fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL) en collaboration avec l'école cantonale d'art de Lausanne (ECAL) en 2011. Le projet Thymio a pour objectif de rendre la découverte de l'informatique et de la technologie accessible à un large public en particulier les enfants. Pour programmer Thymio, il existe différents langages : Aseba Studio, Thymio VPL, Scratch ou Blockly4Thymio. rdf:langString
Thymio II is an educational robot in the 100 Euros price range. The robot was developed at the EPFL in collaboration with ECAL, both in Lausanne, Switzerland. A purely-visual programming language was developed at ETH Zurich. All components, both hardware and software, are open source. The main features of the robot are a large number of sensors and actuators, educational interactivity based on light and touch, and a programming environment featuring graphical and text programming. Thymio has over 20 sensors and 40 lights and integrates with third party languages such as MIT's Scratch. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Thymio
rdf:langString Thymio
rdf:langString Thymio
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rdf:langString Thymio ist ein kleiner, mobiler Roboter, der über zwei Wege selbst programmierbar ist und für pädagogische Zwecke konzipiert wurde. Die Programmierung ist einfach zu erlernen, da die Programmiersprache Aseba übersichtlich und logisch aufgebaut ist. Thymio richtet sich vor allem an Kinder und junge Menschen, die das Programmieren anschaulich und schnell erlernen möchten.
rdf:langString Thymio II est un robot éducatif open source qui a été créé à l'école polytechnique fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL) en collaboration avec l'école cantonale d'art de Lausanne (ECAL) en 2011. Le projet Thymio a pour objectif de rendre la découverte de l'informatique et de la technologie accessible à un large public en particulier les enfants. Pour programmer Thymio, il existe différents langages : Aseba Studio, Thymio VPL, Scratch ou Blockly4Thymio.
rdf:langString Thymio II is an educational robot in the 100 Euros price range. The robot was developed at the EPFL in collaboration with ECAL, both in Lausanne, Switzerland. A purely-visual programming language was developed at ETH Zurich. All components, both hardware and software, are open source. The main features of the robot are a large number of sensors and actuators, educational interactivity based on light and touch, and a programming environment featuring graphical and text programming. Thymio has over 20 sensors and 40 lights and integrates with third party languages such as MIT's Scratch. One of the unique features of these robots is its design, production, and commercialization by a full open-source and non-profit chain of actors. This very alternative approach has been justified by the educational goal of the project. The design has been mainly made by universities (EPFL, écal and ETHZ) within research programs (NCCR Robotics). Mechanics, electronics and software are open source. The company producing Thymio, called Mobsya is a non-profit organization. Many articles have been written about how to teach with Thymio in the classroom including the article, "Classroom robotics: Motivating independent learning and discovery" on Robohub. Research and new Thymio projects are constantly being done as noted by IEEE. In 2020 Thymio's pedagogical design was evaluated by Education Alliance Finland. In the evaluation, a group of teacher-evaluators in Switzerland assessed Thymio's curriculum alignment, pedagogy, and usability through using a science-based product evaluation method, developed by Education Alliance Finland and Finnish educational researchers. The product evaluation was funded by Stiftung Mercator and as an outcome of the evaluation, Thymio was granted a pedagogical quality certification. The robot is in production and distributors of Thymio include TechyKids.com.
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