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Re: Texas UIL State Championship Qualification Information
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Re: Texas UIL State Championship Qualification Information
My instinct is to be inclusive to greatest extent possible. But I'll point out one not oft-mentioned fact. Being a UIL program (if one considers that a positive) comes with some onerous UIL rules (about time per student per week etc) that non-UIL teams do not have to consider. It is non-trivial to mix the two categories of teams but I hope they do...
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Re: Texas UIL State Championship Qualification Information
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What it's about is being _cruel_ IMO to private/home school teenagers. I'll explain... EVERY private/home school student that has been on our team sought us out and explained how much they loved and wanted to do FRC and _asked_ if they could join our team since there would be no other alternative within their area for them to participate in FRC. IF it's about the teenagers, the kids, IMO it's _cruel_ to turn them away from something where they're hungry and deserving to participate knowing that they'll have _no other_ way to be on an FRC team--that's the way I see it. --Michael Blake |
Re: Texas UIL State Championship Qualification Information
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There are more Texas Offseason competitions 1. TRI - Houston 2. Robot Remix - Woodlands 3. Robot Reboot - Fort Worth 4. Red Stick Rumble - Louisiana Sign up for as many off-seasons as you can, every event makes your team better. |
Re: Texas UIL State Championship Qualification Information
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Re: Texas UIL State Championship Qualification Information
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Re: Texas UIL State Championship Qualification Information
Mr. Blake-
To answer your question I dont really see how this creates two tiers. 3999 doesnt get any money from our school districts, so no money from UIL would be no different. To me this would be like having an All Star team that could compete in the All Star Game, but could not become the World Series Champions. If the stated mission of your team is to be a place where any student could be a part of the team than you have to be able to accept that you cannot compete in UIL. Simply put, we know we cant compete in UIL and honestly dont care as long as we can still be full members of the FRC Community. I will repeat this: We will be going through the selection process just everyone else. If it results in 3999 not receiving an invitation to TRR then so be it. We will not try to be part of UIL or fight the things we know we cannot change. |
Re: Texas UIL State Championship Qualification Information
Allen,
I am not trying to get at anything. I am just curious to know, if there are really two classes of FIRST students, does the team with private school or non UIL students have more or less benefits than a UIL school. Is the complication of the UIL Robotics rules worth the hassle of recruiting students not in our high school? From the limited amount of information I have, I am not sure the UIL schools are the one with more benefits, other than in a UIL on competition, which FIRST is not. I do not intend for my question to be taken out of context and start a problem that is not there. I will no longer be posting on this thread, if anyone would like to discuss this further, please send me a pm. |
Re: Texas UIL State Championship Qualification Information
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Re: Texas UIL State Championship Qualification Information
Joe-
What is precluding The Metallic Clouds from applying for one of the slots? This is only a temporary thing for this year. 10 teams like ours will be at the event. -Leigh |
Re: Texas UIL State Championship Qualification Information
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--Michael Blake |
Re: Texas UIL State Championship Qualification Information
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THAT now stops for 3481 as instructed by our UIL certified public school district which is their prerogative--but I don't have to be happy about it even though I love our school and they've been super-supportive in most everything else. Starting next season, I have to now turn-away hungry to contribute in FRC and deserving private/home school teenagers who will have no other reasonable way of being on an FRC team if they cannot be on ours. --Michael Blake |
Re: Texas UIL State Championship Qualification Information
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Re: Texas UIL State Championship Qualification Information
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They DID NOT have to do this deal in this form. I was at the meeting in Austin with FiT and UIL... I didn't see you there, Jeffrey?! They could've said, IF we can't get a UIL deal that doesn't _exclude_ ANY students then we won't do it. But, the lure, and there's _always_ the lure, of exploding revenue to FIRST-in-Texas by the expected jump in team numbers from this agreement was the driving factor to doing a deal that results in throwing some students under the bus IMO. --Michael Blake |
Re: Texas UIL State Championship Qualification Information
I will preface this by saying that I am not affiliated with any FRC team. I am an FTC guy. By their very nature the two have very different issues as it relates to UIL. I understand the discussions that have been going back and forth about mixed teams, non school teams, etc. There is a lot of discussion about the exclusion of home school kids, private school kids, etc. While it might not be "fair" that is how UIL works. In addition to robotics, I am the sponsor for our UIL Computer Science team. If a home school student comes to me and shows a love for learning programming and wants to be a part of the team, I have to tell them no. That's how it works and it won't change.
If TAPPS wanted to start a robotics competition, I doubt they would let the public schools join them. That is how it works. By choosing to be a home school student or a going to a private school, a student gives us their right to compete in events sponsored by organization focused on public schools. Now with that said, I will transition to the FTC issue I see and I ask for feedback/discussion. In UIL every other team competition, only one team per school is allowed to compete. However, for UIL robotics, there is no limit on how many teams from one school can compete if more than one school meets the requirements. Back to my Comp. Sci. analogy. A CS team is made up of 3 students....If I have students and can make the best 2 CS teams around, I can still only send one to UIL Competitions. Why is robotics being handles differently? If the intent is to promote robotics and increase participation, how is allowing a school to send 5 or 6 teams going to do that. It won't. And before any of my colleagues play the "if you want to go get better card", let me again go to every other UIL event. Multiple teams from one school are not allowed to compete. If a school could field 2 state champion level debate teams, they can't send them. If a school sends multiple teams to invitational and/or practice meets and they win every award, they still can't send them to even a district level event. One team per school is the rule for every other team UIL event. Why should robotics be any different? UIL is using the FTC game for his state event, they should limit participation to one team per school. If a school has 7 or 8 high caliber teams, they can advance through the normal FTC process and go to Worlds. Taking teams that have already advanced to Worlds and saying those are the teams get to compete for the UIL State Championship is, imo, unfair to other UIL schools that have programs and weren't able to advance. Ok, climbing off of my soapbox for now. |
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