Close X
Sunday, November 24, 2024
ADVT 
Life

KPU pilots first semester-long remote science labs in Canada

Darpan News Desk, 02 Dec, 2016 11:24 AM
    Physics students at Kwantlen Polytechnic University (KPU) will soon be able to conduct actual lab experiments in an actual lab from the comfort of their actual homes—or anywhere with an actual Internet connection.
     
    Beginning this spring, KPU students at the university's Richmond campus will use an online platform to perform lab activities in the real world in real time with highly specialized equipment located at the Remote Web-Based Science Laboratory (RWSL) at North Island College, created by NIC’s Albert Balbon, the lab’s award-winning architect. This marks the first time a Canadian post-secondary institution has used remote web-based science lab technology to pilot a physics course.
     
    “This is unlike anything that’s ever been done at KPU or any other Canadian university,” said physics instructor Dr. Takashi Sato. “Students aren’t simply logging in to a virtual environment; thanks to this technology, they are actually controlling equipment in another location from the comfort of wherever they choose to study.”
     
    Run by Sato and fellow physics instructor Jillian Lang, the research-validated remote labs remove a barrier for students who do not have easy access to post-secondary science lab courses. KPU physics students have worked with the RWSL in the past on a trial basis and it was so successful that Lang and Sato were eager to work with this technology again.
     
    Working scientists already do much real science in this way, including controlling the Mars rovers, deep sea submersibles, telescopes, and drones. KPU is simply applying the technology to give students the advantages of using remotely controlled lab equipment.
     
    “We are using cutting-edge made-in-BC technology,” said Dr. Fergal Callaghan, head of KPU’s physics department. “This is just the beginning of an ever-expanding and evolving set of remote labs,” he adds.
     
    Added Lang: “We want to make physics more widely available to a variety of types of students, but not at the risk of losing the essential role of laboratory work, learning how science applies to the real world. Remote science labs allow students to interact with real physical systems without the artifice of simulations.”
     
    With the aid of robotics, for example, students can operate a real cart on a real ramp, and then predict and measure acceleration as if they were there. They can also modify electric currents and magnetic fields with the “flick of a switch” using the computer mouse while viewing the equipment on their computer screen and seeing the actual electron change paths instead of just a simulation of an electron.
     
    Sharing a single lab and its equipment with other scientists significantly cuts down on costs. Meanwhile, accessing a work space from anywhere with an internet connection is convenient for students, scientists, and researchers, and for students, they benefit additionally from early exposure to what they will likely encounter if they pursue science as a profession. Further, students are provided with modern “home-kits” that allow them to acquire various types of data in real time, so they can measure a wide range of physical quantities including force, distance, time, velocity, acceleration, light, sound and magnetic fields.
     
    Students will continue to take the classroom portion of the course face-to-face with Lang and Sato, with the long-term goal of providing entire courses outside the traditional classroom and lab. A balanced combination of real remote labs, online simulations, and hands-on lab work won’t sacrifice the full experience of scientific enquiry while improving access to higher education courses.
     
    “Most importantly, students will be supported by an experienced team,” said Sato. “We will be paying close attention to ensure student success.”

    MORE Life ARTICLES

    Understanding the sleep patterns of your child

    Understanding the sleep patterns of your child
    If your infant is not sleeping through the night, it may not be a reason to panic as sleep patterns of infants vary for at least the first three years of life, says a new study....

    Understanding the sleep patterns of your child

    Virtual body swapping could abolish race biases

    Virtual body swapping could abolish race biases
    With the help of a technique called virtual body swapping, researches have helped people change their attitudes with regard to others....

    Virtual body swapping could abolish race biases

    26/11 Mastermind Lakhvi Gets Bail, Shocked India Asks Pakistan To Act

    26/11 Mastermind Lakhvi Gets Bail, Shocked India Asks Pakistan To Act
    An anti-terrorism court in Islamabad Thursday granted bail to Zakiur Rehman Lakhvi, a key mastermind of the 26/11 Mumbai attacks, triggering shock and indignation in India which asked Pakistan to take steps to reverse the decision.

    26/11 Mastermind Lakhvi Gets Bail, Shocked India Asks Pakistan To Act

    'Most US Children Likely To Live With Unmarried Mothers'

    'Most US Children Likely To Live With Unmarried Mothers'
    More than half of all US children will likely live with unmarried mothers at some point before they reach 18, said a study by researchers from the Princeton University and the Harvard University, the US.

    'Most US Children Likely To Live With Unmarried Mothers'

    Spicy foods boost men's sex drive

    Spicy foods boost men's sex drive
    A French study has found that men who love to consume more spicy food have more testosterone and perform better during sex....

    Spicy foods boost men's sex drive

    How to rekindle romance in army couples

    How to rekindle romance in army couples
    For army families who live in combat zones, giving each other time and space is the first step towards rekindling romance when the spouse returns home...

    How to rekindle romance in army couples