Establishes the safety-first mindset required for all robotics and automation operations roles. Covers workplace safety fundamentals (PPE, walkways, emergency stops), Lockout/Tagout (LOTO) procedures, safety zone design for human-robot interaction (collaborative vs. caged robots, light curtains, force limiting), OSHA compliance and reporting requirements, incident investigation methodology, and the critical ISO standards governing robot safety (ISO 10218-1/2 for industrial robots, ISO/TS 15066 for collaborative robots). Physical operations carry consequences that software does not — a robot arm that activates unexpectedly can exert hundreds of pounds of force.
Levels: Remember · Understand · Apply · Analyze · Evaluate · Create — highest demands most original thinking.
Performing correct lockout/tagout procedures for all energy sources on robotic systems, understanding that violations are termination-level offenses in most facilities.
Classifying workspaces by automation level, selecting appropriate barriers and sensors (cages, light curtains, force/torque limiting, floor markings), and designing human-robot interaction points that meet ISO standards.
Applying ISO 10218, ISO/TS 15066, OSHA General Duty Clause, and ANSI/RIA R15.06 to facility operations; understanding audit requirements and documentation.
Preserving scenes, collecting sensor data and witness accounts, performing root cause analysis (RCA), writing incident reports, and implementing corrective actions to prevent recurrence.
Articulating safety requirements to leadership, shift supervisors, and floor workers; defending non-negotiable safety practices against schedule pressure; training staff on human-robot safety protocols.
Facility Safety Assessment and Zone Design — Student receives a facility floor plan with robot types and human work areas. They produce a complete safety assessment: zone classification map (automated/collaborative/human-only), barrier and sensor specifications for each zone, LOTO procedure documentation for 3 robot types, emergency response protocol by severity level (S1-S4), OSHA compliance checklist, and a simulated incident investigation report with root cause analysis and corrective actions.
Facility layout design and safety zone mapping for human-robot workspace planning.
Reference standards for industrial and collaborative robot safety requirements and compliance.
Regulatory compliance documentation for workplace safety audits and reporting obligations.
Computerized maintenance management systems for tracking maintenance safety procedures and compliance.
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