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Project Safe Canada (PSC)
Drone clubs are being set up in Indigenous Communities to;
Drones help teach different topics and subjects as they provide the ability to imagine. Drones allow students to work hands-on, making their learning easier by providing a tangible way to experiment with those things that they are being taught.
Before the teams can fly, they have to first build and code. This is where the STEM aspect comes into play. As an intro to engineering, students take their kits and build their own Drones and Drone Soccer Ball. There’s no dangerous soldering or other specialized tools needed other than a
The PSC team is made up of inventors, engineers, educators, scientists and artists who share a common goal of pushing the limits of community participation in recreation and technology.
The clubs promotes drone education through recreation, teaching community members the principals of flight, robotics and teamwork. They build, code, program and control their drones, they participate in competitive games and open the doors to a future career path opportunities.
Project Safe Canada (PSC)
So, how does it work, exactly? Think Quiddich from Harry Potter. There’s a 10 x 20 x 10 foot mesh arena to enclose the area of play and designed specifically to fit into a classroom, gym our outdoor area. Two teams collide as they try to help their designated striker fly through the other teams’ goal. Drone Soccer provides an accessible team environment for beginners that is a spectator-friendly and indoor-safe activity which schools and communities can easily adopt without a Transport Canada license.
Project Safe Canada (PSC)
Drone racing is a competitive sport. As the name indicates, it involves drone piloting. Pilots have to fly their drones through courses at a high speed and work towards “crossing” the finish line first. … The competitors wear head-mounted displays that give them a live camera stream that’s captured by the camera drone
Project Safe Canada (PSC)
Members build their robots from the ground up, providing a hands-on experience with every wire and screw. Using a CPU, and Intelligent Controller it can support functions including low-latency high-definition image transmission, programming development, and AI computing.
Ground robots are similar to air drones and as a educational tool it unlocks the potential in every learner. They provide an in depth understanding of science, technology engineering arts and math. Members program and code their robots and compete with them in game play modes and intelligent tasks.
Project Safe Canada (PSC)
Aerial drones are impressive and programmable drones perfect for education. You can easily learn programming languages such as Scratch, Python, and Swift. The program comes with more advanced commands and increased data interfaces. Complete with flight control technology you can write code to command multiple drones to fly in a swarm, and develop amazing AI functions.