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Why do teams voluntarily do FIRST without adult technical mentors?
We need to talk. Please sit down.
Let's discuss something that defines FIRST. Sometimes, this is the big white elephant in the corner that everyone wants to ignore... but it needs to be talked about. There are many opinions on this subject. Why do FIRST teams start with the intention of this being a "student design competition"? Many teams operate this way. We see teams who are proud about having a "100% designed and built robot". These teams get awards for their student involvement. I can respect this. They worked hard. They learned much. However, more likely than not, they performed not so well at a regional. These teams saw other teams come in with 4-5 engineering mentors and compete better. These other teams, with more adult involvement, may have engineers working in the pits, along side the students. They may have skilled trades machinists making parts for their team during the build season. They may have professional machine designers creating gearboxes or writing code. Are both teams learning? yes. Dare I ask... Which "team" is better? What defines "better"? FIRST was founded on "Inspiration". It still is the cornerstone. Dean, Woodie, and the FIRST Board of Directors are involved because of this idea. It is a thrill to inspire someone to be great. It is a thrill to be inspired by others. I contend that the best "team" is an equal balance of student involvement, teacher involvement, and engineer involvement. In my mind, can a engineer design something on a robot and be proud of that design? You bet. Some teams frown on this. Some teams, mentors, and students preach that this is wrong. What do you think? Why is that? So... there is it is. This will be a debate. Opinions will be given, and people will disagree. That is ok. Let is out. It will be healthy. Andy B. |
Re: Why do teams voluntarily do FIRST without adult technical mentors?
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This year, we had more mentor involvement than ever, and you could see it in the robot. I'm also afraid that the students learned a little less than ever before. It is all about the balance, and having been both a student and a mentor, I can tell you it is not an easy one to strike. One interesting thing that was said at our end of the season team meeting (to evaluate the goods and the bads was this). Our main teacher/mentor said to the students (not word for word, but approximately) "In your surveys, you all complained that the mentors did too much of the work. Well, before you ever think about accusing us of that again, you better not be sitting in the corner chatting and playing games when there is a robot to be built" It didn't really come off all that harsh but that was the best I could remember what was said. Anyway, for all you students out there, I ask you not to complain about your mentors steeling the show when you are not willing to get involved. It is hard for us mentors to "just say no" because FRC is so dang fun. Most likely, it will be hard for some of us to hand you a tool and say "here build this" when it is easier for us to just to do it. But the mentors already know everything. The point is not always to get the robot done fastest, it is for you students to learn something. So, for the students, I ask of you this. Grab the tools, touch the machines, give your mentors some chairs to sit down on. Get yourselves in there working. Don't be just an onlooker while all the adults are fixing your broken robot. Sometimes us mentors "forget" that a student is the person who should be holding the screwdriver, so I make it your job to take it away from us. Anyway, there was once I time when I used to tell the judges "look, our robot was 100% student built" but I later realized that isn't at all what they are looking for. The end goal in all this is to get the partnership between young students and industry professionals. Any bunch of kids can meet up and play with tools (which is a great learning experience) BUT, only FRC kids get to work with real professionals, and you will get a lot more out of it that way, even if you aren't the one holding the screwdriver ALL the time. |
Re: Why do teams voluntarily do FIRST without adult technical mentors?
While our team prides itself with having a completely student built robot, especially since we were able to be in the winning alliance this year in St. Louis. I don't think that our team would refuse help from anyone, it is just that there is not many engineers around our area, and we have never taken an active role in finding adult leaders besides teachers and parents. As the former team captain I think that while every team is different they all need to be able to teach/inspire the students if this means having the older kids teaching programming, farmers teaching how to run roller chain, or an engineer teaching a student about CAD. It does not matter where the knowledge is coming from as long as everyone is having a good time and learning something.
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Re: Why do teams voluntarily do FIRST without adult technical mentors?
Hmm something I'm currently dealing with. We are semi student ran and I'm trying to make our team more student controlled. I found that while mentors may be skilled with engineering and create great designs they tend to not be practical and often mentors don't actually have experience in robotics just what in theory should work. In fact mentors can easily cause more trouble then solving problems. One thing i see is mentors coming up with ideas and trying to imprint them on students. What ends up happening is that the robot really has little work by the students and it shows (and thats not necessarily a good thing). Even though I'm not a mentor i still have to fight the urge to force my ideas on others and am often better off for it. Ive also found that the reason certain teams do well is because the same mentor is designing the robot each year. One thing students need to learn is how to pass on knowledge to other students so when they leave the kids still their know what the heck their doing. I do this by making other students do the work (this may sound kind of lazy but has a specific purpose) even though i would prefer to do it myself. This is great because if I'm gone for a reason or want to do multiple projects at once i don't have to worry about anyones competence. How many of you can tell some kids set up a test robot and all the wiring and we need the system done by the end of the day? Ill tell you its pretty cool to watch them go off and know they know exactly what their doing. Anyhew ill bet if ran right a student run team can outperform almost any mentor ran team (but not those with insane resources!).
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Re: Why do teams voluntarily do FIRST without adult technical mentors?
Very good thread Andy...
When someone tells me the word "mentor" I think of someone who will be there to teach me, and then watch over my shoulder when I am building cool things. If it is not possible for me to design or machine a part, or code certain section, then the mentor take over and solve the problems. I have seen many teams work like that. The students love it, because they get the best out of the program. When I was a student in HS... I have had my engineers show me a design and tell me how it works. I did learn stuff when they did that. I also learned when they handed me a 3" by 3" by 1/2" thick block alumium and said "we need to make the holders for the ball bearing and the plate which will attach the side plates together. You need a quarter inch hole in the middle so you can attach the ball bearing. Go take weights outta there and make it look cool." The best team out there would be the team who understands the meaning of "Teamwork." When a group of students, engineers, teachers, and parents come together and makes sure that the students learn throughout the build season, it is the best feeling. There is something that I like to achieve more than the awards. I like the feeling when the team comes together, builds, and then have the machine go out there on the field and watch it dominate. That is just 2 cents. |
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Wow, I completely agree with that. That happens in our lab a lot, but we're one of the teams that airs on the side of less-mentor-interaction. In the beginning, this was mostly because we didn't have very many mentors; but now not all of us are willing to be mentored. (This poses another problem for mentors.) Honestly, I wasn't too open to being mentored, especially after having almost no help the previous year. ...leading to my point... I'm not sure that teams without so many mentors realize that they could get mentors or the advantages mentors would bring. They don't necessarily realize that they aren't doing things the best way, that there is another way to approach their current problem. For example (this is a classic 1351 story), our rookie year (2004), we were putting together our gearboxes. We just couldn't seem to get them together right, we'd accidentally put the bolts in the wrong direction, we put the sprocket on backwards, the spacing was off, etc. So we'd take them apart, and each time, we had to take the key out of the axle. And this took us almost forever, because we were sitting there with a hammer, screwdriver and some pliers. About 2-3 hours after we started the job (for the sixth time at least, and I'm not exaggerating), one of our mentors walked in, saw what we were doing, and decided to help (we needed it...). He walked over to our vice, put the keys in the vice, lifted up on the axles, and finished the job in less than 30 seconds. We were all astonished, and stood there stunned for the next couple minutes. We had no idea there was an easier way to accomplish that; we just assumed that we were doing it correctly, and that there wasn't a better or easier or faster way. However, we will never forget this lesson. Hopefully, though, we've learned that there may always be a better, more efficient method to approach a problem--and we don't have to figure everything out ourselves. And being taught something rather than figuring it out yourself doesn't mean that you won't learn and remember it. However, I am opposed to the teams who have entire groups of mentors and adults doing work for them, (e.g. scouting at regionals), especially when they aren't teaching a student what they are doing. I believe the mentors are there to teach us what we need to do to accomplish a goal, how to go about it, and what is important in running a team. I don't believe that they are there to do those things for us. (An exception could be an extremely small team, where there simply aren't enough students to do all the work, so long as they are still learning what the mentors are doing, and the students are aware that the adults took care of task xyz for them.) One thing that's up to debate for me and my team is who should be running the organization and the managing of the team -- students or adults? The students need to learn how to run a team; that is a major part of FIRST. However, it is definately not something you can easily learn on your own. This coincides with all the other threads on how your team is organized, so please don't just talk about that; but perhaps the leadership positions should be occupied by student(s), with an almost-personal mentor to directly help the student-leader out. Thanks Andy, this needed to be addressed. ~Stephanie Team 1351 ps- sorry about the long post :o |
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This thread could go on for ten pages and I guarentee the only thing that will be agreed on is "to each their own" |
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The other thing is a student dominated team who is looking for assistance but doesn't know how to ask for help or is too embarrassed to ask either a mentor or another team. Often this team is suffering due to a minor problem. (i.e. a misaligned bearing, bad wiring or a code bug.) If I could get teams to pledge themselves to ask for help when needed (before or during competitions) then everyone would be better off. My point is that you don't need mentors to make a good robot but it helps and the same could be said for students. However, when you work together, you can accomplish more and have a lot of fun too! Students, this may be the biggest oportunity you will ever get, take advantage of talking, learning, and working with your mentors. |
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I am one that is not a teacher, not a student, not a parent and definitely not an engineer. I am a person that loves to figure out solutions to problems and loves the way FIRST inspires young and old people (myself included). I have spent 3 seasons with a veteran team. When I joined the team I found that the mentors did a lot of the work. Over the last 3 years there has been more and more involvement by the students. This is progress and inspiring. We work more and more as a team and the students are taking on more and more responsibilities. Will this continue? Probably not. Why you ask. Well every team goes through cycles. Every team goes through all of their students every 4 years. Every student is different. This is no different than the real world. People come and people go. What is great about FIRST is that there seems to be a lot of mentors that will only leave one way. This base group are inspiring students and mentors alike. They are there to help the greater good of FIRST. These people share their experience with others. This is where other teachers, mentors, engineers and students can get the inspiration they need to make their teams better. When this happens, all of the base mentors get inspired to do more and the cycle goes on. I must admit that I learn as much from the students if not more than they learn from me. I hope that as time goes on that I will be able to pass my knowledge on to others more than I take. A proper balance of mentors, engineers and students is one were they are all learning from each other, all being inspired and most important, that they are all having fun. |
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One of my fellow mentors hit the perfect phrase in my mind... "Lead by Example" In some cases that may be simple direction or even answering questions but letting the kids work on thier own. Or it may involve doing something complex either with the students by your side or guiding them through your thought process afterwards (though I dislike the last one because of time constraints that usually gets skipped).
The important thing is to avoid the situation where the students feel they are not part of the design and build process. Where they feel that thier presence is not needed or wanted when the robot is being constructed. It leaves the kids with no pride in what has been accomplished. It doesn't make them feel part of the team. We are actually going through a radical team reorganization to avoid that exact issue. Personally, when the kids feel that way I have to beleive that myself and the other mentors have failed our kids. However the team decides to operate, the important thing is that the sponsors and school adminstration are happy. (In my case I found out yesterday my VP was livid that the students had such a small part in the build) And also that the kids are having a worthwhile and fun experience. Personally, I sometimes find mentors are too limited in thier decisions. Engineers tend to stick with "well, we know how to do this so we'll keep doing it this way". Students, esp when they come and go tend to bring creativity and different approaches that us old curmudgeon sometime lack. |
Re: Why do teams voluntarily do FIRST without adult technical mentors?
Great Thread!! Though I feel like we've discussed this before. However, I dont think I have seen the quality of the responses that I see here so far!
