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MrJohnston 20-04-2015 11:06

Re: New York Districts?
 
I was concerned when the PNW went to the district model two years ago... I had all the same questions and concerns that NY teams have been raising in this thread.... Two years later, it is confirmed: the district model isn't perfect. However, the positives seem to outweigh the negatives.

Positives:
* Lower income teams that tended not to qualify for advancement, now have two events and more than double the number of matches - for $4K instead if $5K.
* Smaller events make it easier for lesser known teams to get noticed - and helped if needed.
* Nearly every team has at least one event close enough to home that hotels are not necessary. Most teams (those in more densely populated areas) have two- though some choose to do an overnight trip anyhow.
* A higher percentage of teams are able to play in an "advanced" event with a higher level of play. (Previously, it was only Champsionships after a regional.) This event has the same ambiance as a regional and costs the same amount as a regional. Moreover, a good handful of teams don't need to travel to attend.
* There is a lot of opportunity to "fix," "upgrade," and repair a robot before the next event. Allowing for an increase in student learning and robot performance.
* Overall, a stronger cross section of robots from the geographic area attend champs.

Negatives:
* Let's face it, high school gyms do not have the same "pop" as the locations used for regionals. Teams that do not make the district champs miss out on this completely.
* Teams that qualify for champs, do have additional entry fees to pay if they are to to attend over the teams that typically play in one regional, then attend champs. However, for teams that would play in two regionals anyhow, it's a wash.
* The additional one or two weekends of competition (not to mention days between!) can be taxing on mentors....and students' grades.
* Some teams believe that it lowers their chances of getting to Champs... This is true for some: Weaker robots that rely on being that last pick of the #1 alliance in a regional event will struggle to accumulate enough district points to advance past district champs. However, I don't think this is a bad thing.


Overall, I do think it has been a very good move for the PNW - and I was a skeptic at first. I would encourage all NY teams to take a good, fair, look at it. Yes, each geographic area is different, but there are many ways to account for theses regional differences in the institution of a district model for FRC.

Kevin Leonard 20-04-2015 11:14

Re: New York Districts?
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Sperkowsky (Post 1473975)
This thread is becoming a repeated argument but whatever.

It Comes down to does everyone suffer or do 1/3 of the teams suffer.

I see no suffering- in fact NY going to districts means reduced travel times and more competition for everyone in the state.
This is only discussing DCMP, and only the teams that qualify for DCMP have to worry about these travel times and costs.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Sperkowsky (Post 1473975)
I admit upstate teams get screwed but they are only 1/3 of the teams and as a minority that's someone that has to be done.

If dcmp was in the geographic center Albany (binghamton is a 4 and a half hour drive from li i don't care what Google maps says)

We'd like to prevent any team being "screwed", regardless of where they're from in the state.
Quote:

Originally Posted by Sperkowsky (Post 1473975)
Only about 5 teams would actually benefit from it being in Albany.

False- every team in the capital region, every team in the Rochester region, as well as the Clarkson teams and the assorted Central NY teams would benefit from the DCMP being in Albany or Binghamton vs. NYC. Cheaper travel costs, cheaper hotel costs, and no one has to drive into NYC this way.
Quote:

Originally Posted by Sperkowsky (Post 1473975)
So the rest of the 150ish would have to all travel.

Again, only about 50-60 teams would attend DCMP, so it doesn't affect every team in the state.
Quote:

Originally Posted by Sperkowsky (Post 1473975)
Yea it's a little cheaper for upstate teams but that doesn't account for saved money by not having to have cars or buses accessible.. In a place like Albany you need a bus or a car to go to eat back to the hotel and to and from the venue. In nyc everything is so close that you can usually walk through all those if not taking the the subway which is affordable.

False again- there are hotels within ten minutes walking distance of the Times Union Center, as well as at least a dozen within 30 minutes of the TUC via public transportation.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Sperkowsky (Post 1473975)
With that in mind it will most likely cost the same for upstate teams to come down to the city regardless of the added hotel costs.

