Robots to the rescue! Arizona students in lockdown will still get their
graduation day
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[May 09, 2020]
By Jane Ross
(Reuters) - Juili Kale's dreams to receive
her master's degree diploma in a ceremony cheered on by her family were
dashed by the coronavirus - until robots came to the rescue.
Kale, who has been studying at Arizona State University, had planned the
day for months. Her parents and brother would fly in from India, and a
social media clock counted down the days until out-of-state friends
would arrive in Phoenix for a big party.
But in March, the coronavirus pandemic ended those plans, as colleges
nationwide closed down to stop the spread.
"The clock stopped at T minus 67," said Kale, 40.
But the ceremony will take place, after all - just not as she
anticipated.
Cameras pre-recorded Kale and about 140 of her fellow graduates as they
logged on at home this week, dressed in graduation robes and mortar
board caps. They took turns moving a remote-controlled robot on a podium
at the university that held an eye-level display showing their face. Via
the robot, they approached the dean to receive their diplomas and take a
photo.
The pre-pandemic robots from Double Robotics, based in Burlingame,
California, had been used to allow people to show up at weddings and
funerals without traveling.
The "bittersweet" experience - shot and edited over two days - may not
be ideal for the students, said Dean Sanjeev Khagram, but "we want to
show that we did everything that we could to celebrate them."
Kale will throw a watch party with her husband at home and her family in
India when the three-hour event is webcast on YouTube on Monday.
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Arizona State University's Thunderbird School of Global Management
dean Sanjeev Khagram rehearses a virtual commencement ceremony using
mobile telepresence robots, due to the coronavirus disease
(COVID-19) restrictions in Phoenix, Arizona, U.S. April 30, 2020.
ASU/Thunderbird School of Global Management/Handout via REUTERS.
Adjusting to the online experience was easy for millennial Nancy
Sierras Morales, 22, the first in her family to graduate college.
"We have been able to adapt very quickly because we are used to
being on a computer and on the phone almost like 24/7," she said.
"Graduating virtually, it's not ideal but it's actually also very
cool and iconic to be like the first class ever to do this."
When the lockdown is over, the class of 2020 can do a real-life walk
at any future graduation ceremony they choose.
"I'm disappointed I'm not doing it on May the 11th... but I will get
to experience this innovative, creative event anyway," said Douglas
Northcott, 41, who is graduating with a Masters in Applied
Leadership and Management.
"And if anything, that makes it better, in that is spread over two
times rather than one."
(Reporting by Jane Ross; Writing by Richard Chang; Editing by
Rosalba O'Brien)
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