Mushrooshi
21-03-2010, 22:24
At the Alamo Championships today (Which we didn't win at, but we did well (Division Finalist) and we did our best, and most of our teams' members left sans sour grapes and with a positive outlook next year), we learned that Andrew Schutze will be trying to bring FRC to San Antonio next year. We have two successful FTC teams and quite a few members who seem dedicated enough to want to organize an FRC team.
I know what I am thirsting to have an FRC team for next year. However, we learned our school has ran out of funding, and if we did the same thing we did this year for FTC and start everything at the beginning of the school year, we would be rushing to build a robot in the period of a few weeks. This kind of works for FTC, but I doubt it works at all in FRC.
I'm not so sure about the time frames we should work at. I think trying to organize some team veterans to start the FRC team with massive dedication would be good. I would also prefer the FRC team we start doesn't rely on grants and school budgeting, since our school district is making some radical changes, cutting out a successful liberal arts magnet, handing pink slips to I think 100 or so teachers, and going from an 8 period 4-period-per-day block schedule to a 7 period day. We should take grants, but I'd be interested in trying to get some corporate sponsorship by the summer time.
Also, I'd like to ask how we should organize members of an FRC team. Is it better to have it inclusive or exclusive? GIven the challenge and effort FRC requires, my honest opinion is to make the FTC teams we have inclusive but the FRC team exclusive, and that only the most dedicate members should be able to join the FRC team. If it is anything like FTC, it would be the more dedicated members who would keep track of the engineering notebook and be able to keep up with updates and such. I just feel that is the most efficient way, and we can still expose more 'iffy' members via the FTC teams.
-Rico
I know what I am thirsting to have an FRC team for next year. However, we learned our school has ran out of funding, and if we did the same thing we did this year for FTC and start everything at the beginning of the school year, we would be rushing to build a robot in the period of a few weeks. This kind of works for FTC, but I doubt it works at all in FRC.
I'm not so sure about the time frames we should work at. I think trying to organize some team veterans to start the FRC team with massive dedication would be good. I would also prefer the FRC team we start doesn't rely on grants and school budgeting, since our school district is making some radical changes, cutting out a successful liberal arts magnet, handing pink slips to I think 100 or so teachers, and going from an 8 period 4-period-per-day block schedule to a 7 period day. We should take grants, but I'd be interested in trying to get some corporate sponsorship by the summer time.
Also, I'd like to ask how we should organize members of an FRC team. Is it better to have it inclusive or exclusive? GIven the challenge and effort FRC requires, my honest opinion is to make the FTC teams we have inclusive but the FRC team exclusive, and that only the most dedicate members should be able to join the FRC team. If it is anything like FTC, it would be the more dedicated members who would keep track of the engineering notebook and be able to keep up with updates and such. I just feel that is the most efficient way, and we can still expose more 'iffy' members via the FTC teams.
-Rico