Teachers' views on the use of empathic robotic tutors in the classroom. Serholt, S., Barendregt, W., Leite, I., Hastie, H., Jones, A., Paiva, A., Vasalou, A., & Castellano, G. 2014.
Teachers' views on the use of empathic robotic tutors in the classroom [link]Paper  doi  abstract   bibtex   
In this paper, we describe the results of an interview study conducted across several European countries on teachers' views on the use of empathic robotic tutors in the classroom. The main goals of the study were to elicit teachers' thoughts on the integration of the robotic tutors in the daily school practice, understanding the main roles that these robots could play and gather teachers' main concerns about this type of technology. Teachers' concerns were much related to the fairness of access to the technology, robustness of the robot in students' hands and disruption of other classroom activities. They saw a role for the tutor in acting as an engaging tool for all, preferably in groups, and gathering information about students' learning progress without taking over the teachers' responsibility for the actual assessment. The implications of these results are discussed in relation to teacher acceptance of ubiquitous technologies in general and robots in particular. © 2014 IEEE.
@CONFERENCE{Serholt2014955,
	author = {Serholt, Sofia and Barendregt, Wolmet and Leite, Iolanda and Hastie, Helen and Jones, Aidan and Paiva, Ana and Vasalou, Asimina and Castellano, Ginevra},
	title = {Teachers' views on the use of empathic robotic tutors in the classroom},
	year = {2014},
	journal = {IEEE RO-MAN 2014 - 23rd IEEE International Symposium on Robot and Human Interactive Communication: Human-Robot Co-Existence: Adaptive Interfaces and Systems for Daily Life, Therapy, Assistance and Socially Engaging Interactions},
	pages = {955 – 960},
	doi = {10.1109/ROMAN.2014.6926376},
	url = {https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84937570777&doi=10.1109%2fROMAN.2014.6926376&partnerID=40&md5=7cbaab8a0c446de7f8ceb886e7a1f080},
	abstract = {In this paper, we describe the results of an interview study conducted across several European countries on teachers' views on the use of empathic robotic tutors in the classroom. The main goals of the study were to elicit teachers' thoughts on the integration of the robotic tutors in the daily school practice, understanding the main roles that these robots could play and gather teachers' main concerns about this type of technology. Teachers' concerns were much related to the fairness of access to the technology, robustness of the robot in students' hands and disruption of other classroom activities. They saw a role for the tutor in acting as an engaging tool for all, preferably in groups, and gathering information about students' learning progress without taking over the teachers' responsibility for the actual assessment. The implications of these results are discussed in relation to teacher acceptance of ubiquitous technologies in general and robots in particular. © 2014 IEEE.}
}

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