British The Guardian newspaper has referred to Armenian schoolboys engaged in robotics.
British The Guardian newspaper has referred to Armenian schoolboys engaged in robotics. The post reads:
The little robot makes odd beeps as it spins around the room, detecting fires with its thermal sensors and extinguishing flames with a strong blast of air.
Its mission accomplished, the beeps die down and the machine comes to an abrupt halt.
Rather than being the brainchild of experienced engineers in a hi-tech lab, the firefighter robot was designed by Armenian schoolboys Rafael and Sahak Sahakyan – brothers aged 18 and 14.
It is one of several inventions to come out of Armenia’s youth robotics programme, which aims to establish engineering groups in every school by 2019. Already there are 121 after-school clubs, catering for pupils between 12 and 18.
The government hopes the scheme will improve the quality of engineering education and encourage inventors of the future.
At the brothers’ school in Gyumri, one of the poorest cities in Armenia, more than 20 pupils gather after lessons every week to design and create robots.
“When I was little, every day my friends would go out after school to play football while I would go home and take apart electrical gadgets to find out how they worked,” says Rafael Sahakyan.
His dedication bore fruit. The brothers’ invention will be entered into Armenia’s annual robotics contest, in which schoolchildren from across the country compete against each other.
Instructor Rafael Hekimyan said the project helps children develop independent thinking and will breed a new generation of engineers.
“For a country like Armenia which does not have great natural resources, information technology is a good opportunity to develop the economy,” he said.