Teaching Digital Electronics during the COVID-19 Pandemic via a Remote Lab
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- The teacher begins the class with a video conference tool and performs an initial student activity: a quick test regarding the experiment or a 3-min pitch of the current status of the projects. The teacher can also perform a short demonstration of the working experiment using the remote lab (15 min).
- The students are separated into groups of two or three students each. This group organization is performed by the free choices of the students and this set is maintained in all classes and the project (10 min).
- The students perform the practical activities using the remote lab. The teachers and students access the lab bench remotely, but technical staff are present in the university lab to perform maintenance (e.g., shutdown) during the experiments (3 h),
- The teacher ends the group rooms and presents the instructions for the next experiment (15 min).
2. Related Work
3. Methods
3.1. Engineering Method
3.2. Internet of Things Architecture for Remote Labs
4. Discussion
4.1. Student Performances
4.2. Student Perceptions
- Question: Are the research questions clear and are the features of the study design congruent with them?Answer: The three research questions were clearly defined. The first research question was investigated by comparing the student performances to evaluate if the digital electronics course using IoT could be delivered in a fully remote way. The second question was evaluated using a student survey. The third research question was analyzed based on a case study.
- Question: Were data collected across the full range of appropriate settings, times, respondents, and suggested research questions?Answer: Three questionnaires were applied to the students in the beginning, middle, and course ending. All students were invited to answer the surveys.
- Question: Were any forms of peer or colleague reviews in place?Answer: Three researchers were responsible for the questionnaire design and four researchers were responsible for peer review of the questions and student answers. Three researchers performed the analysis and colleague reviews of their (each other’s) analyses.
4.3. Student Project Description
- Automatic alcohol gel dispenser;
- Smart watering for smart homes;
- Indoor safety for puppies;
- Vacancy sensor for parking lot;
- Smart door for smart homes.
4.3.1. Introduction
4.3.2. Specification
- Checking the amount of space available in the smart recycle bin;
- Sending the amount of waste present in the smart bin to the central;
- Opening the gates of the smart bin, driven by the truck;
- Sending the current conditions of the trash, indicating how much space there is still in the trash can. When requested by the central, by sending the character I.
- Checking the recycle bin status;
- Presentation of the status of each dump present in the project addressed by the central. Separating into status: normal, intermediate, and critical.
4.3.3. Planning
4.3.4. Development
4.3.5. Validation
4.3.6. Students’ Considerations
4.4. Comparison with Related Work
- https://github.com/vthayashi/labead-labdig (accessed on 12 April 2022)
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A. Questionnaire
Appendix A.1. First Survey
- What do you know about serial digital communication, sensors, and actuators? (You may select more than one option).
- (a)
- Only theory
- (b)
- Technical course
- (c)
- Hardware and software internship
- (d)
- I know nothing
- (e)
- LabEAD allowed remote learning
- What do you know about remote classes? (You may select more than one option).
- (a)
- I took theoretical courses remotely
- (b)
- I took separate practical courses remotely
- (c)
- I carried out simulations and remote meetings
- (d)
- I know nothing
- About the first part of today’s workshop, turning on LED by cell phone (you may select more than one option):
- (a)
- I liked the possibility to connect home and school
- (b)
- I understood the remote access
- (c)
- I did not understand the IoT platform
- (d)
- I did not like it
- About the second part of today’s workshop, interaction via the virtual terminal (you may select more than one option):
- (a)
- I have suggestions
- (b)
- I liked the proposal
- (c)
- I could only use remote terminal
- (d)
- I could only use remote access
- (e)
- I did not like it
Appendix A.2. Second Survey
- What do you know about serial digital communication, sensors, and actuators? (You may select more than one option).
- (a)
- I learned a little about the RS232C protocol
- (b)
- I learned the practical part of serial transmission and reception
- (c)
- I learned a little about remote control of a servo motor
- (d)
- I already knew about the technical course/internship
- (e)
- I did not learn anything
- How was your experience with LabEAD support for remote learning? (You can select more than one option).
- (a)
- I learned the theory remotely
- (b)
- I carried out simulations remotely
- (c)
- I performed the practical part remotely on a real board
- (d)
- I did not do anything remotely
- About the LabEAD remote lab tool (you may select more than one option):
- (a)
- Remote access, Blynk and camera immersions are better than simulation
- (b)
- Access to FPGA, Waveform debugging tool and Blynk were made possible
- (c)
- I prefer to simulate experiments
- (d)
- I did not understand the use of the tool
- (e)
- It did not add anything
Appendix A.3. Third Survey
- About the directed project of the second part of the course (you may select more than one option):
- (a)
- The freedom to design should stimulate creativity
- (b)
- I have doubts about the scope of the project
- (c)
- I prefer directed experiments in classes with specific criteria and procedures
- (d)
- I prefer tests to projects
- Provide the name of your project.
- Provide the summary of your project (problem, added value/benefit, results).
