NY school to introduce first humanoid robot in US classroom and vows Sally will never replace teachers

They’re bot for teacher.A rural upstate New York school district will be one of the first in the nation to bring a humanoid robot into the classroom.The Salamanca City Central School District, located on Seneca Nation territory, will be introducing $57,000 AI-powered “Sally” in high school classes in September as a teaching assistant, it announced last week.“Sally” will have brown hair, latex skin and will be able to move its arms and hands — but won’t be able to cruise around the classroom since her legs don’t move.“It’s exciting but also a bit nerve wracking,” superintendent Dr.

Mark Beehler told The Post of the first of its kind pilot program, a partnership with Las Vegas-based company Realbotix Corporation.“Not everyone is open to much change in education…There was a point in time where people argued ‘Why do teachers need email accounts?’ or ‘Do we really need to have the internet in school?’ This is the next iteration of that.And the reality is, AI is already in schools,” he said.For now, Sally is scheduled to be in 11th and 12th graders at Salamanca High School where she will take a byte out of coding, robotic, and artificial intelligence classes.To make Sally more approachable, she’ll feature a western New York accent — similar to Buffalo native Gov.

Kathy Hochul — at the behest of the school district.“We don’t really hear the accent.We think it sounds neutral,” Beehler joked.The bot, which uses about the same amount of electricity as a laptop, will assistant students and teachers in classes that are in the Woz Ed Science, Technology, Engineering, Arts, and Mathematics courses, which was developed by the founder of Apple Steve Wozniak.In September she will be available for only coding, robotics, and AI classes, according to Beehler.School officials vowed that “Sally” will “never” usher out teachers.“The Realbotix educational robot will never replace teachers, staff members, or meaningful human int...

Read More 
PaprClips
Disclaimer: This story is auto-aggregated by a computer program and has not been created or edited by PaprClips.
Publisher: New York Post

Recent Articles