Sanddrag, I 100% agree with you. Its one thing if mentors are shoving students away, but its something else if they are sitting in the corner waiting for a mentor to give them something to do. I just had a huge discussion with our new teacher last night about this. So many students these days wait for things to happen to them. If they didnt have enough to do, it was someone else's fault, the mentors did too much. If they fail a class, its because the teacher gave too much work... etc etc. Students these days need to stand up and get involved themselves, take ownership, take leadership, because they are all smart and they are all capable. Like I said, Im not talking about when a student asks to help and a mentor snubs him or her, Im taking about when the student doesnt ask! Stephanie, great points also... a mentor is not a mentor until they teach something. Doing something for the team, and not working with the students or even just showing them how you did it afterward, is NOT mentoring. But I also want to answer your question: Quote:
Back to Andy's question... Quote:
Every team is unique, has its own problems, has its own strengths. I think the ideal team is one that has industry mentors, a strong teacher involvement, and motivated kids who want to take ownership and leadership. The mentors are there to "mentor", to help the students learn the engineering process, to show them new ways, faster ways, better ways of doing things. The only time I think it goes too far is when the mentors do everything on the team and just drag the students along for the ride. Just watching someone do their job is not inspiring. Having them explain how they do it, or even getting you to help them, or do pieces yourself, is inspiring. As for what defines "better", then I have to agree with Cory. This is going to be a place where to each their own. If the students are learning, and they are inspired to look up to people who are in the science and technology fields, whether it is because of a project or a teacher or a mentor, FIRST has accomplished its goal. The reality of this world is that industry is small compared to the number of high schools, even smaller is the number of people willing to volunteer their own precious time (while I am thrilled with my amazing 20 mentors, I think Harris has over 1700 people working at our division... thats only 1%!!!), so not every team can have the luxury of an abundance of mentors. Should they keep trying to get some? yes! Can parents and teachers be mentors? Of course!! |
Re: Why do teams voluntarily do FIRST without adult technical mentors?
I think the problem here is that FIRST is so complex, and the yearly robot games are so much fun that people get lost in it, get caught up in it, and never see the big picture.
If the core of FIRST was something more mundain, like a popsickle stick bridge building contest, or an egg drop contest then we would not have thousands of HS students lineing up to join FIRST because dropping eggs out of a 5 story window is just so much fun. But building a 100 lb, 2HP drivetrain robot, and getting to drive or control it in matches against other teams - what a blast! Thats where people lose sight of the big picture. Im willing to bet some teams dont even know there is a big picture. Our society and culture needs more engineers and scientists. If you put up a poster at school, and had an engineer come in all day saturday to talk about engineering, how many students would show up, to listen to someone talk all day about data driven analysis, the engineering design cycle, closed loop feedback control systems and the intimate details of PID loops? Can students put together a team, take the kit and build something that runs, and even compete in the games successfully? Absolutely. Can students figure out what a career as an engineer or scientist will be like on a day to day basis, without ever talking to an engineer, or getting the chance to work side by side with one for 13 weeks or more? Can students re-invent all the processes and concepts that engineers have created and developed and refined over the last 100 years? No way! |
Re: Why do teams voluntarily do FIRST without adult technical mentors?
I think it depends on each team situation and how it is ran. For our team, we are 100% student built, student made, robotics team. We have no engineers and adult-technical mentors. And thats what makes us proud, as mentors, that we can show and teach students about science and engineering. Yes, every year we try to get engineers to help and show better techniques on how parts and components should be made but we can't. Do I think it fair that engineers are working on the robots in the pits or at home, NO but everyone has they own idea on how it describe by FIRST.
I agree with Arefin, that when someone "tells me the word "mentor" I think of someone who will be there to teach me, and then watch over my shoulder when I am building cool things". That why I decided to stay on board and continue to help my team, because I can provided information and techniques to better help the team in the following years. So in closing, ( I feel like I am in a debate) I think the one thing thats needs to be important throughout this, is that if we are teaching students and they learn and applied what we are saying to better understand who they are and the world, then thats great. |
Re: Why do teams voluntarily do FIRST without adult technical mentors?
My first thought when I read the opening message in this thread was "What is Andy Baker doing up at 12:30 AM? Isn't that waaaaayyy past his bed time?!"
I like what I’m reading here and I agree with Kim that the quality of responses is far greater than anything else I’ve read. I have seen this discussion played out before on these forums and I always feel compelled to reply. I am one of those people who used to spout about how our robot was student built and how all of our ideas were original to our team and blah, blah, blah. Looking back on those days all I can think is "what a bunch of crap!" It's not that I should not have been pleased with those accomplishments but I was not proud of them for the right reasons. I was trying to make a statement against team's whose robots have a significant amount of professional engineering and manufacturing going into them. Boy was I naïve. FIRST is not about scoring a team’s success based on what percentage of the design, manufacturing, scouting and so on that the students do. It is about the impact it has on students and their future pursuits no matter how that is accomplished. This year our team “borrowed” ideas from other teams (hey, sharing is a part of the spirit of FIRST, right?) and put them to use on our robot. One was a two-speed shift-on-the-fly transmission and the other was an omni wheel. Both were courtesy of Andy Baker and the Technokats. (Thanks Andy!) We did have our engineers and students do some tweaking to make them fit our needs but the fundamental ideas came from another team. And both worked phenomenally well; so much so that we finally won our first competition in our 9 year history. Sharing is the spirit of FIRST and I think we employed those resources well this year. In the last few years I have made a conscious effort to correct those members of our team that point out how Team So-N-So has a robot that was built by engineers. So what?! It’s their team! How would we like it if other teams told us how to do our business? Besides, who has time to analyze other teams like this anyway? How counterproductive and what a tremendous waste of time. There is no one correct way to function within the world of FIRST and there is no magic recipe for team success but staying focused on your team and working as a team certainly play big parts. And any mentor worth their salt will tell you that the ingredient none of us has control over – luck – plays a significant part in each year’s game! While chance favors the prepared mind (and prepared team) a certain amount of luck will always give you a boost or take you out of contention. In my opinion I think FIRST takes teamwork to a whole new level. Not just among members of the same team but also among competing teams. Imagine that – the teams that are trying to beat you every year are also sharing their ideas and expertise with you! Now THAT’S teamwork! Why would you want to knock other teams? If we stop trying to micromanage the FIRST experience we’ll all have more fun and more success. Big picture – stop worrying about how other teams manage their affairs. Not to put too fine a point on it but it really isn’t any of your business anyway. When your team is absolutely perfect, then you can begin judging the others. And for crying out loud, HAVE FUN! My 2 cents. Sean |
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I've been on both sides of the tracks and heres my opinion on technical mentors.
Saying No to assistance that a technical mentor can provide is saying no to help. I'm trying not to make any religious connection but its saying no to a good Samaritan. Who is making them help you? Well anyway I'm strongly in the opinion of never saying no to help, because in the end everyone benefits. You can ask any engineer thats assisted a team, they learn from the student too, so why say no to their education too. FIRST stands for For Inspiration and Recognition of Science and Technology, any I'm starting to believe that in order to be inspired, the closer you work with the mentors on your team the more inspired you would become. I wouldn't have the understanding I have today of mechanics and many other principals if it weren't for technical mentors that have been assisting me for over 4 years now, yes I've been lucky enough to of had mentors in middle school too. And I'm a living fact that mentors work. __________________________________________________ ____________ However lets look at the advantages of a student built robot and compare? Student Built Pros: -If something breaks you can fix it, you built it, you can repair it -Team Pride -Feeling that You've contributed something signifigant to the team -Learned how to use the kit and potentially other items Cons: -Not the greatest track record (reliability issues are most common, I'm a design scout I have pictures and stacks of reports on it) -Didn't get the optimal Engineering experince that could of happened Student and Engineer Built Pros: -If something breaks, you can fix it. Why can't you? -Team Pride -Worked Side by side with real life engineers and got a better grasp of the engineering experince -Generally the best track record available -Contribution to the team Cons: -You didn't make every single part yourself (But is that really a disadvantage?) edit:This is definetly not complete, so don't get angry |
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So anyway, I would say the best experience does not come from handing the students a box of parts and saying "have fun" and seeing what they come up with 6 weeks later. Some form of mentorship, even just reading published whitepapers, I think is crucial to success. |
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Now that I'm back from Europe....
A long time ago I always thought the hardest part of starting a team was getting funding. Now, I think the hardest part is getting mentors. It isn't particularly hard to get a company to donate money but getting an individual to donate time is much harder; particularly the time commitment we're looking at. The other key component of finding mentors is finding the right mentors. Not everyone is cut out to mentor high school students. For a rookie team, it's also quite helpful to find experienced mentors (which, for a rookie team, can be quite difficult). So the question is, how do we recruit mentors (particularly those who are experienced) to go work with rookie teams? Most mentors who are working with team will not likely move to a new team without some large incentive (such as their child is on that team). The only group that I know of that would be unattached to one particular team as well as having experience in FIRST would be college students. What we tried to do in Rochester (to some extent) this past year was to distribute the RIT FIRST college students to the various rookie (primarily) teams in the Rochester area. In many ways it worked but we were still short staffed most of the time. As opposed to starting new college sponsored teams, I would think that using college students as mentors for other teams may be the best way to go. It helps to take a lot of the burden off of the college students (no need to run a team) and it may provide a greater service to the FIRST community. Matt |
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Engineering and science are disciplines that build on the work that has been done in the past. We stand on the shoulders of those who have gone before us. When most people think of engineers the idea that pops into their head is some lone inventor, sitting in his basement, coming up with a new mousetrap or a better way to squeeze the last oz of toothpaste from a tube. But in reality engineering is very different from the lone-inventor. There are methods and processes for tackling new problems, ways to break down a task (like coming up with a strategy for winning a game) - ways to think up new ideas, and ways to analyse those ideas and proceed with the best one. And here's the thing, these methods and processes are not common sense things, not something you would think of on your own. As I alluded to previously, its taken over a hundred years of experience, trial and error, seat of the pants work to come up with these effecient ways of going from an initial problem to an idea, to a solution that can be built, operated and maintained. Engineering is a profession. Can you imagine a program like FIRST in the medical field? Would you have HS students performing surgery on animals, with no medical training and no doctors on-hand to learn from? We dont need any doctor-mentors, we can do a heart transplant all by ourselves? The result would be certain death for the patient, and the students would be frustrated, disheartened and discouraged. I cant think of any simplier way to put this: the intent of FIRST is to bring students and engineering professionals together. How can you take the professionals out of the equation?! |
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I also agree with Cory that, “the only thing that will be agreed on is ‘to each their own’” So, here’s “my own” thoughts as to what this engineering mentor expects to give and gain from the FIRST experience. For me it’s all defined by the FIRST acronym, with the key words being “Inspiration” and “Recognition”. Many here have stated that it’s all about inspiration. For me, however, it’s more recognition. I want the kids to learn something about what it takes to become an engineer. For them to recognize that they can’t wish, nor boast, nor suppose they know what it takes. I want them to show me they have the aptitude. I want them to know that on their first day, in their first engineering class, they can look to the person on either side and be assured that only one will still be sitting there on the last day of the term. I want them to know that on their first day on the job they will not be asked to form a group with all the other interns and then take a vote on the day’s engineering decisions. I want them to know that I’m not there to entertain them, or to raise their self-esteem, or to let them think for one minute that I can quietly sit back and watch them bollix things up. I want the kids I work with to be the ones who survive that first term and go on to become “real” engineers. On the other hand, I want the ones who twiddle their thumbs to go into something else. So, what I expect to give and gain are one in the same. That is to advance the state of my profession. If the students, teachers, and parents already know what I’ve learned, then they don’t need me. If they just want someone to find sponsors, buy materials, arrange shop time, or put band-aid fixes on a job not well done, then I don’t need them. I’d just like to add, before you all begin to take pity on Birmingham-Groves, that this year I was like the Maytag repairman. I never touched the electronics or the programming. I seldom visited the pits and never coached a lick. But that’s only because I had complete confidence in the machine, the plan, the kids, the teachers, and the parents; anything less and I would not been able to keep myself from taunting that 800-pound gorilla. In my opinion, the right mix of student, mentor, and engineer involvement is when everyone gives it 100%. |
Re: Why do teams voluntarily do FIRST without adult technical mentors?
I belong to one of these so-called "Student-Run" Teams. I am a mentor.
The reason that people get bent out of shape about this is that they thing the Engineers do all the work. Sometimes they do, sometimes they don't (there are some really talented students in this program people). Regardless, some teams opt to have little or no adult involvement. As Andy stated, these teams generally do not "perform" well at the regional. I think that the real problem here is everyone's definition of "performance". So what if the robot doesn't match up to the other ones? So what if there is something that was designed/built/engineered better than yours? Does this not inspire our students? Does it not make them want to do better the next year? I think the real measure of a team is the number of students that it produces into the "Engineering field", and the number of scholarships that those students win. Who really remembers who won x-award at x-regional in 200x? What do these things really matter? Some teams are set up differently than others. As long as there is still inspiration, to each his own. |
Re: Why do teams voluntarily do FIRST without adult technical mentors?
