Robogals

Robogals
Founded 14 July 2008[1]
Type Non-profit incorporated association
Location
Coordinates 37°47′55″S 144°57′42″E / 37.7985°S 144.9618°ECoordinates: 37°47′55″S 144°57′42″E / 37.7985°S 144.9618°E
Area served
Australia, Canada, Japan, United Kingdom, United States, South Africa, Philippines, New Zealand, China
Members
3,465[2]
Key people
Marita Cheng, founder
Mark Parncutt, co-founder
Dr. Bronwyn Evans, chair
Nicole Brown, CEO
Taryn Musgrave , COO
Julie Boulton CDO.
Slogan "An international, student-run organisation introducing young women to engineering and technology"
Website robogals.org

Robogals is an international student-run organisation that aims to substantially increase the number of young women pursuing engineering in their tertiary studies and careers. Its primary activity is robotics workshops aimed at girls in primary and secondary school.[3] Robogals has chapters at 31 universities across Australia, Canada, the United Kingdom, the United States, Japan, China, South Africa, New Zealand, and the Philippines.[4]

Robogals also run a range of other activities around this central theme. Past events have included a robotics competition (2008), a mass robot dance that attracted significant media coverage (2009), a robot artwork exhibition,science fair (2010) and the Science Challenge[5].

The organisation is run by university student volunteers, including at the global headquarters in Melbourne, Australia. It is supported through in-kind and cash contributions from the host universities and engineering industry sponsors. Sponsors include CSIRO, GE Energy, Leighton Holdings, Beck Engineering, the Cochlear Foundation, Google and NICTA.

Robogals' achievements have been recognised on an international level with the awarding of an Anita Borg Change Agent Award by the Anita Borg Institute for Women and Technology.[6] Robogals founder Marita Cheng was named the 2012 Young Australian of the Year.

History

Robogals was founded as a student club at the University of Melbourne in July 2008 by mechatronics engineering undergraduate Marita Cheng, together with her partner Mark Parncutt and three other engineering and science students, Kelly Chiu, Ann Chee Lim and Vi Vu.[7] The idea initially came from efforts by one of Cheng's professors, Jamie Evans, to teach robotics at Lauriston Girls' School as a way to encourage more girls to study engineering.

Following its initial successes in Melbourne, the organisation was expanded throughout Australia in 2009 by inviting female engineering students from four more universities around Australia to a three-day "Bootcamp" at the University of Melbourne where they learned how to run a Robogals chapter back at their home university.[8][9] It is also helpful if the students have support from their faculty for establishing a Robogals chapter on their campus.[10] This process has been repeated several times since then Robogals has expanded to 31 universities worldwide as of 2015.

Activities

Robotics Workshops

Robogals' primary activity is running robotics workshops, either in schools or by having the schools visit the uni; the workshops are intended to engage the girls in engineering topics. Robogals volunteers are university students, including male and female, who teach school girls the basics of engineering, robotics and programming using LEGO Mindstorms NXT kits. Lessons are typically taught in 3-hour sessions, over 2 sessions, but this varies depending on location.[11] The sessions include building a robot using LEGO Mindstorms NXTs, adding and testing electronic motors and sensors, and programming the robot to move, use the sensors and perform specific tasks.

The workshops are run by the local university chapter, which liaises with schools to arrange visits, and arranges for enough volunteers who are trained to run the workshops. Spme Robogals chapters also mentor school teams in either FIRST LEGO League or RoboCup Junior. The Robogals Rural and Regional programme encompasses holding events aimed at getting more girls interested in science, engineering and technology in rural and regional areas, organised by female science and engineering students in those areas.

Community Events

Robogals Melbourne held a Science and Engineering Expo in August 2010, partnered with National Science Week,[12] attended by girls schools and a few individual families.[13] In 2010, Robogals Perth went on an excursion to Kalgoorlie to demonstrate to school students as part of the seventh annual Science Awareness Festival by Scitech. In March 2011, Robogals London had a stall at the Big Bang Fair.[14]

In 2009, Robogals' Guinness World Record attempt for the 'largest robot dance'[15] received coverage on national television.[16] Over 300 dancers/students turned up at the event on 29 September 2009 at the University of Melbourne.[17]

The Robots Are Coming was an exhibition built by art and design students, held from 6–11 September 2010 of 5 life-size robots at a transportation hub in central Sydney.[18] The event functioned as street art, inviting pedestrians to reflect on 'the impact of technology in today's society'.[19][20] Over hundreds of thousands of pedestrians had lunch alongside the robots, or stopped to admire them.

