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#1
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**Long post. Just had a lot of things to address**
Hello. I am the student captain of Team 4302, The Robophins. We are a small team operating from a high school in the Chicago Public School system. The problems with our team is many. One of the first points is mentor-ship. This is our teams 5th year in FIRST (FTC Team 3216) and while participating in FTC we needed very little mentor-ship. Our current team sponsor is essentially a dedicated teacher, but a teacher that is very hands off in her approach. She prefers to let the students do all of the work on our own. I am sure anyone can see where this is going. Last year, we obtained the rookie grant from JC Penney with the help of an outside mentor from Northwestern. This mentor was much more involved in team organization, something very necessary in FRC. For a time, it seemed like our team would become a full fledged FIRST team complete with all of its structure. However, our team was too small, and the members of the team have long been used to a lack of organization. In FTC, left to our own instruments our inventory was a mess, we had no records of anything, and I routinely spent 10-15 minutes searching every time I wanted to use a hex key. The switch to FRC started off with confidence. We sat down and went through all of the steps of other rookie teams. We tried to make committees -- fundraising/PR, Electrical, Drive Train, etc, but towards the end they all molded together. The fundraising group never existed -- the team members only wanted to build, we had never needed to fund-raise before because we had relied on a grant from our local parent association. The previous team members, including myself are all dedicated members of the team. We love what we do, we are just a mess in doing it. This year, our outside mentor has said that the commute is too harsh and she will not be able to help this year. I have been trying very hard to attempt to create a FIRST team like it should be. I have taken the steps to create an organized team that acts like a team -- not a group of robotics enthusiasts who occasionally stop by to eat pizza. However, my efforts have essentially failed. Every attempt at organization is resisted harshly by members of the team. I suspect that this is largely due to the lack of a strong authoritative adult leader on the team. With heavy help of the Senior Mentor, we have managed to acquire the money for FRC this year. However, with this I feel strong guilt. Our team did not do the fundraising. We did not put in the effort befitting of a FIRST team. The grants were arranged FOR us. To be a real FIRST team this kind of dependence can not go on. Part of the reason why we failed to do this on our own is because we still participate in the FTC level competition, which takes much of the time of the dedicated members (this is largely because it is the competition team members are most comfortable with and have been doing for years). As captain, I want to repair our broken team. I believe that the team deserves better. I have tried to be a leader, but I drastically lack experience. I was always timid, but in the recent years I have been rapidly growing stronger in qualities of a leader, but I am still learning how to lead. While I find this situation to be an extremely rewarding one that I can tell will improve my leadership skills, I fear that our team is not sustainable in the long run. The majority of our team members are seniors. The two junior members are very irresponsible, immature and specifically expressed lack of interest in a leadership position. Furthermore, as mentioned above, our fundraising is nonexistent. I am extremely frustrated. Participating in FRC was the most amazing experience of my high school years, and perhaps all my years. I want my fellow students for years to come at my school to be able to experience what I experienced. Or rather, I want them to experience MORE than I have experienced. I absolutely loved it, and that was without the added joy of working with a team of Engineers. Just the overwhelmingly inspiring atmosphere is something I think any aspiring engineer should partake in. My school is a selective enrollment school with many of the most motivated students in the city. Prime candidates to be future FIRST addicts. I am lost on what to do and I fear this year will be the last for the team unless significant action is taken. |
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#2
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Re: Help for Second Year Team
I think you need to stop thinking of your team as a "failed" team. I've been lucky enough to meet and interact with teams from all across FiIRST, and the only thing that I've noticed that is the same for all FIRST teams is that they are all different. Every team has its own goals, objectives, structures, practices, and culture. What works for one team might not work for yours. Instead of trying to take your team and fit it into the "Typical FRC Team" mold, develop what makes your team special.