- About the developed artifacts and components, select those that apply to your project (you can select more than one option):
- (a)
- VHDL test bench
- (b)
- VHDL code
- (c)
- Arduino Code
- (d)
- Python Code
- (e)
- Blynk Project in iOS or Android device
- (f)
- External Dashboard (e.g., JavaScript with HTML)
- About the project development in 4 weeks, evaluate the project evolution considering the criteria:
- (a)
- Well-defined and successfully achieved goals
- (b)
- Well-defined goals, but partially achieved
- (c)
- Poorly defined goals, partial results
- About the items below, rate their degree of importance to the project (necessary, very important, important, not important, it makes no difference):
- (a)
- Elevator pitch at the beginning of the class
- (b)
- OpenLab
- (c)
- Python Notebook
- (d)
- HomeLab
- (e)
- Previous experiments
- (f)
- IoT Platform
- About remote collaboration with your team, provide a grade from 1 to 5 (with 5 being the best grade).
- If you had to carry out the project again, what would you have done differently?
- Describe the main lessons learned from the project.
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Phase | Quality Aspect |
---|---|
Project Theme, Application | MVP product, focusing on agility, contributing to small definition as a scope toward real delivery |
Requirements: Functional and Non-functional | Direct mapping of functional and non-functional requirements as inputs of acceptance tests and correctness verification |
Technical Solution | Organization of the system as a set of hardware and software components. Integration tests, unity tests to obtain quality, driven by the previous phases (requirements, verification, and test plans) |
Implementation | The student produces a correct project by implementing hardware and software solutions step-by-step: implements, tests, integration, tests. Each right part acts as a stimulus to continue the project. Simulation is a powerful tool in this phase. |
Delivery | Each tested part acts as a delivery. The students are encouraged to deliver and demonstrate correct details in an evolutionary delivery approach |
Lab | Category | Subject | Number of Students | Number of Experiments | Learning Outcome | Open-Source |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
MASTERS VLAB [11]. | Virtual Lab | Digital Signal Processing | 31 | 20 | The tool enhanced students’ understanding of the course material | yes |
V-Lab [12]. | Virtual Lab | Network Security | 212 | 20 | Students who performed better in progressive experiments also get better grades with 99% confidence | yes |
VLAB OER [13]. | Virtual Lab | 9 Disciplines | 19000 | 1650 | Overall student feedback is positive, and student performances show similar performances in physical and virtual labs. | yes |
OPTILAB [14]. | Virtual Lab | Optics | 83 | N/A | N/A | no |
ONL [15]. | Remote Lab | Computer Networks | 29 | 4 | The contribution of the lab experience to student learning was comparable to lecture learning. | no |
VISIR [16]. | Remote Lab | Analog Electronics | 159 | N/A | The use of remote labs has a positive effect on student learning regardless of their previous practical experience | no |
Advanced Digital Lab [17]. | Remote Lab | Digital Electronics | 510 | N/A | Remote labs can be almost as effective as traditional labs considering student learning advanced digital concepts. | no |
Undergraduate Digital Circuits Lab [18]. | Remote Lab | Digital Electronics | 96 | N/A | The results show no noticeable difference between online and face-to-face approaches. | no |
Hybrid 802.11 Network Security [19]. | Hybrid Lab | Digital Electronics | 76 | N/A | Hybrid lab is as effective as a traditional physical lab. | no |
Mohsen et al. [20]. | Remote Lab | Digital Electronics | 50 | 3 | N/A | no |
Leisenberg and Stepponat [21]. | Remote Lab | Computer Science and Big Data | N/A | N/A | N/A | no |
Oballe-Peinado et al. [22]. | Remote Lab | Digital Electronics | N/A | N/A | N/A | no |
Martin et al. [23]. | Remote Lab | Digital Electronics | N/A | 12 | N/A | no |
Schwandt and Winzker [24]. | Remote Lab | Digital Electronics | N/A | 1 | N/A | no |
LabEAD | Remote Lab | Digital Electronics | 134 | 6 | The remote lab enabled all the face-to-face experiments during the pandemic, with overall positive student feedback | yes |
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Valencia de Almeida, F.; Hayashi, V.T.; Arakaki, R.; Midorikawa, E.; de Mello Canovas, S.; Cugnasca, P.S.; Corrêa, P.L.P. Teaching Digital Electronics during the COVID-19 Pandemic via a Remote Lab. Sensors 2022, 22, 6944. https://doi.org/10.3390/s22186944
Valencia de Almeida F, Hayashi VT, Arakaki R, Midorikawa E, de Mello Canovas S, Cugnasca PS, Corrêa PLP. Teaching Digital Electronics during the COVID-19 Pandemic via a Remote Lab. Sensors. 2022; 22(18):6944. https://doi.org/10.3390/s22186944
Chicago/Turabian StyleValencia de Almeida, Felipe, Victor Takashi Hayashi, Reginaldo Arakaki, Edson Midorikawa, Sérgio de Mello Canovas, Paulo Sergio Cugnasca, and Pedro Luiz Pizzigatti Corrêa. 2022. "Teaching Digital Electronics during the COVID-19 Pandemic via a Remote Lab" Sensors 22, no. 18: 6944. https://doi.org/10.3390/s22186944
APA StyleValencia de Almeida, F., Hayashi, V. T., Arakaki, R., Midorikawa, E., de Mello Canovas, S., Cugnasca, P. S., & Corrêa, P. L. P. (2022). Teaching Digital Electronics during the COVID-19 Pandemic via a Remote Lab. Sensors, 22(18), 6944. https://doi.org/10.3390/s22186944