SINE

The annual conference in each region, known as a SINE (Seminars Inducting New Executive-committees) brings together the organisation's executive committee members in a region, focussing mainly on training the new committee members; it is the primary means of expanding Robogals to new universities.[21] The meetings during the early Robogals expansion stages (in 2009 and early 2010) were called "Bootcamps", but since late 2010 have been called SINEs.

Past conferences have included:[22]

Organisational Structure

Robogals Global (incorporated as Robogals Inc.[24]), based in Melbourne, Australia, is the parent body of the chapters. It was created to oversee and mentor all the chapters of Robogals, and to facilitate worldwide expansion plans. Robogals is divided into regions, each with several chapters.[25] The chapters operate as independent student clubs, with some degree of autonomy in deciding what activities to pursue, but must at the very least offer the core robotics workshop program in schools.

Robogals Asia Pacific, with chapters at Australian National University, Tokyo Institute of Technology, University of Adelaide, University of Melbourne, University of New South Wales, University of Newcastle, University of Queensland, University of Southern Queensland, University of Western Australia,University of Tasmania, Peking University, Xavier University and Monash University.
Robogals Europe, Middle East and Africa (EMEA), formerly, UK & Europe, with chapters at Imperial College London, Loughborough University, University of Bristol, University of Cambridge, University of Exeter, University of Manchester,University of Southampton, St. Andrews University, University of Sussex, University of Leeds and University of Cape Town.
Robogals North America, with chapters at California Institute of Technology, Columbia University, Queen's University, York University, Georgia Institute of Technology, University of Toronto and Wellesley College.

Key People

Robogals has been mostly built up since its founding by Founder & Executive Director Marita Cheng and Operations Director Mark Parncutt. It recently established a Board of Directors as part of a succession plan, chaired by Bronwyn Evans, Senior Vice President at Cochlear Limited.

References

  1. "Current details for 91 316 998 421". Australian Business Register. Retrieved 18 Jan 2012.
  2. Number of members according to https://my.robogals.org/chapters/global/; Retrieved on 25 March 2014
  3. "Robogals Brings Engineering to Girls, ECSWomen Brings Robogals". ECSWomen. Retrieved 4 November 2010.
  4. http://www.robogals.org/our-network/chapter-locations
  5. http://sciencechallenge.org.au. Missing or empty |title= (help)
  6. "Marita Cheng". Anita Borg Institute for Women and Technology. Retrieved 12 November 2011.
  7. "Robogals Smash Robot Dancing Record". University of Melbourne Advancement Office. Retrieved 3 May 2011.
  8. "Marita Cheng - Robogal 25 UNDER 25 + smashin' it! triple j". Australian Broadcasting Corporation. Retrieved 3 May 2011.
  9. "Meet a Sandboxer: Marita Cheng". Sandbox Network. Retrieved 3 May 2011.
  10. "Robogals UK funding proposal" (PDF). Imperial College Union. Retrieved 18 March 2011.
  11. http://andragy.posterous.com/robogals
  12. "Robogals to the Rescue". Herald Sun. 10 August 2010. Retrieved 3 May 2011.
  13. "Robogal's (sic) Engineering and Science Expo". Re-Science. 17 August 2010. Retrieved 7 January 2011.
  14. p. 27, "The Big Bang Show Guide". Retrieved 3 May 2011.
  15. "Melbourne University Students Set Robot Dancing World Record". Herald Sun. 29 September 2009. Retrieved 4 November 2010.
  16. The 7PM Project, Channel 10, 29 September 2009
  17. "Robot Dance World Record Broken". NineMSN. 29 September 2009. Retrieved 4 November 2010.
  18. The Robots Are Coming
  19. "In Sydney: The Robots Came... and Went". ASAM Melbourne. 18 September 2010. Retrieved 3 May 2011.
  20. "The Robots Are Coming". VibeWire. 9 September 2010. Retrieved 3 May 2011.
  21. "Cairns Student Takes the Road Less Travelled". A Force for Southern Cairns. 16 August 2010. Retrieved 3 May 2011.
  22. "Conferences". Robogals. Retrieved 25 March 2014.
  23. "Robogals Southampton host annual conference for UK executive induction". ECS, Joyce Lewis. Retrieved 9 April 2015.
  24. "Current details for 91 316 998 421". Australian Business Register. Retrieved 18 Jan 2012.
  25. "Organisational Structure". Robogals. Retrieved 3 May 2011.

External links