Mr. Fava, a team mentor, says that with FIRST we get to "work alongside the Michael Jordans of the engineering field." FIRST is all about inspiration. Let the engineers inspire the students, and let the students inspire the engineers.
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Re: Why do teams voluntarily do FIRST without adult technical mentors?
Baker, you're making my head hurt and it's only August!!!! :rolleyes:
Yes, balance seems ideal to me too Andy, yet inspiration happens on the individual level. In twelve years of teaching I've had more than a handful of rather humbling yet remarkable experiences. Old students coming back to visit telling me things that I did in the past, both positive and negative that either helped them or hurt them in the path toward their individual futures. Every time I have one of these experiences I get to learn all over again that the most difficult task of all is understanding what inspires each individual student. A single way of doing something will do wonders for one student, while it may stunt the growth of another. Thus my answer lies in the "f" word - FLEXIBLE. What works one year, doesn't work the next. What works for one student, doesn't work for the next student. Students graduate, they mature, they change, new kids come in. At least once a year, in a perfect world, every team would reevaluate all of their strengths, weaknesses, and preferences for learning, and build a model for that year based on the current make up of the group and all of its individuals. The idea is to maximize the experience for everyone involved, including so called "grown-ups" and inspiring each and every student on the team. Therefore, I submit that NO person or team should EVER look at another person or team and say, "It shouldn't be done that way." It's nearly impossible to know what works for every student on your own team. How on earth is it possible to know what works for someone else's? My .02, now go back to work Andy and quit thinking of stuff that makes my head hurt in August. |
Re: Why do teams voluntarily do FIRST without adult technical mentors?
I think the answer to the question at hand is pretty cut and dry. Every student is inspired in different ways. In my opinion, as long as the competition gets the attention of someone and drags them in, it doesn't matter how they get there.
I've been fortunate enough to have been on multiple teams, each of which was run in a different manner. One team was highly student run, another was run mainly by engineers and teachers, and the last one had a good mix of both. My finding...the majority of students who walked away from the experience on any of the teams felt inspired in some way. When I was a student in high school, I fell in love with the competition aspect of the game. My team at the time was a very competitive team and they focused heavily on the strategic aspect of FIRST. From that year forward I was hooked, always bringing my hunger for strategy and competition with me. When I changed teams as I became a mentor, we weren't quite as competitive as my previous team, but the results were the same. Everyone enjoyed themselves, this time because of the closeness that the design and build period brought between the students and the college mentors. With FIRST...if the student cares, its a win win situation. As soon as you are caught up in the atmosphere, the drama, and the glory of it all...you are hooked, and thats pretty much it. Even those who dont stick around for 10+ years tend to look back on their experience as a life altering event. Thats what makes the program as a whole so important. In closing, why search for the means when the end is more than adequate no matter what you do. The purpose of FIRST is served by just showing up. -Andy Grady |
Re: Why do teams voluntarily do FIRST without adult technical mentors?
Dean & Woodie talk about teams having mentors.
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I feel a FIRST mentor should be the same way. They should teach the student their ways and their expertise and life skills (whether it is engineering or whatnot), show them that all aspects of a team should be fun, and should be interesting. By taking away that aspect from a mentor on a team, they've become more of a secretary or a babysitter. I know that if I joined a team where my job as a "mentor" would be to clean up blood and kids cuts and just sit around and observe, I'd be pretty disappointed. Sure, I can see how you would say each team is different, but as a mentor myself, I'd definitely would have a hard time accepting the fact that I wouldn't be able to help on a 100% student built machine. Thats just my take on the matter..... |
Re: Why do teams voluntarily do FIRST without adult technical mentors?
Someone sent me a message (by the way this is a much better method than just repping people) that said my original post was angry and bordered on offensive to mentors and after rereading it while some things were fine they were right! :ahh: I apologize it was unbecoming and i wish to make a new stab at it and see if i can do a better job... but I'm too lazy and since i think the message i sent that person touches on everything i want to say anyways I'm just going to post a modified version of it. What I'm trying to imprint is that mentors should know when to step back and be mentors. I get discouraged when i go to competitions and see robots obviously designed by grownups. Also i like talking with teams and i find too little of the students at IFI know how the robot they built work. In one thread Ive seen this was placed into a question. "When does the competition become about mentor built robots Vs student built robots?" and its true i see to much mentor involvement on some teams (not all and some of you guys are very good at being mentors). And for every one of those robots i wonder how many ideas that while not initially the best idea could develop into something amazing by the students with encouragement from a mentor. Look at this from two different views. One the mentor who works hard to help the students even comes in out of work to do extra work. Its admirable and shows their devotion to the team and to helping out students. Now look at it from a student. The mentors help with with things that might have been overall better left to the kids especially if it would be a valuable learning experience (if your a mentor and your doing something for a team that you know how to do but your not teaching others than this might be one of those times). Also in the end a student looks at a robot and can see exactly what he did. Yes a student can say its cool but an they call it their own? Can they say exactly what their part is in its development and design? This doesn't just extend to mentors though. I'm an experienced student and because of that i catch myself falling into the same trap. Is this going to be "My" robot or the "Teams" robot. Yes they may go along with it because its a cool idea but what have they contributed to make it theirs also. The last thing i want is to offend mentors I'm trying to stress that maybe mentors should look at themselves and ask are they teachers or builders? I really don't want to belittle the mentors contributions, their great and i have lots of respect for them! Its just the pains of knowing things and trying to have everyone else reap the benefit. Well that was it slightly modified to this thread. I just think that mentors should take more of a passive role and try to more guide the students to get their invention working. Uh i guess this is it in a bottle (and applies to all people with knowledge) just because you know a better way IS it a better way? I know that this whole post isn't indicative of ALL mentors on FIRST teams and maybe you don't agree (you can indicate this with a message to me not reps please) but really look at all I'm saying and maybe evaluate the merit of what I'm saying and if you yourself have noticed similar things. I hope that was better and please recognize parts of my origional post could have been better thought out.
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Re: Why do teams voluntarily do FIRST without adult technical mentors?
I agree with the majority of people here already.... I feel a great way to achieve a well-run team is to have a good balance. The mentors must empower the students to design, build, lead, etc, and the students must be open to learning from the mentors, same as the mentors must be open to learning from students. It's a two-way street and I don't think you can logically argue that. There are some teams that have little to no mentors (or vice versa), but where there's a will, there's a way.. to recruit them... or recruit the help of other teams.
However, the key is defining.... what is inspiration... what is a mentor... what is an engineer... what is a teacher....what is winning...what is good performance....what is an award....what are your goals....what is FIRST about.... Everyone will have a variation to those definitions. So you are always going to have different opinions on what is the best way to run a team. The students will have one idea, the adults will have an idea... Hopefully those groups can come to an agreement. There must be give and take, but above all there must be learning on each side. Many times people have said "inspiration is letting the students do all the work and learn from their failures", while others have said "inspiration is leading by example, teaching students fundamental skills to carry thru the future". I think.. it's BOTH. I honestly don't feel anyone can realistically say "a student-run team is better" or a "mentor-run team is better". If a student on a student-run team says "a student run team is best way", that implies they know everything (aka "we don't need mentors for anything, they cause more harm than good"). If a mentor says it about a mentor-run team, same implication, and I think that's ludicrous. The students have next to zero "professional" work or real-world experience, and I feel they need someone who does to be effective. But that's not to say adults know everything either - they learn from the creativity and "unconditioned" or "out of the box" ideas from students. There are positive aspects to all 3 ways of running a team, but personally I feel there are only negative aspects in purely student-run, or mentor-run. (I'm not saying either are terrible, I'm saying there are some negatives to it and most of them are obvious)... The difficult part about a "well-balanced" team is: maintaining the balance between the sides. So, that's what I think. If there are disagreements within the team about how to run it, then perhaps a team evaluation of your definitions of the above words is in order. |
Re: Why do teams voluntarily do FIRST without adult technical mentors?
I will admit I don't have an answer. But something seems very wrong to me when I walk into a pit and ask a student about part X only to hear that the brilliant part X was designed by a professional engineer. He/She's a professional, what pride could they possibly get from trouncing a bunch of student designed robots? It's like Michael Jordan going down to the YMCA for a pickup game, joining a team, and totally dominating the other teams. How the hell would that help the kids on his team? Is it okay for Michael Jordan to go down to the Y and help kids work on their jump shots? Sure! Is it okay for a professional engineer to teach kids about practical design considerations in designing a gearbox? Of course! I think you see where I'm going with this.
To keep with the sports star analogy: Imagine if a bunch of star basketball players each adopted a team of aspiring young athletes. Then they held a big competition. I'm sure it would be inspiring to play with a sports star, but you wouldn't be doing much, would you? It would just be mentor on mentor. What a lot of people fail to realize is that a lot of schools have a lot of inspired students already, students who walk in the first day and have known for a long time they want to be engineers/physicists/mathematicans/etc. For schools like that, maybe the Recognition is of greater importance. Other students can certainly be inspired by the nerdy ones, no? My team currently has no engineering mentors, but I'm actively changing that. One of the FIRST things I'll do though is make clear that we are not looking for an engineer to design are robot for us so we can gaze over his/her shoulder in silent awe, then do menial tasks at there direction. I'm not sure how an engineer does fit into our team yet, by I'm sure will figure it out. I aplogize, this is not my usual writing style, it's much more off the cuff than usual, as this is an issue which I harbor very strong opinions on. You may now mod me down, thank you for reading. |
Re: Why do teams voluntarily do FIRST without adult technical mentors?
The bottomline is that we're fulfilling FIRST's ideals of inspiring youths to consider careers in science and technology and changing today's outlook in these fields. It doesn't matter if a robot is built and designed 100% by engineers and is the best on the field, or bulit and designed 100% by students and is the worst on the field, or even a combination of the two, as long as the students are inspired.
I've heard this one being reiterated in the FIRST community too many times now and I'm sure inspiration is happening in every FIRST team out there, but has anyone ever considered to take it a step further? I sure have. Instead of letting FIRST simply encourage youths to take on jobs of science and technology, why don't you make it a personal or team goal to produce the leaders of tomorrow? If not the leaders, at least the geniuses of tomorrow. Besides, FIRST isn't only about inspiration, FIRST is also about providing opportunities of enrichment. I'm the taking this opportunity, generously provided by FIRST (and my mentors and teammates, of course), to rise to the top. Every team is unique, thus, the solution will always be dependant on the team.*sigh* I've heard this one too many times as well. Not that I'm trying to offend anyone, but this sort of thinking doesn't get us very far. What we need are details. "A good balance of...this-that-this" really isn't good enough either I'm afraid. To find a better answer, let us remind ourselves the question at hand. Quote:
Now, to stop daydreaming. It'll be a while before the perfect team comes along (I won't shoot down the possibility), but the more your team is similar to this one, the closer you will be to achieving this dream. Unfortunately, what we usually see today are excellent engineer-built robots or not-so-great student-built robots. Between these two types of robots (not considering the existence of excellent student-built robots), not-so-great student-built robots still make the "better" team for FIRST's sake. These are the students that will more likely the geniuses of tomorrow. But we have to remember that engineer-built teams are still good teams for inspiring the students. Just because a robot is 100% student-built, doesn't mean mentors and engineers still can't help. We must remember that mentors should only be teaching. If mentors keep to teaching students the design process and how to use a machine and etc., and ensure the students are productive, all that is needed from the students is a creative mind and a willingness to work to have an excellent competitive robot. I am not leaving out the fact that some teams cannot be easily student run or have a student built robot if the students aren't willing, that some students may be too independant to ask for mentor support, that mentors can't help but join the fun and other facts, I am simply directly answering the debate question. |
Re: Why do teams voluntarily do FIRST without adult technical mentors?
