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-   -   Should FRC Account for School Size? (http://www.chiefdelphi.com/forums/showthread.php?t=108109)

Andrew Lawrence 01-09-2012 13:46

Re: Should FRC Account for School Size?
 
A low resource team with a well-thought-out robot and a smart strategy will beat a high resource team any day.

slao 01-09-2012 15:59

Re: Should FRC Account for School Size?
 
I think the OP was actually referring to the resource gap, rather than just school size.

With regards to the resource gap, I think that's a major aspect of FRC. It's meant to be like real world, where there are no divisions. Life isn't always fair. But like others have said, you have the ability to be innovative and compete with others who have a bigger budget and better resources.

Al Skierkiewicz 01-09-2012 17:01

Re: Should FRC Account for School Size?
 
Dealing with many teams each year, it doesn't seem to matter (in the big scheme of things) how big the school is, how big the district is or how big the team is. I have seen big schools struggle to turn out a 10 person team and I have seen small rural schools involve the entire school. There is at least one team that had so few students that they joined forces with the next closest district, across the state line and still had less than twenty team members as I remember.

Aroki 01-09-2012 20:16

Re: Should FRC Account for School Size?
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by SuperNerd256 (Post 1183948)
A low resource team with a well-thought-out robot and a smart strategy will beat a high resource team any day.

A high resource team with a well-thought-out robot and a smart strategy would have a distinct advantage over the low resource team, while having the less problems to overcome. I don't think a tier system would work due to the complexity of making one, but I do recognize the gap between high and low resource teams' ability to compete competitively

Andrew Lawrence 01-09-2012 20:27

Re: Should FRC Account for School Size?
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Aroki (Post 1183968)
A high resource team with a well-thought-out robot and a smart strategy would have a distinct advantage over the low resource team, while having the less problems to overcome. I don't think a tier system would work due to the complexity of making one, but I do recognize the gap between high and low resource teams' ability to compete competitively

A high-resource team with a well-thought-out robot and a smart strategy competing against a low-resource team with a well-thought-out robot and a smart strategy would make a very even, yet entertaining match. Especially if the low resource team wins. ;)

Although I do see what you mean by this.

DampRobot 01-09-2012 23:13

Re: Should FRC Account for School Size?
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by SuperNerd256 (Post 1183971)
A high-resource team with a well-thought-out robot and a smart strategy competing against a low-resource team with a well-thought-out robot and a smart strategy would make a very even, yet entertaining match. Especially if the low resource team wins. ;)

Although I do see what you mean by this.

Assuming most rookie teams start out as roughly equal in terms of size and resources (a few dedicated students and mentors in a small, poorly supplied shop), soon both the intellectual and physical resources will become concentrated in upper level teams. To use SuperNerd's terminology, " a low-resource team with a well-thought-out robot and a smart strategy" will soon become a "high-resource team with a well-thought-out robot and a smart strategy." Teams tend to attract physical resources (money, tools, sponsors) after winning with intellectual resources (namely, a "well-thought-out robot and a smart strategy"). Soon, the both types or resources become concentrated.

holygrail 02-09-2012 11:58

Re: Should FRC Account for School Size?
 
It seems clear that school size alone is not the best factor to consider when trying to account for the resource gap in FRC, but that doesn't change the fact that some teams have far more resources than others. It also seems clear that a team with high tech manufacturing capabilities, full size practice fields, and practice bots has a distinct advantage over an equally brilliant and dedicated team that lacks the space and/or money for those things.

So to re-frame the OP...
What, if anything, should FRC do to minimize the gap between the high resource teams and those that struggle to afford a single entry fee as we move into the future? How do you think that decision could impact the sustainability of FRC in coming years?

Clearly this could be an extremely complex issue. But I also know the CD community doesn't shy away from an issue just because it is difficult and complex.

Thank you all for your insights.

lynca 02-09-2012 13:50

Re: Should FRC Account for School Size?
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by holygrail (Post 1183846)
As FRC grows and potentially becomes more and more like other major school activities like sports, it makes me wonder whether FRC should account for school size.

Size should not matter, small private schools are producing fantastic results in FRC.

What should matter is % of school under free or reduced lunch. The free-lunch % statisitic is a metric used to gauge poverty levels at schools.
After years of watching teams succeed and fail in inner city schools, I believe the free lunch statistic is a major contributor between a sustaining team and unsustainable team.

Now if FRC really wants to meet their growth numbers for the future.
FRC should consider reducing registration fees to teams with a >40% free-lunch .

