SOUTHFIELD – Three seventh graders from Canton and Northville have earned the right to represent the United States at the World Robot Olympiad by winning the Open Senior category of the national championships held Sept. 27 at Lawrence Technological University.

Eric Liu (seventh grader, Canton East Middle School) and Brian Ding and Justin Chang (seventh graders, Northville Hillside Middle School in Northville) competed as the Robocruisers E team and took first place in this year?s Open Elementary category competition with ?Titan Hovercraft System.? The task in this category is to design and create robots that can assist humankind in solving tasks in space.

The team from Canton and Northville will represent the United States in the Open Senior category of the WRO?s international competition to be held in Olympic Village in Sochi, Russia, Nov. 21-23. Nine teams have qualified to represent the United States.

This is the first time the United States is participating in the WRO international competition founded in 2004. This year more than 20,000 competitors from elementary school through college in 50 countries used LEGOS and other kits to build robots that perform multiple tasks.

The three seventh-graders were intrigued to learn in June that NASA has proposed sending a drone to land on Titan, the largest moon of the distant planet Saturn. The mission would also include a submarine to explore the biggest methane lake on Titan.

?We came up with an idea: why don?t we design a robot that can maneuver on both lakes and land?? the three seventh-graders said.

A major goal of the WRO competition is to provide students with a fun way to learn more about science, technology, engineering and math ? the STEM subjects. ?Robotics is fun for these students because what they create actually comes alive. That?s what autonomous robotics is all about,? said LTU Professor CJ Chung, the founder and director of Robofest at LTU and the WRO national director for the United States.

?Robotics is a game changer in many fields including education, since it provides a true interdisciplinary hands-on STEM learning environment,? Chung said. ?Our country needs many more people with technology knowledge and skills, and student competitions like the WRO can help us achieve that goal.?