I think that the roles of mentors ultimately depend on what the team wants to gain by participating in FIRST. We seem to have two followings in our team. 1351's leadership seems to have been pushing us toward engineering. They want the team to learn about science, engineering, and technology. Having fun is a second priority. However, there are some that want the team to be something "fun". They want to be here to be with friends and play with a cool robot, making learning a lower priority. With the current leadership soon to be changed, we may change our direction to the latter, depending on how things play out. I'm not saying that you can't generally have fun while you learn and vice versa, just that different people have prioritized them differently. In certain situations, however, you will have to pick whether you want to have fun or you want to learn, with very little middle ground. In those situations, people will go with whichever they want more. Having said that, I'd like to discuss mentors.
To the engineering folk who want to learn, mentors are best suited to teaching. The students get to fumble around a little, but still get help from mentors when they need it. I've found that you can never truly learn something until you do it. I can sit here and tell you everything you need to know about programming, but until you try it, you'll never actually understand how to do it. For instance, you may try to do something that may cause a problem. I never actually told you not to do it, however, because it seemed obvious to me. Everyone has different levels of expertise and has had different experiences in their lives. Until you try something for yourself, you'll never truly be prepared for it. To those that want to have fun, more mentor involvement would be better. The students can focus less on try to learn how everything works and spend more time playing with everything. The kit comes with enough parts and instructions to make a functional robot, though not that spectacular. For some, that may be enough. They get to spend time with their friends and do something together, but not get caught up with the boring book learning. The mentors, depending on the exact situation, may have to pick up the slack that the students don't really want to take care of themselves. As another example to my point, my friend does battlebots. He tried to get me into it also, but I just didn't like it. He is a mechanical person and I'm an electronics person. He has fun building the robot. He likes to cut the metal and weld it together. He loves doing the math to show that his robot could probably beat up a car. He doesn't care, however, how the electronics work. He works with the black box mentality. Boxes A and B are connected together using wire C. It doesn't matter how they work as long as they do. As for me, I can care less about the mechanical aspect of it (but battlebots is more geared toward it, which is why I didn't like it). I have more fun programming and designing the electronics. If I had someone to build the chassis, I could spend all the time I want playing with my new mobile electronics platform of doom. My friend, however, would want the opposite. Now I'm not saying that you should decide your mentor involvement on whether or not you want to have fun or want to learn. I'm also not saying that my opinions are the best way to handle the situations presented. I'm just posing these as examples. Your team may have totally different priorities, or they may just be finer striations of the points that I brought up. Maybe your team wants to prepare students for industry. In that case, you'd need more mentor involvement to teach them how things are done. Maybe your team just wants to give students general engineering knowledge and skills. In this case, less involvement may be better. If you're looking for a way to hang out, parents (depending on how you feel about your family) may be better because now it's a family event. In the end, your team needs to sit down and decide where you want FIRST to take you. Once you know where you want to go, you can decide how you want to get there. |
Re: Why do teams voluntarily do FIRST without adult technical mentors?
Mr.Baker and Sciguy may I say excellent posts and topic to bring up I like it. In my opinion FIRST teams need as many mentors in the technical fields as possible. People like Mr.Baker (45) and Raul from 111 are the very essence of FIRST the reason why it works so well. The robots without mentors would be boring and the kids would have no one to look up to and no one to guide them in building it. I know that on 1251 without our engineering and various other mentors we would not be able to make our robots and things we deisgn a reality. I think the engineering mentorship piece is critical to a team it shows them what the real world is like and how to deal with problems. Mentors are great I think the fact that they take so much time out and design with the kids really amazing robots is fantasic thanks to all of you out there.
My two cents, -Drew |
Re: Why do teams voluntarily do FIRST without adult technical mentors?
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Of course, mentors are necessary to help a team function. I could not imagine having students doing everything from booking hotels to packing meals to welding the frames perfectly square to wiring the robot perfectly the very first time. As much as I hate to admit it, FIRST just isn't that simple. And of course, as many have said, mentors are there to help, not to hoard. Quote:
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Re: Why do teams voluntarily do FIRST without adult technical mentors?
I think D.J. Fluck's spotlighted post sums this up well
"I don't understand why it should matter if your robot is 100% student built, 100% engineer built or somewhere in between. As long as you are Inspired (I word again) FIRST is getting its point and primary goal across." I agree with this almost fully. If 100% student built gets the kids inspired, go with that, if 100% engineer built works well, do it. However, personal experiences lead me to prefer a mix of students and engineers. My freshman year, the bot was completely built by the engineers. I personally didnt find this inspiring or fun, perhaps if they had let us watch what they were doing and they explained what was going on and why, it would have been a more positiv experience. Then, in 2004, it was 100% students. I thought it was the best set up, and that we were better than the other teams because we didnt need engineers. Now, after taking a year off and watching, I wish that I had the oppurtunity to work with engineers in FIRST. I think that having the chance to work alongside engineers is an incredible oppurtunity that high school (and even college students) can learn a lot from. And I agree with Elise, the mentors can learn from the students. Remember Dave Lavery's story of Colin Angle and Tooth the robot at JPL/ NASA? Also, to answer the title question of the thread, sometimes teams just can't get technical mentors to join them. Sometimes the more rural teams have no companies close enough to them that could provide engineering support. Or maybe the team is surrounded by companies, but none have the time or enough people to spare to devote to the robotics team. So it's not that all teams are voluntarily choosing not to have engineering assistance. |
Re: Why do teams voluntarily do FIRST without adult technical mentors?
I really love this thread because it reminds me how wonderful FIRST is. We see so many opinions here yet everyone seems to work according to their own needs. There is no "way" and we all get to bask in the ability to choose how to run our teams.
Alot of people mentioned here how some teams "do not realize" how involved a team could be. This could not be closer to true. I am living proof. When I started FIRST, I was astonished to see so many adults at the competition. I thought all teams, like ours, was student run, student built, etc. Thus, I had the image that this was the "only way to go." After mingling with other teams and through chiefdelphi, i've realized how many different teams and levels and interactions there are. I had NO idea! This year would be our third year competing. Our team consists of probably 10 dedicated students and two VERY dedicated teachers. We don't even have a real "sponsor" -- alot of our money comes from relations that will give one time and move on (and the majority comes from us). But, we are desperately trying to change this. We are trying to find a sponsor, trying to get more students involved and trying to find an engineer to help us. After two years of trying, we haven't given up...maybe this year will be our lucky break. What i'm trying to show here is that alot of teams don't have a choice. However, imagining that we had an engineer, I think it would help our spirit, competitive edge, and overall experience. No doubt, we take pride in our self-reliability. When we run into problems, we sit and figure out what to do -- we engage in this process to its fullest extent without having someone on the end cut us short with the answer. But it's been hard. We had no machining tools (that should change this year) in the past and the majority of our robot was built with a drill, a hammer and saws. And given what we had, I feel take pride our progress. Most of all, I want to point out that our two mentors, the teachers in my school that have taught me mathematics, engineering and CAD and that I see everyday (literally, except for sundays and holidays), have gotten us this far. No, we had no engineers but we had two dedicated mentors that were willing to put their heads together with us, treat us as equals, and engage in the "engineering process." We all are human, we all learn, we all interact. So why not promote the interaction? Every team needs a mentor to push them in some sort of way -- so, the more the merrier. |
Re: Why do teams voluntarily do FIRST without adult technical mentors?
I'll bite.
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I realize there are no absolutes here, but what I have seen has appalled me. I've witnessed an engineer on a team with an obviously professionally designed robot yelling at one of his pit crew about how he was “stupid" for the way he was trying to fix something, then push him out of the way and do it himself. Witnessing things like this make me VERY thankful I am on a team with high student involvement. When you see the pits of these teams at regionals, It seems like the kids are standing around when the engineers do all the work. People learn from doing something, not watching someone else do it. Quote:
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Re: Why do teams voluntarily do FIRST without adult technical mentors?
I mentor a FIRST team because I think building the robots is fascintating, I have time to do it, and I think it's never too late to have a happy childhood.
FIRST teams vary all over the map. The high school where my team is has eliminated all vocational programs. Although we're in the heart of Silicon Valley, most of the students in the club don't seem really passionate about technology. If it wasn't for my efforts, I'm afraid a robot wouldn't get built for the competition in the last 3 years the team has been in existence. I've thought about standing back and letting the team fail to deliver a robot much less a competitive robot. It's hard to separate the student's failure from mine in this instance. When I work on something, I expect excellance. When the robot is finished, it's handed over to the students for competition and I have no control over the outcome of the competition. I've told my students the one thing I can control is the "ooh and ahh" factor when people look at our robot. I take pride in what we build no matter how it finishes in the competition. If the students in the club learn something from being around me and how I proceed at robot building, then I'm happy but that is largely up to them. I'm not a teacher. I'm not paid to spoon feed them or keep them entertained. I'm a mentor. I'm there to show them how the real world approaches problems, attacks them, and solves them. The first year I was involved with FIRST I tried to stand back and wait for a "student designed and built" robot with me acting as a consultant. Three weeks into the build, there was absolutely nothing to show for the effort and we were lucky that Stack Attack was a relatively simple game so we managed to field a robot that by virtue of being reliable, was competitive. The team who had sponsored us as our mentor didn't really provide much support. FIRST teams are organizations that have great turnover. The longest a student will be on the team is 4 years. Continuity is big factor of the mentors being available to carry the knowledge forward. Ideally, this knowledge would be passed from experienced students to less experienced students. While some of that happens on my team, it's not how I see the major knowledge transfer. PS. If any of my students read this, please tell me. While I've pushed that Chief Delphi is a valuable site, I suspect that none of you visit here regularly if at all. |
Re: Why do teams voluntarily do FIRST without adult technical mentors?
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When you see the pits of these teams at regionals, It seems like the kids are standing around when the engineers do all the work. People learn from doing something, not watching someone else do it. Quote:
Also, until you've worked with a team, or spent an extensive amount of time around them, do not make ignorant claims about how their team is ran. You have no idea what they have or haven't done, and you have no right to demean their work. It's not up to others to police mentor involvement on a team. It's up to the students. If they feel like they don't have enough involvement, THEY need to fix that, likewise if they feel that they have too much involvement, they need to get mentors into the game. $0.02 |
Re: Why do teams voluntarily do FIRST without adult technical mentors?
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Re: Why do teams voluntarily do FIRST without adult technical mentors?
My experience is with a team which has had a large number of mentors working with the students over the last several years. These mentors included engineers, teachers, college students and other adults from all kinds of vocational backgrounds. While nothing is perfect, and the team dynamics change from season to season, I like to think that exposing the students to working with adults other than teachers (whom they normally have contact with on a daily basis during the school year) is advantageous. Not all of the students are planning to become scientists or engineers so exposure to other professional skills is a good thing. Because the team had grown to larger numbers and had mentoring and other support, it allowed the team to expand to include additional things like community involvement, which in turn brings in more media attention, which in turn attracts more potential sponsors and spreads the word of FIRST. Adults have networked and have more connections than the average high school student simply because we're out in the workplace and we've met a lot of people. Managing the paperwork and scheduling the school board meetings for a team with students from multiple high schools is an administrative nightmare that most students don't want to deal with, but some adults may have the professional skills to do it efficiently (and are more than willing to explain it to the students, if any were ever interested in learning about it). I think an effective mentor is one who encourages student ideas, listens to them, then offers an opinion or guidance based on professional expertise.
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Re: Why do teams voluntarily do FIRST without adult technical mentors?
There are 2 more things I would like to add to this topic. The first leads into the second.
At our school, there are no classes in programming of any kind. The closest they come is a web design class and html is nothing like C. That being said, it falls on me to teach the kids what they need to know. Last year we only go one 4 hour session to go over programming prior to the season. Not enough for the kids to understand it well enough. So did I do the actual programming, yes. But I tried to do it in such a way that they students were involved and understood something. As much as possible, I hooked my laptop up to a projector and worked on the code with the kids. Explaining the decision process and having them help determine how it was going to work. Is that "having the students do it" No, I admit that. My goal this year is to make another step in that direction. Did the students learn? I beleive so. The indiciated to me that they learned something. Sometimes what the mentor has to or doesn't have to do is a product of the environment and what kind of team they are on. (though the goal should always be to improve the students skills, thought processes, and experiences) That being said, even though I am a professional programmer, I do not work on a daily basis with anything similar to stuff we do on the robot. I work on PC-based simulators that simulate the interfaces between military systems. I don't work with microprocessors directly, I don't have to deal with interrupts, setting pins, or worrying about memory space. To me, the whole robotics experience is a stretch and something new. So while a lot of us have degrees in engineering, I'd claim that the only real "professionals" are one who work with this type of stuff all the time. I think most of us would really be in the experienced amatuer category. |
Re: Why do teams voluntarily do FIRST without adult technical mentors?