Again, false. Transportation into the city is a bit of a nightmare, as well as hotels in the city being substantially more expensive than in Albany.
With a quick google search, I found the cheapest hotel I could find was $135/night, while the cheapest hotels in Albany are about $45/night.
That's a substantial difference.

I understand that NY as one district has some difficulties, especially in locating a suitable place for a district championship, but I'd ask you consider the effects on every team that would qualify, and understand that there are teams with monetary and logistical problems everywhere in the state.

Quote:

Originally Posted by MrJohnston (Post 1473979)
I was concerned when the PNW went to the district model two years ago... I had all the same questions and concerns that NY teams have been raising in this thread.... Two years later, it is confirmed: the district model isn't perfect. However, the positives seem to outweigh the negatives.

Positives:
* Lower income teams that tended not to qualify for advancement, now have two events and more than double the number of matches - for $4K instead if $5K.
* Smaller events make it easier for lesser known teams to get noticed - and helped if needed.
* Nearly every team has at least one event close enough to home that hotels are not necessary. Most teams (those in more densely populated areas) have two- though some choose to do an overnight trip anyhow.
* A higher percentage of teams are able to play in an "advanced" event with a higher level of play. (Previously, it was only Champsionships after a regional.) This event has the same ambiance as a regional and costs the same amount as a regional. Moreover, a good handful of teams don't need to travel to attend.
* There is a lot of opportunity to "fix," "upgrade," and repair a robot before the next event. Allowing for an increase in student learning and robot performance.
* Overall, a stronger cross section of robots from the geographic area attend champs.

Negatives:
* Let's face it, high school gyms do not have the same "pop" as the locations used for regionals. Teams that do not make the district champs miss out on this completely.
* Teams that qualify for champs, do have additional entry fees to pay if they are to to attend over the teams that typically play in one regional, then attend champs. However, for teams that would play in two regionals anyhow, it's a wash.
* The additional one or two weekends of competition (not to mention days between!) can be taxing on mentors....and students' grades.
* Some teams believe that it lowers their chances of getting to Champs... This is true for some: Weaker robots that rely on being that last pick of the #1 alliance in a regional event will struggle to accumulate enough district points to advance past district champs. However, I don't think this is a bad thing.


Overall, I do think it has been a very good move for the PNW - and I was a skeptic at first. I would encourage all NY teams to take a good, fair, look at it. Yes, each geographic area is different, but there are many ways to account for theses regional differences in the institution of a district model for FRC.

Amen.

smistthegreat 20-04-2015 11:21

Re: New York Districts?
 
In my opinion, the only neat way to resolve the DCMP difference is to split New York into two districts. It solves almost every issue with very limited downside.

- Each region is big enough to have its own district
- Downstate can have a NYC DCMP, upstate can have one in Rochester (or another upstate city)
- Even if we made one big district, the downstate teams would play downstate districts, and vice versa for upstate, essentially splitting the region already

Jimmy Nichols 20-04-2015 11:42

Re: New York Districts?
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by MrJohnston (Post 1473979)
...for $4K instead if $5K.

How does this work? I know that the districts receive money for every team that registers from the district with FIRST, but from everything I know they still need to pay $5K* for their initial registration. According to FIRST's site, this is the case.

*$6K for Rookies.

Dominick Ferone 20-04-2015 12:06

Re: New York Districts?
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Sperkowsky (Post 1473975)
If dcmp was in the geographic center Albany (binghamton is a 4 and a half hour drive from li i don't care what Google maps says)

I am going to have to disagree with this. Being from around your area me and my roommate get back to school in about 4 hours and we pass Albany on the way.(We are an hour east of Syracuse and and hour west of Albany).
When driving up what takes the longest is getting through the city and the LIE, when on the thruway it's not bad. To avoid problems in the city you just need to leave during non rush hour times.

MrJohnston 20-04-2015 12:17

Re: New York Districts?
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Jimmy Nichols (Post 1473999)
How does this work? I know that the districts receive money for every team that registers from the district with FIRST, but from everything I know they still need to pay $5K* for their initial registration. According to FIRST's site, this is the case.

