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Re: What can FIRST do to increase FRC team sustainability?
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Eliminating (or delaying) a bag & tag deadline will not give you any more scheduling options for anything which does not involve building a robot, because you have all those options already. Quote:
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I mostly understand what you're saying now. I don't accept the outcome, because there are many unaddressed factors, but I do accept the math of what you do address. Quote:
If getting rid of bag & tag will help a team become more sustainable, it's going to be because they can spend more time on the robot, period. You have described well how to reduce the number of hours spent per week, but you have not shown any evidence that the number of hours spent per week is a problem. |
Re: What does FRC sustainability mean to you?
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Re: What does FRC sustainability mean to you?
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Re: What does FRC sustainability mean to you?
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(I'm an old-timer, when I graduated high school everybody stuck their robot in a crate and turned it over to the shipping folks by midnight on ship day instead of sticking it in a bag at midnight on ship day--and what's this thing about "withholding allowance" again?) |
Re: What does FRC sustainability mean to you?
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And to go off on a long limb (this does not reflect back on you or your comment, GeeTwo, just a tangent)... What is so bad about attrition as long as the FRC pool of teams continues to rise? In essence - some teams die on the vine and others flourish. This is not a reflection on FRC but an exercise of Darwin's 'natural selection'. Teams that have what it takes can make it - and others do not. FIRST and it's sponsors have already done their work by spreading out their resources to teams that may need it - but how have those teams used these resources? Or are we in a place in FRC that we all need equal access to all resources? Yes, my team wants to have what the best of the best have - but we are confined to the resources in our area. And I will be honest with you, I believe that we have enough resources to compete with the 'best of FRC teams'. We feel that our greatest resource is 'time' with 'talent' being a close second. So here is what sustainability means to me: Build/create a strong mentor core that can withstand the exit of student talent. Have a SWOT plan in place so that we can withstand long-term ebb and flow of sponsors/student talent/space/etc. Creating a Booster Club to aid in our fundraising efforts and back the team/club when the School Board is making significant changes that effect our funding. Founding and supporting FTC and FLL teams that will produce the new wave of innovation for the FRC team. Creating a HUB from teams in a similar geography to aid each other in time of need. You see, none of these rely upon FIRST - and none truly go back to the students themselves. If your FRC team is set up to succeed - it is set up so that the students can succeed as the mentors and support groups do the work that they are designed to do. Yes, it takes a lot of work by the lead mentors; and yes it may take years to establish this culture... but for us in Becker, MN - it has served us well. FRC 4607 is a success as it graduates 10-15 students each season and we look to bring in another 10-20 that can take the place of those that graduated. How do we do this? By creating opportunities for those in the lower grades. Last year we started 3 FTC teams and 3 FLL teams. Last Wednesday we registered students for our FTC teams and we are now creating 2 more teams... and by September I am expecting to create 2 more. That means in a town of 4500 people, we will have 6-7 FTC teams. These teams will be made up of kids from Becker, St Cloud, Big Lake, Clearwater, etc. And I am certain we will have at least 5-6 FLL teams as well. Oh - and our largest sponsor gives us $3500 a year. Most of our sponsors give between $250-500 (cash and in-kind). And we have 24 of these - all of which we worked our butts off to bring into the fold. And we are in Central Minnesota, in the middle of Potato Fields - 9-15 miles in every direction. edit - I am not saying that teams need to fold, but teams need to have strong leadership. Money can entice leaders, but it does not guarantee strong leaders. |
Re: What does FRC sustainability mean to you?
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How about when a first year mentor gets scolded by an LRI because they lost the B&T form and that causes them to have a terrible event experience (seriously, happened this year)... Explain to me how keeping B&T keeps teams alive. You can use big words though. I can't guarantee that giving teams more time to iterate on their designs will help everyone but it has the ability to help some and it is a reasonable idea. Eliminate the bags! #NeverBag |
Re: What can FIRST do to increase FRC team sustainability?
Story time.
