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Introducing Newbies!
Hey guys! After a brief veteran meeting today, my lead mentor suggested that I organize some activities for pre-season (after I suggested that more kids is not necessarily better; he shot down an application idea). We hold weekly meetings starting Oct. 8, which is our school's club sign-up day.
As my team enters the 2015 season, we're looking to organize ourselves much more. To be honest, we barely did anything pre-season last year and I want to change that! If you wanted to be in a sub-group, you had to get yourself there. This year, I'm tentatively suggesting we set up a series of "stations" almost, for each sub-group throughout the pre-January weeks. I think it would help people find what they're good at, what they're not, what they enjoy and weed out those not ready for FRC (consider it an application sans paper; I think some people's abilities don't show up on forms, honestly). Sometimes, you have to be put in a group to realize you enjoy it, and it's good to have a general familiarity with all parts of your team! I was part of the shooter group on my team for two years and had a lot of fun, but when I started scouting I realized I did it much better and truly loved it. And so, my question remains: tldr; What does your team do to help newbies find their niche? |
Re: Introducing Newbies!
We just started something new today. We're calling it Spotlight.
It's goal is introduce everyone on the team to the non robot side of the team. We setup a small business plan competition. We split our team into 4 groups and have them design a new team, write a motto, mission statement, create a logo, come up with some fundraising proposal or outreach idea, & give a 3 minute presentation about their team and proposal. Today was the first day to work on it, so the presentations won't be for a couple weeks. |
Re: Introducing Newbies!
I wrote a post a little while ago about all the different ways you can teach rookies. Maybe you can use some of these methods to fit your needs.
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Re: Introducing Newbies!
With the subgroup/station idea, I wanted to teach my group to program Arduino robots to see if they really want to be a programmer. The scary, old LabVIEW introductions and TI BASIC programming really chased off quite a few people. I feel this is more in sync to what a robot programmer actually is.
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