Andrew Schreiber 02-09-2012 15:37

Re: Should FRC Account for School Size?
 
As a huge Star Wars fan I've been waiting to use Yoda for something on CD...



All joking side, this is supposed to emulate real world engineering. We don't have enough time, money, resources, or information about the problem but we need to solve it. There will always be people who have more time/money/resources/knowledge but we have to do our best with what we have. Hand holding and handicapping won't help with that. Let us low resource teams compete with the best so we can know what it takes to beat them in the future.

rachelholladay 04-09-2012 18:26

Re: Should FRC Account for School Size?
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by lynca (Post 1184018)
Size should not matter, small private schools are producing fantastic results in FRC.

What should matter is % of school under free or reduced lunch. The free-lunch % statisitic is a metric used to gauge poverty levels at schools.
After years of watching teams succeed and fail in inner city schools, I believe the free lunch statistic is a major contributor between a sustaining team and unsustainable team.

Now if FRC really wants to meet their growth numbers for the future.
FRC should consider reducing registration fees to teams with a >40% free-lunch .

While this probably would be tricky to integrate (for example, would everyone else's registration go up a little bit to make up this difference?) I do like the sentiment. I agree that percent on free or reduced lunch is an effective way to measure poverty (and therefore lack of availability to resources).

yarb65 04-09-2012 18:45

Re: Should FRC Account for School Size?
 
Team 1662 is from a school of 200. The team has won 3 regional and other awards. Team 330 way to wins to count, less than 200 students. Sometimes smaller can be better. Small no excuse. It only takes 6 dedicated students to build a winner. I know I have done it,

Ravage457 04-09-2012 20:36

Re: Should FRC Account for School Size?
 
Unless u did it like how they do it in high school football, like here in Texas, the size of the school(# of students in the school) would determine what class district the school would be in, for example South San High School(Team 457) would be in district 28-5A, Brandeis High School (Team 3481) would be in 25-5A. Now from their if both teams made it to the State Championship, depending on the enrollment in this two school would determine what division the school would be place, for example Team 457 would be District 5A Divison 2, and Team 3481 would be District 5A Division 1, now the other teams that are not part of any school district, Could be place in 6M1 or 6M2(6 Man Division 1/6 Man Division 2, since those school can only field 6 players on thier team) due to the size of thier Team, it can be done, but the state would have to be in a district format, and FIRST would have to know how many students are in each school and in non school affliated team, other than that u couldnt place team in divisions by the size of the school if you were doing this nation wide, maybe if you were doing it in a state that has district format

ebarker 04-09-2012 22:09

Re: Should FRC Account for School Size?
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by lynca (Post 1184018)
The free-lunch % statisitic is a metric used to gauge poverty levels at schools. After years of watching teams succeed and fail in inner city schools, I believe the free lunch statistic is a major contributor between a sustaining team and unsustainable team.

The free lunch statistic isn't a contributor,... It is a correlation.

A key to effectiveness is organization and planning, commitment, hard work, and other elements.

Team 842, Carl Hayden HS, is in a 91 % free/reduced lunch school.

Having a ton of material resources doesn't automatically convey advantage over the human spirit.

EricH 05-09-2012 12:53

Re: Should FRC Account for School Size?
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Ravage457 (Post 1184159)
Unless u did it like how they do it in high school football, like here in Texas, the size of the school(# of students in the school) would determine what class district the school would be in, for example South San High School(Team 457) would be in district 28-5A, Brandeis High School (Team 3481) would be in 25-5A. [...] it can be done, but the state would have to be in a district format, and FIRST would have to know how many students are in each school and in non school affliated team, other than that u couldnt place team in divisions by the size of the school if you were doing this nation wide, maybe if you were doing it in a state that has district format

We just got done saying that size of school has nothing to do with the size of the team, and the size of the team has little or nothing to do with how competitive they are. A team of 15 can compete with the big boys, or a team of 40 or more can be the last seed. A team of 15 could also be at the bottom of the standings, while the team of 40 could be first at every event. I think you get the picture.

IndySam 05-09-2012 13:23

Re: Should FRC Account for School Size?
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by rachelholladay (Post 1184129)
While this probably would be tricky to integrate (for example, would everyone else's registration go up a little bit to make up this difference?) I do like the sentiment. I agree that percent on free or reduced lunch is an effective way to measure poverty (and therefore lack of availability to resources).

We have a very high percentage of free/reduced lunch. I don't think anyone would call us a low resource team.

See how difficult this is?


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