*$6K for Rookies.


I cannot speak for the inner workings of FIRST. I can tell you that when we were in regionals, we spent $5K to get going and it covered the KoP and our first regional. This year, I paid $4K to start and it covered the KoP and two district competitions... It could be that rookie teams still pay the extra $1,000 - so $5K for both events.

I believe that the main reason for this is that renting a venue large enough for a regional competition is quite expensive, but HS gymnasiums are relatively cheap - sometimes free if the event is "hosted" by that high school's FRC team... That savings is passed on to the teams.

1493kd 20-04-2015 12:41

Re: New York Districts?
 
I know it changes year to year but how many of these teams in the top 60 are from downstate and how many are in areas other then downstate??

http://www.chiefdelphi.com/forums/sh...ork+ranking s

Chris is me 20-04-2015 12:44

Re: New York Districts?
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by smistthegreat (Post 1473987)
In my opinion, the only neat way to resolve the DCMP difference is to split New York into two districts. It solves almost every issue with very limited downside.

- Each region is big enough to have its own district
- Downstate can have a NYC DCMP, upstate can have one in Rochester (or another upstate city)
- Even if we made one big district, the downstate teams would play downstate districts, and vice versa for upstate, essentially splitting the region already

I want to specifically emphasize the last point here. A point earned in Long Island and a point earned in Rochester would not really even mean the same thing. I don't think it's unfair to say Finger Lakes is typically a more competitive event than Long Island. In other districts, teams can travel / be reassigned to help even things out, but due to the geographic constraints here, few teams will travel from one to the other (and the teams that would are already good enough to qualify for DCMP).

I really think that two districts, or one district and one region merged into the other, is the way to go here. I would even be fine if NYC / LI teams could opt to get real district points from events in the surrounding 3 districts.

smistthegreat 20-04-2015 12:46

Re: New York Districts?
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by 1493kd (Post 1474032)
I know it changes year to year but how many of these teams in the top 60 are from downstate and how many are in areas other then downstate??

http://www.chiefdelphi.com/forums/sh...ork+ranking s

That data is very flawed in this context for a number of reasons. A better indicator of what you're trying to find would be max opr or average opr.

Jimmy Nichols 20-04-2015 12:48

Re: New York Districts?
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by MrJohnston (Post 1474015)
I cannot speak for the inner workings of FIRST. I can tell you that when we were in regionals, we spent $5K to get going and it covered the KoP and our first regional. This year, I paid $4K to start and it covered the KoP and two district competitions... It could be that rookie teams still pay the extra $1,000 - so $5K for both events.

I believe that the main reason for this is that renting a venue large enough for a regional competition is quite expensive, but HS gymnasiums are relatively cheap - sometimes free if the event is "hosted" by that high school's FRC team... That savings is passed on to the teams.

Each district receives $1000 as a re-grant from FIRST for every team that registers. I assume PNW must tell FIRST to apply that $1000 towards the teams registration fees vs. sending it to the District. That would be a choice that the district makes given that they have the funds to support their annual expenses. Otherwise all teams pay $5K per FIRST's website. I don't have any contacts in PNW to confirm this, but since I'm involved in both Regional planning and District conversations with FIRST, this is my educated assumption.

Just trying to prevent mis-information about the fees from getting out there.

Alan Anderson 20-04-2015 12:54

Re: New York Districts?
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by mistersands (Post 1473149)
NYC is very hard to travel out of. Virtually none of my students have parents who have cars.

My experience is that it's hard to travel into NYC. Once you're there, it's easy enough to get around, but unless you're taking the train you've got some serious logistical issues trying to find a place to put a team bus, and it'll be expensive no matter how you do it.

Staying overnight in NYC is a heck of a lot more expensive than any of the other suggested locations. That puts it on the harder end of the scale when you consider fundraising.

I don't see why the number of parents with cars is relevant. They're not going to be the ones asked to provide transportation, are they?

Quote:

Most of the parents don't speak English. In fact, on my team of 20+ students, I've only met the parents of 2.
Again, I don't understand the relevance. Unless you're trying to imply that the parents do not comprehend what the team does, in which case it shouldn't be hard to tell them. One would expect that the students can talk to their parents.

