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FIRST Youth Protection Program
Those of you who are not aware of Youth Protection Program (YPP) that FIRST has implemented, please read the guide below. Kudos to FIRST for implementing this. Background check for criminal records and sex offender registery is checked for mentors, not sure if all mentors or just the main and alternate contacts of a team.
http://www.usfirst.org/sites/default...ogramGuide.pdf FIRST, thank you for implementing this. We will continue to do school required background check for all mentors as well, it seems redundant, but it satisfies the school district requirement. |
Re: FIRST Youth Protection Program
At least 2 mentors for each team. FRC-Main and Alternate, FTC/FLLJrFLL Coach and one other. Reccommended ALL mentors/coaches register, like always, in TIMS.
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And most event volunteers for Jr.FLL, FLL, FTC and FRC.
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Perhaps I'm missing something, but why is this considered a violation?
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Don't get me wrong, I understand where they're coming for, but it would be a big change for my old team. |
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Welcome to the post "Sandusky" / "Catholic Church priest" world. People we trusted couldn't be trusted. So rather than define your own trust, we have swung the other way to a default of "no trust". I agree its a sad state of affairs, but we all code software for "this could never happen, but ...." and this is a real world case.
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don't want to turn this into political or religious fight....
just that even with YPP, these people (that you have listed) could not be stopped. We as civilized society must remember that bad elements exists and we need to be proactive in protecting our kids. Yes FIRST has taken this major step and sure many schools had some sort of background check done. Also I want to remind myself that I cannot rest with YPP in place, I need to educate our students and make sure that they are not in harm's way. |
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Obviously I'm not trying to say the woman in your story was a likely child molester, but it certainly does happen. |
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Like I said I'm totally on board with bringing in standard policies for engaging with students but I'm just curious how we handle some of these other issues. I think most of us would agree that FIRST mentors interact with students on their team (and others) more than your average student program between competitions, here on CD, and through social media. This area just seems a little loosely worded for me. |
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(I'm being serious, btw) |
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Honestly, the YPP doesn't affect my team at all - we already have all these policies in place. The basic idea is to try to prevent any situations that could even look funny from the outside.
I can understand how many people might think all of this is maybe a little extreme or draconian, but it's as much for our protection, as mentors, as it is for the students. It's important to avoid giving even the impression of any impropriety. All it takes is one incident, one accusation (even a fallacious one) to create a situation that could severely impact our lives as mentors, and the team for years to come. By following the YPP policies, we work towards preventing even the opportunity for such an event. If we have multiple mentors at each meeting, then we know nothing untoward happened. If we avoid connecting with active students over social media, we don't provide an opportunity for someone to say we're too friendly with a student, or suspect that something more is going on. If we keep all of our e-mails, texts, etc focused on team activities and career growth, they can't be pulled out later as "proof" that we were being to friendly or forward. Maybe I'm a little over sensitive about the whole thing, but I think that's par for the course when you're a young male working with an all female team. Due to many crappy incidents in the past, society has almost come to the point of instant suspicion in those situations, and you have to spend a lot of time and energy proving you're there for the right reason. All it takes is one "incident" (could be real or imagined) to confirm the suspicions society already has. It's generally better to prevent any scenario where such an "incident" can occur. |
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The part in bold especially applies to me. Maybe it's because I've always been an "old soul" but a mentor and I got along quite well. His been a significant influence in my life. We've joked that I'm his right hand (and sometimes his left too). When brought to a competition, his son knows that if he can't find his dad to come find me. I'm friends with his wife and at least passing acquaintances with some of his friends that have come to events/helped out the team. Incidentally, I'm also vaguely related to his wife, but we didn't discover that until I was no longer a student. Like magnets, had this been in place while I was a student, I wouldn't have become as good of friends with him as I did, nor would he have had the impact that he has. I understand the intent behind this policy, but the impacts it has saddens me. |
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Not sure if it strictly follows the YPP rules, but as it relates to something like the "chit-chat" forum...
(Disclaimer: This is a personal opinion on good practices, not any statement on whether they comply with the new YPP) In terms of social media, email, forums, etc... just keep it either public or through a group email that several have access to. We commonly send email to our kids, either as a group or to a single student. We always copy our team Gmail account which is a record of the email, and it auto-forwards to 4 mentors (3 male, 1 female). The key here is to minimize strictly 1 on 1 interactions in off hours. In 99.9%+ of cases, it would be perfectly fine. However, in at least a few percent, it might look/sound a little funny, and human nature sometimes leads us to assume the worst. A few "crazy" scenarios that can be avoided: Imagine you are dropping a student off after a meeting on a regular basis. A parent in financial trouble decides to fabricate a story and raise a civil lawsuit claiming harassment. Can you defend yourself? Do you have any concrete proof? A younger student has a crush on an adult mentor and begins talking to them in off hours. The mentor thinks the relationship is platonic/mentorship, but the younger student feels it is a "boyfriend/girlfriend" connection. The student decides to make a move, and it gets noticed by another adult who raises the flag. Now, all text messages between the two are subject to review. The older mentor never intended anything, but how would the text messages look in retrospect? Is there anything said that when looked at in a new context could appear inappropriate? Or... you are on a team that just thinks "this could never happen to us" and doesn't place much value in the YPP rules. You unfortunately do get into a bad situation where an adult becomes involved with a vulnerable high school student. How much good is required to be done to offset such a bad thing? What does this mean for the future of your program? Long story short, I think the right answer is somewhere between the written rules and ignoring the topic altogether. If you try to stifle any form of interaction, you lose much of what makes FIRST such a great program. However, don't put yourself into a situation that might be hard to explain. The simplest solution IMHO is to always have a second person involved (preferably in a documented way like email). In most cases, everyone says "I never would have thought that person would do ______". However, I can't think of many (any) cases where a child predator managed to pull something off with a 2nd person in the room. |
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It's just my opinion that it's not worth it to live your life in fear of something like this happening. Sure, you should be careful and make smart decisions, but I don't believe we need people making decisions for us about who we should and shouldn't be friends with. If you start thinking like this, you have to consider everybody you know from the FIRST program as being a potential threat. People who you've known for the past ten years of your life that you care about are a threat. This is a dangerous line of thinking, and it leads to a really sad and boring team, and eventually life. There are people on my team who I trust. Here's a quick story- A student on my team who is a big FIRST enthusiast was having a hard time fitting in, both on CD and on the team. A very well respected mentor reached out to him over private messages on Chief Delphi, and helped show him how he needed to behave. After the conversation, the student became a much better team member, and I'm thankful for what that mentor did. If I follow YPP, I am required to report that "incident" to FIRST. I won't, but you get the idea. |
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