By virtue of being MOOCs, the courses -- Introduction to Roboticsand Robotic Vision -- will be free and open to an unlimited number of students worldwide.
The courses have been designed for undergraduate engineers but QUT said they are suitable for anyone with a strong interest in robotics. They are the first ever developed for people with undergraduate STEM knowledge, and the first robotics and vision MOOCs to be offered globally, according to the school.
"While the MOOCs might attract some high school STEM stars and skilled armchair roboticists, I expect most of the students will be undergraduates, perhaps studying engineering or computer science at a university that doesn't itself have a strong robotics program," said Professor Peter Corke, who created the course and is the director of the ARC Centre of Excellence for Robotic Vision.
"It could also be helpful for STEM professionals looking to expand their skill set -- with big players like Google, Apple and Boeing pouring hundreds of billions of dollars into robotics and automation, it's an industry that'll be screaming for workers into the near future."
Here are the course descriptions:
"They're certainly not going to be walk in the park," Corke warned of the courses, which were developed over 16 months with QUT's eLearning Services team. "Both MOOCs involve theory, mathematics and programming."
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Corke said he became interested in the possibilities of MOOCs after he broke his knee and had to do his lectures remotely. After the semester, he uploaded them to YouTube and received a massive response.
"I was really surprised by the interest those lectures generated -- more than 70,000 views, with one lecture alone viewed 32,000 times," he said.
"That made me realise just how many people are genuinely interested in robotics and it got me thinking about how I might be able to deliver structured course content online."
MOOCs allow robotics to be taught without traditional limitations of the education system, he said.
"Once upon a time we needed a lecture theatre and a lab full of hardware to teach robotics but in this digital age we don't always need that resource-intensive, bricks-and-mortar model to deliver a strong robotics course," he said.
"These days we can teach mechatronics with LEGO kits at home rather than labs, and I find that a truly exciting prospect."
Adam Bender covers telco and enterprise tech issues for Computerworld and is the author of dystopian sci-fi novels We, The Watched and Divided We Fall. Follow him on Twitter: @WatchAdam
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