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One of the more uncomfortable, and seemingly inevitable moments of explaining first to an outsider is the inevitable prompt, "Are all these robots student built?", to which I haven't found a good response. The honest answer would be no, but how do you justify the program in light of that? Quote:
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In FIRST, entirely Engineer built robots are an abomination. There is significant reason to be proud of the degree to which your robot is student designed (built is less important, I find, because real engineers may never pick up a spanner). |
Re: Why do teams voluntarily do FIRST without adult technical mentors?
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Re: Why do teams voluntarily do FIRST without adult technical mentors?
You know Andy; I am still amazed by the things that come out of your brain. This one has got me stumped.
For a number of years, and to a large extent still I am very much in the boat of wanting the students to do the majority of the design and manufacture work. Mentors I believe should be providing expertise and guidance (along with travel arrangements, money management and so on). From having the experiences I had in FIRST, I personally got so much more out of “doing” things then I would ever have gotten by just watching and listening. However, it was also a great opportunity to work alongside and with engineers, and learn from their years of experience. Often this was a great asset to our team, with young, creative, and crazy-minded students providing a fresh look at how things can be done along with the voice of experience in our engineering mentors letting us know when perhaps we were just a little too crazy. Now this is not to say that teams in which students provide less engineering and manufacture work are not as inspired. In fact, some may be inspired to ask why an engineer chooses to design and manufacture a half-inch shaft over a 3/8ths shaft, while another may be inspired to learn how to manufacture it. They did not need to be in the shop or design room to be inspired, but merely see how exciting the world of engineering and science can be, and then have the drive and initiative to go out and find the answers as well. Who knows, maybe someday Student A from Team XX, which was student run, may work in the same company as Student B from Team XXX whose team was mostly engineer run. Both these people have very different experiences in engineering, Student A may have an insight into the manufacture of parts and a sense of what can be done to simplify the creation of parts and therefore lower cost, while Student B may have an incredible sense of design and a fantastic handle on the fundamentals of machine design. By putting the two together, you have twice as much brainpower and expertise at work on a real world problem, both able to point out specific concerns from both sides of the engineering world of design and manufacture. As a result, you could get a better design, that is simpler to make, and safer to operate, while saving money. What more could any company ask for? Ultimately every human is different, thankfully. If we were not all different I imagine we could be sitting and staring at the wheel sitting next to the fire in awe of how great the two are. Instead, we have traveled to the moon, and someday we will travel to Mars and beyond. I propose a different view of the issue at hand. It is not so much of how the team is run, be it by students or engineers or a combination there of, but how each student learns and is inspired. Ultimately the students are the drivers behind this competition, for without them Dean and Woody would have a great idea, but not a whole lot of progress. The students need to ask questions if they are inspired by something they see, and the mentors need to be sure to answer them to the best of their ability. Remember though, it’s always fun to get your hands dirty once in awhile too. |
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Re: Why do teams voluntarily do FIRST without adult technical mentors?
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Seriously? If FIRST was primarilly a robot building contest, then the major funding for it would evaporate overnight. Turn FIRST into battlebots, where winning is the thing, then what is the point? I could not possibly care less which high school or which company can build the best robot in the US, or in the world. I do care about my profession: engineering. I do want to see more students take up the challenge of completing an engineering degree and helping to do what the rest of my profession does: making peoples lives better. If a team has to win to be successful, then at the end of each year you will have 3 successful teams and 997 losers. |
Re: Why do teams voluntarily do FIRST without adult technical mentors?
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and they would do the same to us - it was a game to lighten the air when someone screwed up - and the joke was: none of us were getting paid anyway. Usually when you see mentors totally dominating the students, and even (actually) yelling at them, its their first year, and they dont 'get it' yet. |
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Competition serves an important purpose, it serves to focus our efforts. |
Re: Why do teams voluntarily do FIRST without adult technical mentors?
"FIRST will start to discourage many teams from participating when they realize that the robot they spent six weeks on has no chance of success at the competition" ~Ryan F
As much as I hate to full out disagree with you and say you're wrong, you are. My kids came to competition this year with a robot that was... um, not the most competitive at the competition. The first practice match, the entire gripper fell apart. Luckily for us, a team with more engineers and resources was able to help us out and provide us with a well designed and very functional replacement. Did this discourage my kids? Well of course they wished they could be the best, who doesn't? I mean, in any given competition, there is a best, and everyone in the given lower ranks, wants to be that best team. Here's a hint, just because you don't win doesn't mean it's not still fun. As to the topic of balance which has been thoroughly discussed, I'm going to go devil's advocate on this one. Guess what? All of these teams that say they're 100% student built, designed etc, are not. Who do you think designed everything in the kit of parts? I can pretty much guarantee you it wasn't a high school student. So yes, you have had engineer help. Really, it's not so bad, I promise. Why would you do it without adult technical mentors? (and btw, in this post, college kids will count as adults, even though some people say that there is still a need for real adults) Well, possibly because you have none available. I know that we looked endlessly for anyone to help mentor our team. We had 1 engineering major in our mentor team last year. The rest just knew from being on their high school teams. I understand that it's not ideal, but sometimes you just can't get adult technical mentors. We've been trying to get into GM (the closest place that would have them) for almost a year now. I'm still waiting to get ahold of anyone inside of the Lansing plant. Why would you do it? To make things happen with what you have. Sometimes it's just not available. I've had a few people tell me that since I didn't have them that I shouldn't have started a team. I think my kids still had a great time, and want to come back again next year, so I don't see the problem. The kids learned. The mentors learned. Yes, we weren't as good as the best teams, there are only so many "best team" spots available. Overall point to those that don't want to read the rest of this post's babble: Whether or not your team has the technical mentors, as long as your kids are still inspired by the adult technical mentors of other teams, and get the picture that we're trying to portray in this program, the best that you can to is the best you can do. Do it, and be proud of your results |
Re: Why do teams voluntarily do FIRST without adult technical mentors?
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I definitely don't agree with your logic. In FIRST, high schoolers are supposed to partner up with professionals (engineers, skilled tradesmen, business leaders, etc.) and compete against other teams. This program is more about that partnership, and less about students being educated. This is not a science fair. You say "FIRST is meant to Inspire the STUDENTS." You are right. However, you seem to be missing the point that these professionals are doing much inspiring. It is a two way street, in my opinion. If this was just a student robot building contest, the level of inspiration we see would not be present. Seriously... we would have no swerve drives, no shift on the fly gearboxes, no object-oriented autonomous programming, no WFA winners, no IRI, no Battlecry, no WRRF. We would not be playing in the Georgia Dome, there would be no students getting Segway riding lessons at FIRST competitions. Quote:
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As long as I am still involved in FIRST, I will fight to keep it to be a partnership between students and adults, working side by side to build these robots. Andy B. |
Re: Why do teams voluntarily do FIRST without adult technical mentors?
Beth, I agree with your post
the question of this thread is more geared towards asking why some student run teams actually shun professional help if you try to get engineers on your team, but you cant find one, thats one thing but there are teams out there that have the attitude "we dont need (or want) any engineers, we can do this all by ourselves" |
Re: Why do teams voluntarily do FIRST without adult technical mentors?
I see absolutely no value in an entirely engineer built robot. Is that really so insulting? I mean, if the students just watch the engineer do brilliant things, they might as well read a book about great innovators. I really do not mean to be insulting, I have immense respect for every F.I.R.S.T. mentor I've ever met, but for the purposes of arguement I'm talking about a hypothetical extreme: an entirely engineer/mentor built robot, something I consider to be indicative of a terrible state of affairs. It could probably never happen in the real world, I said it merely to illustrate the worst case scenario. The closer you get to that worst case scenario, the worse off you are. The flip side of the coin isn't good either: purposely shunning any engineer involvement is contrary to the spirit of F.I.R.S.T. It's about balance, and if you are going to be off-kilter, I think it better to be off kilter on the lack-of-engineer involvement side of things. But why be off-kilter? :)
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Re: Why do teams voluntarily do FIRST without adult technical mentors?
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However (as is probably true for many others), I did not distill this message from your previous posts. I am glad you've clarified for all of us, where you stand. |
Re: Why do teams voluntarily do FIRST without adult technical mentors?
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To me, shunning help from people who have experience is silly and wasteful. We live in a world where few products come from a single person. It seems to me that to be sucessful in engineering is more to be able to work with and learn from others than to be able to say "I came up with this myself!" Even though I consider myself a hands-on person, I'm much more inspired by watching/helping an engineer build a robot than I am by an engineer handing me a kit of parts and a machine shop and saying "have at it." |
Re: Why do teams voluntarily do FIRST without adult technical mentors?
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Re: Why do teams voluntarily do FIRST without adult technical mentors?
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If you don't know these people, you need to. Heck, there are many more things being developed by mentors in FIRST I don't even know about. Seek them out. Ask them what they developed or helped to develop. Learn from them. This will inspire you to new heights. Then... pass it on. Mimic these developments, improve upon them, share it with others, inspire your peers and the people who look up to you. This is what makes FIRST special. Andy B. |
Re: Why do teams voluntarily do FIRST without adult technical mentors?
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FIRST seems to have found a formula for success, and that includes all the types of teams out there, not just student-built teams. Some of you are talking about mentors who are interested in the competition and engaged with their teams as if it's a bad thing. Frankly, some of the things being said in this thread are borderline insulting to mentors who volunteer up to thousands of hours each in order to provide this opportunity for you guys. Some of you are acting like we should volunteer all this time but do so solely to operate as babysitters and not "get in the way". I'm sorry, but the fact of the matter is a lot of the great engineers in this program probably wouldn't be here if they were not given the opportunity to work on their robots alongside their students. To all of you on here who are speaking so harshly about engineers who design parts of their robot: hopefully you don't use any of the kit transmissions, or kit frame, or parts from Andymark, or Skyway wheels, or anything else that isn't a raw material because guess what: those parts were designed by professional engineers. If your team buys a transmission and has students install it, is that really better than another team who has an engineer design their own transmission and their students install it? |
Re: Why do teams voluntarily do FIRST without adult technical mentors?
I think we all concur that mentors do indeed have a key role in the 'I' of FIRST. If a team does not have the resources for whatever reason, however, the students are not necessarily not being inspired. Rather, I think that such a situation would inspire the students - simply in a different manner than would be expected. When they do research on a drive train or form of appendage or approach a corporation on their own (to name a couple of examples), they are - in my opinion - inspiring themselves to persevere, to be innovative, to recognize their own talents.
Nonetheless, we must find it integral to recognize help where help is offered. When I was a sophomore on my team, we took pride in having a 100% student-built robot (a few negatives for this have been mentioned throughout the thread) - but that is definitely not to say that we did not accept aid from our mentors. Our mentors were the ones to teach us the concepts of physics during the design process. They offered us tips on what appendages might work, all while stressing the importance of simplicity and allowing us to select what we thought would work most efficiently. Our mentors taught us how to use the machine tools. In essence, they empowered us by giving us the knowledge necessary to build a robot and have a successful team. Did they touch the robot? No. But did they inspire us? Most definitely. I had been given the opportunity to see the contrast between the different types of teams as a student who had been on two teams. I must say that I found inspiration in both types, and while the kinds of inspiration differed, the point is that the 'I' was indeed existent. |
Re: Why do teams voluntarily do FIRST without adult technical mentors?
I've come to the realization that holding opinions on things publicly is a really, really, bad idea. Really. I'm not being sarcastic for once. Having received negative rep from people I really respect, I now realize that this navel gazing, while fun for a while, is ultimately divisive. Talk is cheap.
