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03/07/2017 11:40

Cebit 2017: The intelligent school book supports pupils using innovative sensor technology

Katrin Müller Presse- und Öffentlichkeitsarbeit
Technische Universität Kaiserslautern

    Digital technologies found their way into daily life long ago - including school life. Researchers in Kaiserslautern are exploring how the technologies can be applied usefully in lessons. In the “HyperMind” project, an intelligent school book is being developed for tablet and PC. This uses technology, which will detect the reader’s line of vision, which it will then analyse. This will quickly determine whether the pupil has understood the learning content. The technology aids individual progress. At the Cebit computer trade fair in Hannover, researchers will present their project from 20th to 24th March at the research stand of Federal State Rhineland-Palatinate (hall 6, stand C17).

    Joint press release by University of Kaiserslautern and German Research Center for Artificial Intelligence (DFKI)

    Secretary of State for Education, Johanna Wanka, wants to promote digitalisation in German schools. In the context of the education initiative for the digital information society, new ideas and concepts are being developed that will make future schooling smarter. For example, digital boards or data goggles will make learning fun. At the German Research Center for Artificial Intelligence (DFKI) and University of Kaiserslautern, the research team of IT Professor Dr. Andreas Dengel and Physics Education Research Professor Dr. Jochen Kuhn are developing such technologies. One example is the intelligent school book. “Here, in particular, the book is able to recognise the strengths and weaknesses of pupils at an early stage via integrated sensors", explains Professor Kuhn, who is currently researching the use of modern media such as tablets and smart-glasses in physics education. “Learning technologies already exist on the market that assess pupils’ knowledge”. But in that case, only learning success plays a role. It would not be possible to test, for example, whether someone requires longer than average to solve an arithmetic problem, due to difficulties with mathematic formulae.

    The technology used for the intelligent school book is fairly simple and is thus suitable for learning at school or at home. The content of the book is displayed on tablets or a monitor. An eye tracker is fitted below the display. “This system can track the reader’s eye movements”, explains Dengel, HyperMind project manager, who is professor of knowledge-based systems at the University of Kaiserslautern and manages the DFKI site in Kaiserslautern. “This way, it can detect, for example, areas where more time is spent or what is read more than once”.

    In the next step, the researchers intend to analyse this data in greater detail, in order for example, to draw conclusions on learning behaviour and progress. “In the future, this technology will be able to aid early recognition, for example, as to whether pupils need support in a particular subject, which they have not yet fully understood”, Dengel continues. On the other hand, with this technology it is possible to see what areas a pupil is particularly interested in. “For example, if a pupil looks at a word frequently in succession, the system could provide further information on the word via an internet browser for instance”, Kuhn adds.

    The intelligent school book helps to identify strengths and weaknesses and to provide pupils with individual support. The researchers will present their project at the Cebit. They are already collaborating with a school book publishing house. The system is not only suitable for physics, but for all school subjects.

    The University of Kaiserslautern and the German Research Center for Artificial Intelligence (DFKI) are working together on utilising the newest technologies for studying, teaching and schooling for years. HyperMind as a sub-project of “U.EDU: Unified Education – Medienbildung entlang der Lehrerbildungskette” is part of the “Qualitätsoffensive Lehrerbildung”, a joint initiative of the Federal Government and the Länder which aims to improve the quality of teacher training. The programme is funded by the Federal Ministry of Education and Research.

    Contact persons:
    Prof. Dr. Prof. h.c. Andreas Dengel
    Scientific Director and Site Head, DFKI Kaiserslautern
    Deutsches Forschungszentrum für Künstliche Intelligenz (DFKI) GmbH
    Trippstadter Straße 122
    67663 Kaiserslautern
    Email: Andreas.Dengel[at]dfki.de
    Tel.: 0631 20575-1010
    www.dfki.de

    Prof. Dr. Jochen Kuhn
    Department of Physics/Physics Education Research Group
    Tel.: 0631 205-2393
    Email: kuhn[at]physik.uni-kl.de
    www.physik.uni-kl.de/kuhn/home/
    www.iphysicslab.de
    twitter.com/DidaktikPhysik


    Images

    IT Professor Dr. Andreas Dengel (left) and Physics Education Research Professor Dr. Jochen Kuhn are developing an intelligent school book, which will detect the reader’s line of vision.
    IT Professor Dr. Andreas Dengel (left) and Physics Education Research Professor Dr. Jochen Kuhn are ...
    Credit: Thomas Koziel
    None

    IT Professor Dr. Andreas Dengel (left) and Physics Education Research Professor Dr. Jochen Kuhn
    IT Professor Dr. Andreas Dengel (left) and Physics Education Research Professor Dr. Jochen Kuhn
    Credit: Thomas Koziel
    None


    Criteria of this press release:
    Journalists, Teachers and pupils
    Information technology, Teaching / education
    transregional, national
    Research projects, Transfer of Science or Research
    English


     

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