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Re: Hiring a Teacher Mentor
You absolutely need a reasonable, coherent job description if you are trying to recruit someone. If you are talking about paying a stipend to a teacher, you need to know the rules for that. Contacting the school HR department is a good first step.
One thing to consider for any paid mentor (teacher or not) is insurance. Currently my co-leader and I split a modest stipend. The few hundred bucks is nice but what it really does for me is to ensure that I am insured. FRC has the potential for serious accidents. A paid adviser is being put into a position with a lot of potential liability. Even more so for a teacher, because in addition to being sued a teacher could lose his or her job if an accident happens. I love doing FIRST but without knowing that I was covered by the school insurance policy I don't think I would do it. At least not at my school. Even if the mentor is not a teacher, you are going to want to consider covering them.
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Thank you Bad Robots for giving me the chance to coach this team.
Rookie All-Star Award: 2003 Buckeye
Engineering Inspiration Award: 2004 Pittsburgh, 2014 Crossroads
Chairman's Award: 2005 Pittsburgh, 2009 Buckeye, 2012 Queen City
Team Spirit Award: 2007 Buckeye, 2015 Queen City
Woodie Flowers Award: 2009 Buckeye
Dean's List Finalists: Phil Aufdencamp (2010), Lindsey Fox (2011), Kyle Torrico (2011), Alix Bernier (2013), Deepthi Thumuluri (2015)
Gracious Professionalism Award: 2013 Buckeye
Innovation in Controls Award: 2015 Pittsburgh
Event Finalists: 2012 CORI, 2016 Buckeye
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