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Oh heavens, now I hold opinions about holding opinons. I'm meta opinonated! Ack! Wait, was that a judgemental "ack"... am I meta-meta-opinionated? It's a downward spiral folks. |
Re: Why do teams voluntarily do FIRST without adult technical mentors?
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Students on engineer-run teams have mixed emotions; some students love it and see the inspiration of a well engineered machine first-hand. Others see it as though the engineers don't listen to their input, or take control and it isn't really "the student's robot". Students on student-run reams have the same thing; some of the kids love being involved 100% (or close) on all the decisions. Some hate it and are sometimes overwhelmed by everything and wish desperately for experienced guidance. Having experienced both perspectives first-hand, I have come to the conclusion that it doesn’t really matter in the end. As many people have said, this isn't designed to be a competition; it is designed to inspire and motivate high school students into a career involving science, math, and technology. As long as you remain involved because you LOVE what you are doing and the things that have seen, it doesn’t matter who wins and looses the "competition" and, it doesn’t matter who build or designed a robot. Just remember some of the things that flat-out amazed you about robots. Chances are that an adult helped with it. Instead of criticizing the team, try to beat them! Come up with something amazing for the next year. I know it can be hard to make people understand what you have experienced, as no person has experienced every facet of every team. Just try to remember that we care only about you, not the robots and not about wining. We want you to get an engineering degree, make lots of money, and love what you are doing. Or at least I do! -Alex |
Re: Why do teams voluntarily do FIRST without adult technical mentors?
One thing that hasn't been mentioned yet is the fact that even student run teams with no engineering support may very well have received the help of engineers. There are many teams that have used the resources made available here on Chiefdelphi by some of the very engineers that Andy listed in his post above. These resources have helped many teams that don't believe they need engineering help take their robots to the next level. Imagine what you could do if you had some engineers full time?
FIRST isn't about building robots. That's just the tool used to get the message across that with some effort, these high school students can have careers in engineering and that those careers are fun!!! Working alongside these engineers or even interacting with engineers at competitions and on these boards is what achieves these goals. The closer the engineers are the more accessible it makes their job seem and the more students learn about what it really means to be an engineer. I know how it feels to be on a team where the students get to do very little for their robot and to be on a team run fully by students. There are very few people that have been on both sides of the fence. I've learned that the engineers are a very vital part of keeping this program successful and that before you judge others, you should try to step into their shoes for a little while. Try getting a few engineers to help out and see what happens... After some more thinking.... Andy, there is one little problem with your list above. Where are the women engineers??? |
Re: Why do teams voluntarily do FIRST without adult technical mentors?
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I have not stopped arguing because someone said my points were invalid (dost thou thinkest me a coward?!). I stopped for the reasons stated above, nothing more, nothing less. The comments of mentors made me reconsider the whole endeavor. |
Re: Why do teams voluntarily do FIRST without adult technical mentors?
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Sure, sometimes the student-built teams may not have the same resources that they would if they had engineers, and perhaps sometimes the bots are of the same caliber as others, but it doesnt mean they cant win. Keep in mind that strategy and alliances are a vital part of the game, especially this year. It's not just about who has a better bot. |
Re: Why do teams voluntarily do FIRST without adult technical mentors?
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When I was on team 93, the mentors took care of travel arrangements, running some team meetings, issues with the high school and getting food to the team during the build and at competitions - they oversaw students taking care of the majority of everything else, organization-wise. Ordering shirts, picking out swappables, getting buttons made, setting up and running fundraisers, setting up meetings with potential new sponsors, doing demonstrations ... even ordering materials (with mentor approval!) was sometimes done by the students. The mentors were always there to make sure we didn't screw up too badly - but they did, occasionally, let us screw up and learn from our mistakes. One of the most important things Sean Schuff ever taught me was how to fail forward. There's a great book by John C. Maxwell on the subject called Failing Forward: How to Make the Most of Your Mistakes - check it out! Quote:
Don't make the mistake of thinking everyone learns the same, thinks the same, and is inspired in the same ways as you. |
Re: Why do teams voluntarily do FIRST without adult technical mentors?
((I split the above post and this one, because as a single post it was just too long!))
Alright, back to the beginning: Quote:
Rich pointed out before that the key is flexibility. What works for team A doesn't work for team B. Similarly, what works for team A one year, might not work for them the next. Let's take a closer look at teams A and B: Year One
In both instances, the students are inspired to continue with FIRST and engineering. Both teams had "good years" and did well in the competition. For these two teams, the way their respective teams were run worked. Now, check this out:
Case in point - what works for one team doesn't necessarily work for another. Going back to teams A and B; the teams are in their second year now. The rookies on both teams are hearing how wonderful FIRST is and what a great time the teams had the previous year. Year Two
Team A is a good example of "what works for a team one year, may not work the next." Had the students stepped back a little bit, and realized that they did need help, they might have done much better and had a lot more fun. Team B is a good example of "just because a team is run by mentors, doesn't mean the students come away uninspired." Team B found what worked best for them and ran with it. Both years the students walked away feeling inspired and wanting to know more about and do more with engineering. They're two for two on successful* years. Bottom line: The cases above are just two ways things could go. There are a thousand different scenarios and a thousand different ways to run a team, and neither of them is "the best way." There is no formula to figure out what will inspire people the most, what will win you the competition the easiest, or how to run the team as smoothly as possible. The "best" way to run a team isn't by having it all student run, or all mentor run. It's not splitting the "power" 50/50 and having students do their half and mentors do theirs. It's about finding what works best for the team - finding what inspires team members and having the ability to realize that you may have to change the way your team is run slightly, from year to year. As soon as you can do that, you've truly found the best way to run a team. * = successful, as the students on the team were inspired by what they saw and learned. |
Re: Why do teams voluntarily do FIRST without adult technical mentors?
Phrontist: First - don't feel bad about having opinions and making them public. You can't try to please all of the people all of the time.
For everyone on this thread: just be sure that you post due to logic - not emotion. I know there are people that disagree with some of Andy Baker's points (phrontist's posts and others prove it). The reason that Andy is so well respected is that he doesn't (okay - rarely) posts when his emotions are controlling his typing. He posts when he has thought about it very clearly and logically. Quote:
Okay, the reason for the post. I'm going to disagree with the above statement, and I'm going to go DEEP into the FIRST rhetoric archives. When Dean used to explain what FIRST was all about, he used to use the example of an NBA game. When young people went to NBA games to watch Michael Jordan, everyone left wanting to play in the NBA and be just like Michael Jordan. They were inspired. Was it because these young people got to play in the NBA game? Heck NO (duh!). It's because they watched greatness occurring in front of them. FIRST used to preach this a long time ago. The message was that people ARE inspired just by watching - the NBA proves it. That doesn't mean that is the only way to run a team - but it IS a perfectly acceptable way. |
Re: Why do teams voluntarily do FIRST without adult technical mentors?
I see things from both points of view that Andy started this thread from. When I first started doing FIRST I was on a small grass roots team. The team I was on has been struggling to find a company to give them a major sponsorship to help fund the team. The team remained competitive regardless of the lack of technical support they recieved from professionals. The team functioned with a teacher, a professional welder and the students. As the team grew in the next few years they were able to expand to recieve help from some of the parents who were engineers. The designs were still made by the students; they were simply assisted by the adults.The inspiration in all this comes from the guidance that was given to the students. The inspiration allowed for cleaner and better built machines.
The team still does not have an corporate sponsor with engineers but the students learn enough about theyre machine and with some guidance from the adults the still functions at a competitive level and the students learn alot about engineering, science and awhole lot more. Moral of the story: A team does not need to have engineers to compete competitively but proper guidance from engineers is always a welcome contribution to a team. -Pat |
Re: Why do teams voluntarily do FIRST without adult technical mentors?
Allot of people have thrown the word build around and used it in a variety of forms. I want to be clear here. Are we talking about building or designing? They are two very different things and i think shape you're posts into very different messages.
Overall i don't think mentor involvement should be viewed as a bad thing. I love mentors and think they do bring inspiration to FIRST. Its just i see mentors get over eager in their desire to help. Nothing is wrong with a robot that is student built (yes their are student built robots believe it or not) also their is nothing wrong with mentor built robots. I guess the only place i get rubbed wrong is when i see mentors designing the robot over the kids. And you cant tell me it doesn't happen. lots of us are guilty of wanting to promote our idea over somebody Else's. I'm not saying the robots need to be 100% student built. I just think that the robot should be representative of the students ideas. Also this thread will stay alive longer if we don't directly refer to others post. your not going to change someones opinion by pointing out where you think they are wrong. People are untitled to their ideas and will get defensive about them. Respect peoples opinion even if you don't agree with it. This is a good thread and i would hate to see it fall apart into personal attacks. |
Re: Why do teams voluntarily do FIRST without adult technical mentors?
I am going to state a small lesson that I learned on my trip to Africa. I guess that it is a science lesson that can be applied to this topic.
I was told when I arrived that I needed to drink water. When I stated that I wasn't thirsty I was told that by the time you felt thirsty your body was already being stressed by lack of water. If however you had a consistent supply of water to your body then you would not get thirsty and your body wouldn't become stressed. Take the above story and replace the water with engineers. A lot of the time we do not realize our needs until it's too late. |
Re: Why do teams voluntarily do FIRST without adult technical mentors?
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Everyone is arguing and showing why what they think might be “better”, but few are seeing that everyone has different perspectives. There are merits to more or less mentor involement, but each team has to chose which they want to take advantage of. One team may feel that winning at the expense of not giving students as much hands on experience is worth it. Another may feel that it doesn’t even matter if they make it to competition as long as the students got to do everything. Quote:
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You could also see this the other way around. Fostering creativity might not be as important as completing the project in the allotted 6 weeks. They can still learn after everything is finished. Learning through observation has it merits. FIRST allows students to see how real world engineering works. If they don’t learn that much about the technical details right now, they’ll be going to college anyway. Quote:
Of course, some might feel that consistent “failure” would discourage people. Why would they keep coming back if they know they are going to fail? As the 2004 drivetrain started to show its wear and tear in its poor performance, a lot of team members started to get discouraged. I couldn’t believe how many people were just moping around despite the fact that we still had a decent chance. If these failures happen at inopportune times, people might start leaving. Quote:
However, by setting students up like this, they may shy away from engineering. If they have bad experiences about it before they go to college and get stuck with whatever degree they spent the last 4 years on, they might do something else. By doing the “dirty work” for them, they’ll be able to have the full experience because the team is able to advance. Instead of seeing the bad side of engineering, they’ll see the good side and hopefully stick with it. Quote:
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Just remember that you have to chose what is in your team’s best interests. If you haven’t done so aleady, get your team together and discuss what you want to get out of FIRST. Doing so will be good for more than just deciding on mentors, but also how you want to run your team in general. If your team has a direction and purpose, I think that you’ll be more successful. Success of course being defined however you want. Now go! Call everyone and set up a meeting. Quote:
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Re: Why do teams voluntarily do FIRST without adult technical mentors?
This is an interesting thread. I wish i had the time to write a lengthy response.
I am one of the founding mmmbers of an entirely student run team. We are not this way out of stubborness its just the way things have always been and we have never had any problem with it or seen the necessity for engineers. We are a competitive team and i do see that we are missing all that much. We have a number of extremely experienced/skilled students who mentor less experienced team members and we are our own self contained bundle of inspiration. We take great pride in knowing that our robot is 100% of our own design and craftsmanship. |
Re: Why do teams voluntarily do FIRST without adult technical mentors?
Maybe the formula here is that there is no formula.
And honestly, when everything's said and done -- what are we going to remember in our past about robotics? No one can do everything on the team but each student has the ability to get as much out of the experience as he or she wants. FIRST gives me (and everyone else) an open opportunity -- if i wanted to learn something and I couldn't learn it from my own team, there are always other teams I can go to for assistance. That's the point! It always boils down to WHAT YOU WANT and HOW YOU'RE GOING TO GET IT. If everybody adopts this attitude (with respect to other's wishes) everything can fall into place. Satisfied, Dissatisfied -- it's all in the eyes of the beholder -- and sometimes these views can't be shared because the experiencers and the passerbyers see two different things. We (clearly) have our differences in this chat, but it's all about opening our eyes: to problems, to discordance, and to solutions. |
Re: Why do teams voluntarily do FIRST without adult technical mentors?