In 2015 our team was coming off 2 terrible seasons. We had designs both those seasons but failed to execute them running out of time every year. We had a design and executed the whole thing in time. Our issue however was that, that design did not work. We could have probably fixed all the flaws and had a decent season but, we found this out on bag day. I even frantically posted this thread for help - http://www.chiefdelphi.com/forums/sh...d.php?t=134801 But.... It was too late. We went to our one and only competition spent the entire time trying to get it to work only to ultimately fail due to our lack of tooling and time. We finished in dead last and continued our 5 year streak of no awards. If bag and tag was not there we may have been able to gut the old system put a new one and compete at the very least. This year we finished week 3. I guess that's a result of SBDSD. |
Re: What does FRC sustainability mean to you?
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The biggest impact is on teams barely going to two events - they have a robot in the bag they know can be fixed but their chance to fix problems is artificially limited by a garbage bag that a third of FRC has a stronger emotional attachment to than the actual goals of the program. This was my old team, 2791, for many years. Small changes we could make, big changes we could not. We went to the CT regional in 2011 knowing we were terrible, that we had almost no chance of making the elimination rounds, and with really no opportunity to make improvements to the robot. The team almost died that year. Obviously there's more to the story than "the robot was in a bag" but these things were related. Several people are posting arguments to the effect of "well, some teams will still be bad, therefore it won't completely solve the problem, therefore we shouldn't do it". What a bunch of hogwash. If even a few struggling teams do better this way and can play at a more sustainable and competitive level, isn't it worth it? This will make some FRC teams more sustainable, it's just a matter of if we're willing to do it, or if the people that don't feel like trying after 6 weeks without the self control to stop themselves will make the entire league worse for the sake of an outdated tradition. |
Re: What does FRC sustainability mean to you?
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I've personally witnessed team success drive team sustainability. Many argue that robot performance does not matter at all, that it has zero bearing on if a team will succeed or fail long-term. I believe that this is false and that long term sustainability and long term improvement - both on and off the playing field - share a common link. A team that plays well and to the best of their abilities and has some measure of success at a competition is an inspired team. They're excited, they're happy, they're proud. The students, mentors, & sponsors feel good because all of the time and effort they put into their teams paid off in some tangible way. Not an intangible "we really learned a lot this year, have a pat on the back" way but "wow, we programmed 3 autonomous modes that worked in 90% of our matches and won an award because of our consistency, and made it to the elimination rounds." There are teams that never have that second moment I just described, ever. And at some point enough is enough - the students, mentors and sponsors don't see the students getting excited and they as a team aren't feeling inspired. Those are teams that fold after repeated years of feeling not so great after competitions. Could ending bag and tag help improve the above scenario? I'd argue yes, it very well could for many teams. It gives teams a little more time to have that 'ah ha!' moment and get things working. It doesn't punish teams that can't build an extra drive base to put their 30 lbs of withholding allowance on to continue to practice and iterating. If we can raise the bar even a little bit for the lower and mid-tier teams, isn't that worth it? Look to the VEX robotics competition if you want an example of how it should be done - no bag and tag. Constant robot access for iteration, improvement and practice. Would VRC be half of what it is today if they had a tools down / bag & tag policy? I'd argue no. I still haven't read one statement arguing why bag and tag is still necessary other than statements that hint at "It's the way we've always done it!" I'm sorry, but that's not a good enough reason to continue to do it. There were plenty of people who shot down the district model because it was different. Now it's the future of FRC. As a community that's supposed to be innovative and trying to drive culture change, we sure are afraid of trying anything new. |
Re: What does FRC sustainability mean to you?
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Re: What does FRC sustainability mean to you?
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Re: What does FRC sustainability mean to you?
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So while I can't argue it's necessity, the value it does provide is a universal limited time frame that's apparently significantly shorter than real world projects. I view it as a really really good opportunity to learn about project/time management. |
Re: What does FRC sustainability mean to you?
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Re: What does FRC sustainability mean to you?
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Is removing it going to make FRC harder for at risk teams? I don't have evidence to believe so. Is keeping it making life harder for those same teams? I believe so. What benefit does B&T really bring to our program besides an artificial constraint? And is that artificial constraint important to the goals of the program? |
Re: What does FRC sustainability mean to you?
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