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Student-Created Robot Kit Creates Global Impact for Engineering Opportunities

by Benjamin Konuch, Student Public Relations Writer – April 21, 2025

One engineering senior design team at Cedarville University has developed SafeTown, an affordable, educational autonomous robot kit that can teach engineering fundamentals anywhere in the world.

Engineering is one of the fastest-growing career fields in the world, but not all countries provide students witha pathwayfor engineering education. One engineeringsenior design team at Cedarville Universityis addressing this need with the development of SafeTown, anaffordable, educational autonomous robot kit that can teach engineering fundamentalsanywhere in the world.

Before the project has even been completed, SafeTown is already making impacts in engineering education opportunities. Through a Cedarville connection with the Central Asia Engineering Dentistry Medicine Institute (CAEDMI), the student-developed autonomous robot kit will soon be utilized in real classrooms across Central Asia.

SafeTown is a robot kit designed to teach engineering students the basics of working with details ofelectrical componentsand programming. The kit, based on a similar but more expensive model from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, will be paired with an educational curriculum developedalong with the robot to guide students through the actual construction process. Then, when the robot has been assembled, it can be used on a foam map and programmed to follow instructions to move within the boundaries of the map.

“We believe this project can be used for students to find out early if their interest in engineering is something that they’ll enjoy applying in real-world scenarios,” said Benjamin Kinard, a computer engineering student and the student team leader. “That’s what this kit is designed to do.”

The senior design team, led by Dr. Clint Kohl, senior professor of computer engineering, is the second group to work on this project. Inheriting the research and work of the previous year’s team, this group of four senior engineering students — Benjamin Kinard (Cockeysville, Maryland), Joshua Cappella (Cedarville, Ohio), Zachary Craig(Baldwinsville, New York ) and Caleb Willson(Beaver Falls, Pennsylvania)—has been tasked with developing and perfecting an actual working model that can be produced and provided to high schools and colleges for replication.The kitwill be completed and ready for full production by the end of the semester.

“This year's senior design team has been a pleasure to work with,” said Kohl. “They have made remarkable progress in developing an educational product that I hope will benefit many students—both here at Cedarville University and beyond.”

The design team has worked on two different versions of the SafeTown robot. The first isthe junior kit designed to teach engineering basics,while the second is designed for more intensive trainingof students with programming experience. While the senior kit is not as far along in production as its less-complicated counterpart, the team believes that massive leaps will be taken in its design before the semester ends.

The Cedarville team is developing SafeTown to have an international reach, as the idea for the project actually came from CADEMI itself.One of the full-time faculty members of CAEDMI, Dr. Andrew Heyd, graduated with his Bachelor of Science in mechanical engineering from Cedarville University in1999 and served as a professor of mathematics from 2002-2004. Through his connection with Kohl while at Cedarville, Heyd discussed the need for teaching resources in Asia with Kohl, and the SafeTown project was born. Through this connection, CAEDMI is in line to become the first official client of SafeTown, using the project and its curriculum to teach engineering at institutions in Kyrgyzstan and Central Asia.

In addition to providing the kits for use in other countries, a version of SafeTown will also beutilized in anintroductory engineering class at Cedarville to be debuted next schoolyear and taught by Kohl.The Safe Town curriculum will be used to help incoming freshmen get early exposure to engineering concepts and better determine if the pathway is right for them.

Whether used in Ohio or in countries half a world away, SafeTownwill help lead to a better future ofwell-equipped engineers.

Cedarville University, an evangelical Christian institution in southwest Ohio, offers undergraduate and graduateprograms across arts, sciences, and professional fields. With 6,384 students, it ranks among Ohio's largest private universities and is recognized by The Wall Street Journal as being among the nation’s top three evangelical universities. Cedarville is also known for its vibrant Christian community, challenging academics, and high graduation and retention rates. Learn more at cedarville.edu.

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