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Another point...People, please don't take internet discussions too seriously. Many people will voice different opinions here, and they are not necessarily personal attacks. |
Re: Why do teams voluntarily do FIRST without adult technical mentors?
Our team has always prided ourselves as being a primarily student designed, student build and student run team. I believe that if students designs the robot, builds the robot, repairs the robot and are able to effectively compete, a team will take away much more than by following an engineer's example. If you come by our pit at a competition, you will see four to five students repairing the robot and a mentor standing back, allowing the students to repair the robot as they feel is best, and no engineer in sight. Seeing something that I helped design, build and compete with do well makes me motivated more than anything else.
Our mentors are there mainly to do registrations, supervision and make sure we get the parts we need. Our mentors are there to help when needed, but help improve student designs than imposing their own. Our mentors are primarily there to do anything the students aren't aloud/unable to do. Our engineer sponsors come in throughout the build season to check on our progress and help with any parts we simply don't have the machines to make ourselves. The engineers are ready to help if needed, but we try and avoid having any aspect of the robot engineer designed. You want to see something interesting? A new mentor from a mentor-run team trying to work with a student-run team. |
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Re: Why do teams voluntarily do FIRST without adult technical mentors?
OK. I'll post this quote one last time, and then I'm never bringing it up again. I've done it to many times. It's someone else's turn.
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Our job as mentors isn't to teach them how to make a robot. Or to hand them a box of parts and say "Go". It's to teach them that there is value in technology and being among the people who create it. This isn't an easy thing to teach someone who wants nothing more then to get out of school. But you can do it. Just stay focused on whats important. If I find a student on my team who came through FIRST having learned nothing more then he wanted to go to MIT, I'll give my self a pat on the back and start counting down to kickoff. -Andy A. |
Re: Why do teams voluntarily do FIRST without adult technical mentors?
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I'll bite. Hard. <ACID> Being on a team with no adult technical mentors, to answer the question "Why do teams voluntarily do FIRST without adult technical mentors?" would require me to justify the actions of myself and my team to others. This is something I am loathe to do in a largely closed-minded (among other things) community with such a degree of homogeneity of thought as ChiefDelphi (so shoot me... and prove me right). But what I can say is that actions speak louder than words. The only students that left Team 19 after our extremely unsuccessful 2005 season were graduating seniors. I don't know if it would be the same with another team; I don't know anybody on another team personally. But I am proud of them for it. Our motivations are our own. The "inexplicable" fact remains that we voluntarily participate in FIRST without adult technical mentors. </ACID> To each person, their own goal in participating in FIRST. To each individual, due credit for their accomplishments. It's altogether wrong to say that the actions of any person or group of people are wrong when they harm nobody. This goes in life as well as in FIRST. George Hansel. |
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This community is anything but homogeneous. There are all kinds of teams with all kinds of people, and you will not find a single team that runs like another. The one common thing that we share is FIRST. We try to remember what this organization exists for: Inspiration and Recognition of Science and Technology. We universally agree, and we should, that Inspiration is the only thing that matters in this organization. As long as your students remain involved and inspired, then mission accomplished. Props to you for being involved in a student-run team. I can tell you from my own experience that it is a lot of work and is 100% worth the effort, and I think you would agree. However, don't misunderstand what people are saying in this thread. No one is attacking student-run teams, they are just trying to understand why people do it the way they do it. No one was calling anything "wrong", and no one has that right. My team is student-run because I personally believe that more student involvement is a better outlet for the inspiration of my students. I have my way, others have theirs. The only thing wrong is when people tell others how to run their own teams. I hope this helps clear things up! -Alexander S. McGee |
Re: Why do teams voluntarily do FIRST without adult technical mentors?
My post was not clear enough (hey, for 11:30 at night...).
You say "We universally agree, and we should, that Inspiration is the only thing that matters in this organization." I agree completely and to contest this statement would be ridiculous because it's the second letter of FIRST. I think, however, that it needs to be clarified. I think something like "We universally agree, and we should, that Inspiration is the only thing that matters to this organization and to every team leader." is more descriptive of the situation. Not necessarily that exactly, but it helps me illustrate my point. FIRST exists to inspire teenagers to pursue careers in science and technology... we all know this. But in that statement is a blindness to the sheer multitude of reasons that students join a FIRST program or found a FIRST program (forgive me, I have no personal experience with a school founding a FIRST team). In many lucky schools, the robotics team is an accredited course which gives the students time to do robotics stuff during school hours. In such a case, they might be motivated to join by a guidance counselor or a parent. Or they might join to look good to a prospective college. In other teams, the student might join just out of curiosity. In other cases, a student might join because he or she already knows they want a career in engineering, and robotics is the only outlet (such that it is) for their talent. Or a singer might join because the people on the robotics team are fun to be around, and she can do some PR work, despite having no interest in the robot itself (friend of mine). Whatever the dominant reason may be in a team (and this will be different in every team) the leader must adjust the way the team is run and the degree to which technical mentors are involved to best motivate, please, and inspire everyone on the team. That is the fundamental reason there is no correct amount of technical mentor involvement. Shame I only made it clear the second time through. As to my team role of "engineer". You are not the first person to have been confused by that, but you are one of the people (perhaps the only one) who were tactful enough to ask without immediately demanding that I change it - on the grounds that "engineer" unambiguously means "adult technical mentor" or "professional engineer". Thank you. I am a highschool student on Team 19. By no means do I claim to be an engineer of any kind in real life. There are those my age who do; I am not one of them. But when school ends each day in January, February, and March, and I walk into the team meeting, or regional, I am walking into the fantasy of FIRST and into my "team role" of an engineer. Thanks, I hope this clears something up. I hope to meet you (as well as many other people on these boards), because I'm a much kinder person in real life. George Hansel |
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I used to care about this kind of thing, but I don't anymore...
Run your team the way you want - I'm not going to care. It doesn't really effect us a great deal. I just hope your team is inspired, learning, and having fun like ours. If not, THEN you are doing something wrong. |
Re: Why do teams voluntarily do FIRST without adult technical mentors?
As a brand, spanking-new entry to this group,I want to thank ChiefDelphi for providing such a valuable resource to FIRST "lifers." As I ready through all the responses to Andy's question, I became more aware of the fact that team-related issues are not the sole property of our team. Since I joined up in 1998, our team has gone from mentor-heavy and student-poor, to mentor-light and student rich, to the current situation - about 20 students and no mentors. The sorry details aren't important here, but I want to emphasize that RESPECT is a key component that is too often lacking among team members. If mentors don't respect the students' desire to learn and take an active role in the construction, they're missing the point of FIRST. If students refuse to accept the knowledge and experience of the mentors, that's not independence - it's arrogance.
Here's the place where I put out my call for help. With our mentor forces depleted, our parents' group is trying to step in and do what we can to help. However, we don't want to overstep our bounds and become intrusive. I already read "101 Ways Parents Can Help a FIRST Team," and there were many good ideas (but forget about me making luggage pom-poms - #48). Can I hear from some teams that have active parent organizations so we can find out if we're on the right track. Thanks to all of your for a truly thought-provoking thread. Quote:
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Re: Why do teams voluntarily do FIRST without adult technical mentors?
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Welcome to Chief Delphi! (Certainly an excellent first post, here's to many more...) |
Re: Why do teams voluntarily do FIRST without adult technical mentors?
Arrrggggh I really don't like the name of this thread. Its a little provocative in some ways (no offense Andy i think our chat was great!). OK so Ive decided to amend my view a little. I still believe everything i posted before but Ive come to realize that it doesn't matter. My opinions and everyone else's only really apply to our perspective teams. While these posts are good in showing how other teams are run no team plan is better than any other. I don't think anyone should be shot down for their opinion ghansel and i hope nobaody did. The only reason a teams organization is wrong is if it no longer provides a fun and educational environment for the students or if it hampers a team from exemplifying FIRST goals. I think ultimately a team that is completely student run or mentor run (or a mix) is no better than any other (unless of course the reasons provided occur). I think a good part of the posts here supporting student run teams need to be specific. Honestly their is nothing wrong with mentors on teams but most of the posts here aren't talking about that. What there talking about are teams where mentors strong arm the students. This is something i think almost everyone(and some who agree probably do it without realizing it) here agrees should be avoided unless its absolutely dire. I personally hate it when a mentor OR student strong arms other students by suppressing their ideas. I think a good thing to keep in mind is that their truly is no such thing as right or wrong to this because a specific team will work better to certain leadership methods. The only real tragedy is when a team becomes so static that it can't adapt.
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Re: Why do teams voluntarily do FIRST without adult technical mentors?
I think that this topic is one that will never have a definate answer. I will however, post my own opinion, as I am a 3rd year veteran on 624.
Some adults may forget that we, as teenagers, feel a need to prove something to the world. To prove we are adults and adequate in the world. THIS is why teams knowingly participate in FIRST without adults to guide them. The students are in part blind to the fact that they do not know everything, as they might hope, and also in part, they are just as stubborn and controlling as some mentors. Some students fail to realize that thirty-some-odd years ago, when the adults that are now assisting them in their endeavours, were students themselves. But unlike now, thirty years ago, there was no FIRST. There was no organized outlet for their creativity. They had no big and fancy toys to play with during their high school years, such as we have today. So, just as parents want to do their child's science projects for them, the mentors want to build the robot for the students. When they build the science project, of course that project will get first prize in the science fair. But is this fair? Hardly. It is not fair to the students. It is not fair to the other teams. It is most certainly not fair to the mentors themselves. The best team is comprised of both students and mentors. And by mentors, I mean adults that help guide the students through the building process. There should never, ever be "mentors" building the robots, while the students of the team play cards. In that instance, they cease to be mentors and are simply engineers. The mentors should be the people who ensure that things are getting done, but are not doing said things. The students who design and build the robot should, by all means go to their mentors with their problems, as the mentors are the ones with college degrees in engineering and physics. I have many an instance when even the adults learned something from the students. Our school sponsor this year and last year, as opposed to previous years' sponsors, is not a physics teacher, or a calculus teacher. She teaches Spanish. When we first got her involved, she had absolutely no idea what she was doing, except supporting some students who were in dire need of assistance. Now, she has learned so much from the students and the other mentors. She is, in truth, a FIRST fanatic at times. But this is what happens when the spirit of FIRST inspires people. I have seen it inspire not only students and mentors, but parents as well. There must always be a balance, and, as posted above, a sense of respect between the adults and the students. Both sides need to understand that most of the time, students have minds and ideas with an abundance of creativity, just like most of the time, mentors have minds and ideas with an good deal of knowledge and experience. These two entities can not, despite many beliefs, survive without one another. The best way to survive is to thrive, and to do so by working with one another, rather than against one another, that is truely success, whether or not the competition is won. As a team, we have realized that only under extremely lucky conditions will we ever win a championship, being primarily student built robot. I think no one is devestated by this fact because there is so much more to FIRST than winning. We realize that many times, the teams whose robots win or are almost perfect are not built by students, by any length of the imagination. Our team, to the best of my knowledge, would rather do OUR best, with mentors working alongside students, than be THE best with great sacrifices in who builds the robot. We are not a machine. We are a team. We make mistakes and we learn from them. That is a fact of life. Any team that can not make a small mistake without great consequence is more machine than human. And all teams are primarily human, with one very important machine. But I digress... Simply, the mentors are a necessary factor in a FIRST team, but they will almost always tread the fine line between mentoring, and doing. Keep in mind that students are the core of every team, a necessary evil. Without the students, there would be no FIRST, just a bunch of old men sitting around playing with their hi-tech toys, losing their creativity. The mentors are not a necessity, but a great and valued component to any team. |
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So obviously you are for mentor run teams but i think some of your statements are a little askew.
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your last sentence is completely contradictory to the next section. Quote:
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Re: Why do teams voluntarily do FIRST without adult technical mentors?
I think the most important thing is to find a balance- at Championships, I went out scouting for a little while, and at some teams' pit areas you were directed straight to the mentors when you had technical questions, because there would not be a single student who could answer; I don't think that is right.