Quote:

Many would not LET their child travel outside of NYC even on a school trip. A trip to Long Island would be fine, but upstate I might lose a third of my team to parents not wanting their children to travel.
Can this be true? I have a hard time imagining that high school students would not be permitted to go on the equivalent of a school field trip. It's not like the world outside NYC is some crowded, dirty, crime-ridden environment. (Okay, that's not fair of me to obliquely accuse NYC of being such an environment itself. I'm just trying to understand the reasoning.)

Quote:

If it was overnight, I would lose over half. And NYC teachers are forbidden from transporting students in their own vehicles.
I'm getting the impression that you're focusing on trying to travel using privately-formed carpools. What's wrong with a school bus? And I thought the reason Albany was suggested was because there's rail transportation available from NYC.

Quote:

Long Islanders are used to traveling. Almost all parents have cars, and in fact many students have cars.
Whether or not someone is accustomed to traveling shouldn't have any bearing on someone else's planning a trip for them.

plnyyanks 20-04-2015 12:58

Re: New York Districts?
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Kevin Leonard (Post 1473981)
We'd like to prevent any team being "screwed", regardless of where they're from in the state.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Chris is me (Post 1474033)
In other districts, teams can travel / be reassigned to help even things out, but due to the geographic constraints here, few teams will travel from one to the other (and the teams that would are already good enough to qualify for DCMP).

And these are the main reasons that two smaller district regions is emerging as the best option in my mind.

This year, Indiana proved that the district system could be successful with 50 teams. So we split NYC+LI into one district, and everything north of Westchester-ish into another. Each would require maybe 4 events + DCMP, and having them stay "local" would really minimize travel costs.

Plus, if inter-district play gets sorted out, then teams could still intermingle if they want, NYC+LI teams can compete in MAR, and upstate teams can go to New England events. That seems like the "everybody wins" scenario, even though it bring a new host of problems surrounding inter-district play.

Kevin Leonard 20-04-2015 13:02

Re: New York Districts?
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by plnyyanks (Post 1474042)
And these are the main reasons that two smaller district regions is emerging as the best option in my mind.

This year, Indiana proved that the district system could be successful with 50 teams. So we split NYC+LI into one district, and everything north of Westchester-ish into another. Each would require maybe 4 events + DCMP, and having them stay "local" would really minimize travel costs.

Plus, if inter-district play gets sorted out, then teams could still intermingle if they want, NYC+LI teams can compete in MAR, and upstate teams can go to New England events. That seems like the "everybody wins" scenario, even though it bring a new host of problems surrounding inter-district play.

For all non-selfish reasons, I have to agree that this becomes the better option for most teams in NY.
The other similar option that benefits the international teams is to have upstate NY become a district and leave NY as is. Maybe even add another regional event to NYC or LI.

Dominick Ferone 20-04-2015 13:05

Re: New York Districts?
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by 1493kd (Post 1474032)
I know it changes year to year but how many of these teams in the top 60 are from downstate and how many are in areas other then downstate??

http://www.chiefdelphi.com/forums/sh...ork+ranking s

If you based it off of this Which you shouldn't, 3 of the top 5 are upstate teams and I believe 26 out of top 60 teams are Also from up north.(could be wrong just going based on numbers I remember being from the upstate area.)

Also if you were to look at all New York regionals they had high scores and $@#$@#$@# the weeks went on they got higher when people gained more skills. (Going from tech valley to flr in one week 6 teams had a final score of over 100 rather than the previous 3.) Also the averages were overall much higher scores than Long Island which was the same week.

Koko Ed 20-04-2015 13:05

Re: New York Districts?
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Kevin Leonard (Post 1474043)
For all non-selfish reasons, I have to agree that this becomes the better option for most teams in NY.
The other similar option that benefits the international teams is to have upstate NY become a district and leave NY as is. Maybe even add another regional event to NYC or LI.

Upstate New York/Western Pennsylvania seems to make alot of sense.


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