![]() |
Disbanded Teams
This year team 1930, Rush Henrietta, New York, had a huge delay when our teacher was laid off, and because of this the seven remaining team members had teamed up with Team 2228 , Honeoye Falls-Lima, New York. After some deliberation with my fellow team mate, from 1930 and 2228, we've decided to "merge" the two and have everyone from team 1930 permanetly join 2228. This has of course caused a as forseen now permanent disband of 1930. I was just wondering if anyone else has seen this happen to them, are there any teams that have disbanded since FIRST's inseption?
|
Re: Disbanded Teams
I know my team (1402, then 1694 a year after) disbanded. well i like to perfer it as "folded"
our school sponcor left and we were stuck with no structure. because all the tools were property of the schol. Some of us went to help out area teams (1065, 1694, 945) Mainly the students have all graduated, or are graduating this year (the old students that were from 1402, the students form 1694 graduate next year.). But the mentors, and alumni are sill active or are willing to be active in the program (945, 425, 2391) |
Re: Disbanded Teams
Team 64 disbanded into teams 39 and 1013.
Team 22 disbanded into team 4, though that one wasn't nearly as nice. |
Re: Disbanded Teams
many teams fold over time. and some , 1889 is a good example, take a year off and are able to come back strong. I remember my rookie year seeing tons of rookies at florida, now only a handfull of us are left. some teams that were struggling just cant take it anymore and fold, some lose sponsors, mentors, advisors. some great teams even fold. I know some teams who have been rather dependant on the NASA grant due to lack of sponsors in their area have it tough after their 2nd year when they are no longer eligable for the grant. (If my info about that is incorrect i'm sorry) its sad but true. :(
|
Re: Disbanded Teams
186 and 762 folded and one of their mentors formed 1557(us)
EDIT: its 762 not 742..... |
Re: Disbanded Teams
Quote:
|
Re: Disbanded Teams
My old team (824, SWAT) disbanded when the team had a bad funding year and the lead mentor had a kid. He said to me that he would start the team back up when his kid is the age to participate :) The mentors primarily would come from UW college students and had a high turnover rate. The high school students were quite involved in other physics and robotics projects so it wasn't too hard for the team to take a break for a while.
|
Re: Disbanded Teams
I know team 144 which was the first team in FIRST history to win the Championship Chairman's award and the Championship (but not in the smae year though it was close) folded in 2003 and the mentors are now leading 1038.
|
Re: Disbanded Teams
my High School split off of 68, forming 1140. 1140 was relatively good winning one regional.
a few years ago, the sponsor folded and 68 was glad to welcome Holly High back into the fold. good thing for them too as 10 of the 12 students are from holly...:cool: |
Re: Disbanded Teams
Quote:
Yeah our parent team (144) disbanded when the school stopped supporting the team. The lead teacher mentor, mentors, and sponsor all left and formed 1038. We tried to take our number, but FIRST wouldn't let us. |
Re: Disbanded Teams
I was also surprised to hear that 1680 folded this year due to sponsorship issues I believe. They had a really strong start a few years back as one of the triplets with 1114 and 1503.
|
Re: Disbanded Teams
Quote:
186 mostly folded in 1065 (We have the stuff to prove it :P) But 1065's last season was 2008. Who knows where the rest of the stuff is now... |
Re: Disbanded Teams
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
In 1994, Team 144 was with Walnut Hills High School. At some point after that, they switched to Northwest High School. I don't know which school they were with in 1996. In 2000, Team 488 was Redmond High School. They didn't participate in 2001. In 2002, Team 488 reformed with Franklin High School. |
Re: Disbanded Teams
Quote:
|
Re: Disbanded Teams
Quote:
|
Re: Disbanded Teams
There used to be team 616 from Southampton High , Southampton County,Va.
They were in existance from 2001 thru 2005 and very early 2006. During late 2005 and the first week of 2006 it was planned to have both 616 and newer team 1610 from Franklin High (rookie year 2005) work together at a local community college and merge the following year. While we held meetings and did some planning both school boards never worked anything out. (I won't go into the details here and don't fully know all of it anyway. Its still a sore subject down here.) Anyway team 616's lead teacher got so fed up with what happened she quit and 616 died along with her. 1610 continued on and went on to win the NASA/VCU regional that year. Later three former students of 616 and one of the mentors joined 1610. 1610 also already had one mentor who had worked with 616 previously. 1610 continued on until they were moved from the high school. During last year the space at the school that 1610 had used was needed for another class and all of 1610's stuff was moved to storage. Many mentor meetings were held and we also attended many school board meetings until a place was found for 1610. By then though it was very late in the fall of 2008 and almost winter and 1610's lead teacher decided to pull the plug and not compete for this year 2009. 1610 almost died. But ...it was decided to continue on and compete in 2010. The school system gave us a former gym to use (built in 1935) and spent some money to upgrade the building so we could use it. (it had no heat and old wiring and lighting)Hopefully we will be able to start setting up our shop soon (they are finishing up the rehab work as i write this)...anyway...1610 at least continues. Thats not to say 616 has been forgotten. We at least got to know them in 2005 and i at least am grateful for 616 leading the way in our area for the FIRST program and the mentors who have joined 1610 after 616 was lost. |
Re: Disbanded Teams
Quote:
FIRST was a great program for Southampton, and they wanted to claim our winnings for the school system, but showed us no support otherwise. The usual VCU teams still remember 616, but the students who remember us are becoming slim. Maybe one day 616 will come back, but by the time that happens they may be known as 4616! |
Re: Disbanded Teams
Quote:
Gotta fundraise! Now, my main question is, why do these teams fold? Too contrasting ideals among teachers/team leaders/students? Fundraising troubles? |
Re: Disbanded Teams
Quote:
30% of disbanded teams had financial problems 60% had adult leadership problems or burnout 5% had other school/sponsor issues 5% had some other problem Rarely, if ever, would a team fail for student reasons. If the adult mentorship is strong, the students can come and go and the program will survive. |
Re: Disbanded Teams
465 competed in 2000 and 2001, but the sponsor could not return (bankruptcy), so 465 was no longer.