Last year was our rookie year (tho two out of our three co-captains had been on a FIRST team before), and we had a 'mentor hands-off' policy. Our team was interesting because we were 9 people, and most didn't have any pertaining experience at all, myself included. We were really lucky in that our mentors were understanding, because they taught us everything, without taking over, and now I fully appreciate how difficult that must have been for them; this last saturday, I was with our LEGO team, and it took all my willpower not to just grab the legos and run away cackling madly; i mean, i LOVE legos :D ! and i bet our mentors felt that way all build season, but for the most part they wouldn't actually pick up something and start working at it unless we asked them- once we asked, they were free to help. And as a result, we learned a LOT. we knew from that start that if we built it on our own, our robot may not be one of the 'winning' ones, the ones that everyone wants in their alliance. but we made a conscious decision that having a 'winning' robot didnt matter as much to us, we just wanted to have fun and learn. as it was, we had tons of fun and learned a lot, and our robot did fine. it is part of a mentor's responsibility to know when to back off (and to do so if asked), but eqaully it is the student's responsibility to willing stick their nose to the grindstone when that time comes; a mentor cannot be blamed for doing it themselves if the students are slacking off. finding the balance is the most important thing for a team to be successful- i don't mean top 8 seed successful, i mean 'everyone is inspired, happy, and has learned so much that they have forgotten what their house looks like' successful... just my 2 cents (aaaaaaaa where did the cents sign go? ....can't...find....) |
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1. Being an engineer is advantageous for building successful robots. There are thousands of companies around the world who design and build robots (automated industrial systems, consumer robotics, and robotic toys, just to name a few markets). Who does the majority of the designing and developing of these robots? Engineers. Companies in these markets who want to hire someone to help them build their next 6-axis, servo-driven, wafer-insertion robot or their next robotic lawn mower mostly hire people with engineering degrees to do engineering. Usually, these companies wait until a student gets out of college to offer them a full-time position. 2. Colleges do teach their students to design, debug, test, and produce robots. Where was this mentioned that these were rarely covered, and by whom? Sure, there are many engineers who have not specifically studied machine design and they might not know FIRST game play, but they still are engineers. If these people are willing to help, students should show enough respect to at least hear them out. They might not be able to discuss the intricacies of a swerve drive, but at least they can teach V=IR, F=MA, and the basics of C programming. Quote:
I am going to go out on a limb to make an assumption and offer a suggestion. My assumption that there are engineers who are deemed "unhelpful" because they are thrown a FIRST-related technical challege during week 2 or 3 of the build season. They come up with a solution without really knowing the details of the game and after not shown a FIRST match. When these un-informed engineers give a sub-par design that might not be advantageous, students shake their heads and think "oh, he's just a engineer who doesn't know anything about robotics". Here is my suggestion: instead of simply going to an engineer during week 2, actually bring them into your team now. Let them become part of your team. Take them to an off-season event. Invite them to your fund raising events, your bowling nights, and your fall planning sessions. Believe it or not, these engineers will probably come up with better input come build season. They might even show you something and possibly even inspire someone on your team. Call me crazy, but this just might help your team. Andy B. |
Re: Why do teams voluntarily do FIRST without adult technical mentors?
Oz,
I have to agree with Andy on this one. My son just graduated from Bradley with an ME degree. I can tell you that not only did he have classes in robotics, but there was an entire section of the floor dedicated to robotic design and function. Manufacturing, particularly automobile building, makes extensive use of robotic devices from material handling to painting. To DB213 Parent, listening and observing are two very real ways to judge how much to get involved. Your students will show and tell when they need help, are frustrated, tired or out of ideas. If you run into a situation where you need assistance please come here to CD to get your questions answered. I will help on anything electrical, and the other mentors who write here will help with mechanical, software, even team dynamics. You can't get a better source for info than right here. Be assured that when you are at competition, you can turn to us for help as well. Just ask. |
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As an engineer, I work with and build robots daily. I know many many others who do too. Think about any company that sells products in the USA. These products, whatever they might be, need to be tested / packaged / organized / repaired / reconditioned / redesigned. Who do you think does all this? Certainly engineers, but they can't do every little thing 24-7. We build robots to do it for us. Take a look at this: ![]() That is what I am talking about. This robot runs 24-7-365 in the Test Lab of R&D where I work, Stryker Instruments. We make Medical products and are required by the FDA to test and ensure that they can sustain long life. This is a life-cycle tester which automates and monitors an Autoclave (hospital sterilization) with a variety of parts in it. I can only show this to you because I made it as a freshman. I wish i could show you some of the amazing things that other people whom I work with have created. I am not sure what you are talking about when you say that robotics is not taught in College. Which aspect of robotics are you referring to? I have had classes in machining, design, drive train, electrical, pneumatic control, and programming, (gotta love Statics, Solids, Thermo, & Heat Trans!) and I am not even a Junior yet! Maybe it is different at your school, but and engineering degree touches so many facets of robotics, that one can't begin to learn them all. I also disagree with you about engineering mentors and their ability to help a team significantly. Look at, oh, every team that has ever been in the top 4 at Nationals. Do you think that a majority of these robots had minimal engineer involvement? Of course they had help. It is the engineers in this program who make it what it is. Without them and their ideas, it would have taken teams much longer to come up with things such as swivel drive, a 4-speed transmission, autonomous programming (before 03, if you would believe it), and everything else that has left you in awe. The students are, of course, vital to the program as well, but engineers and their ideas have made this program grow exponentially fast. I'm not attacking you personally, I just felt that your post had some things that need to be addressed for everyone. Feel free to IM me or email me and we can chat. Also, please re-read Andy's last post. I couldn't agree with him more. -Alex |
Re: Why do teams voluntarily do FIRST without adult technical mentors?
Thanks for the warm welcome - what a terrific venue for opinions from everyone involved with FIRST.
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Re: Why do teams voluntarily do FIRST without adult technical mentors?
Thanks so much for your warm welcome and kind words. My email requesting entry into NEMO should already be in your box. Elaine Giacomo
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Our new structure seems to indicate that this "advisor" role will be more strict. Our engineering branch is hierachry of students to manage the design and construction of the robot. From what I understand, their exact duties are still to be determined, but it's intended that the engineering leaders (high school students) have the final say in how their project is done. Quote:
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Right but not everywhere is Lear. I know my dad is a aeronautical engineer and his company doesn't have to make their programs, electrics, web on top of everything else. Plus as i recall Lear is slightly larger than any teams i know of. In fact yes their are similarities and yes exceptions but still FIRST is VERY intense. All I'm saying is that a mechanical engineer has knowledge that would far surpass my own yet that doesn't mean they are better at say building a car. Anyway sorry if their some confusion. Normally when i post i just assume people understand I'm not trying to make my statements all inclusive (in fact i normally say so). From now on ill be even more clear on this.
NOTE: nothing in my posts is a given fact and only represents my opinion unless i say otherwise. I know! A little dramatic I'm just making it clear that its an opinion based on my knowledge thus subject to flaw. I still stand by it. Few companies as small as a FIRST team have to cover such a spectrum of knowledges. I understand where you come from but i think you are looking at it from the outlook of a large company. Most teams are close to 15 students. |
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If that were true, then why would GM, Ford, etc. require job candidates to have a degree? Sorry, but I wouldn't be expecting any calls from recruiters for these companies any time soon... because someone who holds a mechanical engineering degree is FAR more likely to be better at building a car than you. ---- I posted earlier about posts in this thread being borderline insulting to us engineers. Your last few posts fall into this category in my opinion. It would be interesting to see how you feel about this after you've gone though the challenging process of earning an engineering degree yourself... |
Re: Why do teams voluntarily do FIRST without adult technical mentors?
You missed my point entirely! I'm saying that being an engineer in a specific field does NOT give you intimate knowledge of everything that field involves. Of course GM requires people applying to have degrees but does that mean that all mechanical engineer knows a car like the back of his or her hand NO of course not. As mentioned in other threads few colleges have open robotics courses and even fewer do robots to the scale we do (Their are small groups on most colleges that do advanced robotics but these are rarely open courses). You could get your mechanical engineering degree without ever having touched a robot. Anyway this conversation is veering from the thread so either we start a new thread or feel free to drop me a message.
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An engineering education is about the concepts and skills that apply to any engineering project. Your argument is that a mechanical engineering education (and, by extension, any other engineering education) is not relevant to building robots because they don't teach you how to build a robot in school. The point that you're missing is that nearly ALL of the concepts that are learned while pursuing an engineering education are applicable and relevant when building FIRST robots. |
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I just started college. I haven't accomplished nothing compared to many. I wouldn't be where I am right now if it wasn't because of my mentors. Team 108 mentors has always been there for me. Even though these two engineers weren't from my team, they took the mentor role in my life... Andy and John. Do give credit to the mentors, because they make you who you are. Maybe you won't realize it now (just like I didn't back in my sophomore year in high school), but you will realize it the night you sit down and design a transmission and you face a lot of problems. You will be able to solve them just because your mentors were there to teach you how to solve it. There are still teams in FIRST I know, who don't have any mentors. Do you know how bad they crave for one? I do, because I know I wouldn't even bother to sit infront of the laptop with inventor open and try to design cool things. In order to design the cool thing, you need to know how to design it. Thats when an Engineer/mentor comes in. As a teenager (ya, I was pretty dumb) I used to not listen to anyone or not pay attention. But as time passed by, I learned to listen, to pay attention, to learn. It helps. Yes, lectures can be boring... actually very boring (I go through 4 lectures, 3 days a week for college, I would know) but I do learn things from this. Now I am sitting here thinking, 4 years back if I was reading this post made by some college student, I would say something like "why is he posting it... why is he even bothering to tell me stuff like this. I know enough." From Tytus and I: We learned how to manufacture parts because our mentors were there for us and helped us learn how to use all the machinery. We learned how to design a transmission by looking at many different transmission that were posted right here on chiefdelphi by the mentors and the engineers. You think we came up with those idea? Nope... it was all designed and built... all we did was took the idea... modified it a bit and make it work. All the dog shifters in FIRST has the basic concept? are they all same? no... What are we both trying to point out... We are trying to tell everyone that we are Arefin and Tytus because of the mentors. We like to thank every single one of you mentors for being there for us. In 4/5 years, we will be still here with our degree on our hand helping as many teams out as possible. P.s. - While I was posting this, Tytus was talking to me on Teamspeak. We both shared our opinion. |
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seriously i just started college, and i wouldn't know the stuff or have Done anything i have done if it wasn't for the mentors like Chet and Dan letting me take the parts home and mess around with them. and get me a copy of autocad, and actually put me behind the glass As a freshman driver. it's all thanks to them. and when everything expanded with chiefdelphi all the mentors on here were there for me too pushing me along even more. Now that CD media is up i searched all the things i have uploaded and everything i see i see some element that wouldn't be there without a mentor. the fact is that i have been very fortunate being on 179 and Being here on chiefdelphi. Many teams Don't Even Have one mentor Just a teacher and no experience in first and honestly its not fair. mentors are very important and no this Rarly can't be done without them. |
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"Engineering is Problem Solving." "Engineers solve problems using the Engineering Design Process." When you get a degree in engineering, you are being taught how to solve problems in a professional, methodical manner. This approach to problem solving through analysis and design is what makes an engineer an engineer. You are being taught how to find the tools you need to solve these problems. Quote:
Your argument is flawed if you believe that if an engineer hasn't had a robotics course, then they haven't learned distinct skills that will help them in FIRST. (I have emphasized problem solving as a primary skill, but there are many more.) The FRC design process is highly accelerated and very challenging, no one will argue with this. However the FIRST program is a strong parallel to industry. For you to imply that it is somehow "unique" enough that an engineer has no means for comparison outside of FIRST, is foolish. Heck, I'll come right out and say it: You are foolish to think that engineers do not have an "advantage" in FIRST. They do. Who would best program my robot?
But... I bet Arefin wants to be like the Copiolster when he grows up, and THAT is what FIRST is all about. Seeing the advantage, understanding the advantage. "Wow, so if I learn my trig, I can do THAT!?!" I want to be like Paul, Ken & Flowerday, JV |
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