However, 862 was created in 2002 with a new sponsor at the same school complex. And I do mean complex. (Canton-Plymouth-Salem is an interesting beast of a high school system with 6200 students on 305 acres) FIRST HQ felt it was going to be easier to form a new team rather than convert 465 over to the new sponsor and organization. Not really sure why. |
Re: Disbanded Teams
Quote:
Although, Mass Academy is possibly facing closure, which means that a high school shift might happen again... |
Robotics teams feel pinch from recession
Here's an article out Richmond that I found saddening.
http://www.timesdispatch.com/rtd/new...223208/236489/ JUAN ANTONIO LIZAMA TIMES-DISPATCH STAFF WRITER Published: March 20, 2009 Robotics teams feel pinch from recession Budgets have shrunk as some sponsors cut back on their support James River High School's robotics team lost a major sponsor, JetBlue Airways, this year because of the recession. "They were an outstanding sponsor for us, but times are tough all around, so they just couldn't afford to sponsor us anymore," said Bob Benway, a physics teacher and coach at the Chesterfield County school. "We've taken some hits from other sponsors as well." Benway and his team were busy working on the robot yesterday in the crowded pit area at Virginia Commonwealth University's Siegel Center in preparation for the annual FIRST Robotics Competition NASA/VCU Regional today and tomorrow. (FIRST is For Inspiration and Recognition of Science and Technology.) This year, many of the 70 participating high school teams from Virginia, Canada and Brazil are feeling the effects of a weak economy. They have lost school-funded transportation and sponsors. They've cut their budgets, skipped competitions and worked harder to raise money. Pattie Cook, the Virginia FIRST regional director, said she picked up some new sponsors and lost some in her fundraising for this year's competition. "A few companies and partners whose budgets were sliced hugely . . . said, 'You know, we need to take a pass this year. We're so sorry,'" she said. Teams pay a $6,000 registration fee, which includes a kit with parts to build the robots. Matt Wilson, a physics teacher and coach for the Goochland High School team, said the robotics program's budget shrank to $10,000 from $16,000 last year. So the team did not participate in a second competition and could not build a robot prototype for practice. "Lots of the smaller companies that we would get a couple of hundred dollars from were not able to contribute this year," he said yesterday at the Siegel Center while team members worked nearby, adjusting a battery running low after a skirmish session. "We may have lost monetary donations, but the level of mentor support has increased this year." James River High's Benway said a grant from NASA saved the team. "Without that NASA support this year, I'm not sure we would be on the field right now," he said as he bumped fists with mentor Lloyd O'Hara when the team successfully hooked the robot to the control system. Budget constraints forced the team to skip a Washington competition about two weeks ago, coaches did not receive their polo shirts and team members had to pay for food. Even though the team could not do as much as the members wanted to, the important thing is that students are learning about science and engineering, Benway said just before the team rolled the robot for a second inspection. "I know of no better program in the educational circles that gives as much hands-on work with the state-of-the-art equipment that they have," he said. The Richmond Community High School team was unsure whether Qimonda, which filed for bankruptcy protection in January, would support the team this year. But FIRST Robotics is one of few programs the company decided to continue funding, said John Siket, who was laid off from Qimonda's memory-chip plant in Henrico County. Siket, who is still looking for a job, continued volunteering with the team. "We actually were able to spend more time on the robot because we were laid off," he said. Charles Montgomery, an engineer with Philip Morris, said his supervisor encouraged his volunteering with the Trinity Episcopal School team, which has a $10,000 budget and has not been affected financially so far. But the company has gone through a major reorganization. "People who are still there are kind of concerned about, 'Gee, do I have time to do this kind of thing and still keep on doing my regular job?'" he said as he guided a student in drilling holes and screwing parts on the robot. Some teams, on the other hand, are thriving. Fran Nolen, a physics teacher and coach for the Deep Run High School team in Henrico County, said her team is bigger and has a larger budget, totaling $39,000 this year. Her team was the regional champion and recipient of the Chairman's Award last year. "We're fortunate to have strong sponsors," she said. "This is our strongest year yet." Contact Juan Antonio Lizama at (804) 649-6513 or jlizama@timesdispatch.com . |
| All times are GMT -5. The time now is 09:56. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2017, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright © Chief Delphi