The issues surrounding fundraising is a bit more complex. Simply put, FRC is expensive, especially if you want to build cool machines that do more than just move. Fundraising is something that an entire team has to work on. You said that this year you're participating because of a couple grants. That is good! This means that you know that your program is eligible for these grants in the future (probably). So next year, instead of having other people apply for these grants for you, get the team together and fill out the application yourselves! It really only takes an hour or two (and only if you want to be REALLY REALLY thorough). But at the end of the day, this is only good if the entire team wants to do it. One person can't run an FRC team; there's just too much going on. When dealing with your teammates, don't tell them what to do; ask them what they want to do. You're a leader, not a dictator. Leaders act based on the good of the collective; dictators impose their will on others, and that's not a healthy or useful leadership style. Long story short: it's great that you want to leave a legacy for your fellow students. But it's not your decision whether or not they fall in love with FRC. If, after this season, your teammates are content being an FTC team, and you're still 110% enthused about FRC, then contact other FRC teams and see if you can join them. Heck, you're in Chicago, there are plenty of teams around the city. I'm sure one team would accept a bright, enthusiastic, driven student on the their team! |
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#3
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Re: Help for Second Year Team
I can't help but notice a lot of similarities between your team and my own during our first year, and others I've had the chance to interact with. You have a group of passionate students, but they don't all see your vision. They love FIRST and want to do well, but don't seem to understand what it takes to move to the next level.
Not having an "adult in charge" is very difficult. You seem like you have a strong idea of what you're doing and are probably far ahead of many student leaders of teams. However, without an adult there to drive accountability and handle a lot of the background logistics so that you can focus on leading your team, your attention will be divided. Your teacher's "hands-off approach" was probably well suited to FTC, but the stakes are different now. Decide if participating in both FTC and FRC is appropriate for the team at this stage - you may be spreading yourselves too thin. While students change year to year, she is the constant - if she is as committed to the success of robotics at your school as you are, she will need to modify her role a bit. Sit down with her (perhaps with some parents too) and try to identify how she can best help the team. This may mean taking a more active role in the team structure, keeping students accountable for what they need to do, and serving as a "safety net" before things get too out of hand. It takes time to set up a solid team structure, and I applaud you for your effort; see if she can help take it the rest of the way. The issue of your subteams "blurring together" and lacking definition is not unique to your team and something I've seen before. Help each leader be accountable for their area of responsibility by outlining clear job descriptions and using a system like Trello (or a simple whiteboard) to track the tasks their committee must complete. Don't feel guilty about the grants. You earned them - grants aren't handed out. They were earned by your team. The fact that an adult helped write the applications for a young team is not a bad thing. It will take some time before your fundraising committee can be independent and entirely student run. Be thankful for the grants, keep in touch with your sponsors, let them know how much you appreciate their support. This will set a foundation for successful, long-term relationships with them. Over the next 29 days, work on preparing your team for success. Organize the workshop, appoint a head of "operations" to keep inventory and keep everything organized. Purchase whatever parts and tools you know you will need. Outline clear job descriptions for each subteam leader. If possible, create a handbook that outlines team rules and procedures that all team members must agree to (see our example and many others here on CD). Don't give up. You have very high expectations of your peers, as you should. The rest of the students are certainly capable of what you ask of them, but they have to want the same thing as you. Try to communicate this message with the help of your teacher. Make the most of this season, and try to share your story with as many students at the school as possible so that you have a continuing group of students. This won't be your team's last year, it will be the first on the path to greatness. Last edited by dcarr : 07-12-2012 at 09:51. |
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#4
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Re: Help for Second Year Team
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#5
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Re: Help for Second Year Team
Another thing -- We have repaired our robot from our previous year (which turned out be magnificent after replacing a chain). Next week we are exhibiting the robot at our school's science fair. In previous years we have done something similar with our FTC robots and we have borrowed FRC robots from other teams to show and gain interest. However, what we found last year is that much of the interest is fleeting and we don't manage to retain many that showed interest initially.
Suggestions on introducing interested members to the team? Also: What are some other ways that you use previous year robots for awareness (we were thinking to pseudo-crash a sports-team pep rally by driving the robot through the middle of it > , with permission of course.)(I feel as if I am asking too many questions in too short a period of time, but there is so much to learn) |
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#6
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Re: Help for Second Year Team
Just a few Ideas we have done or I have seen other teams do successfully...
Get out there in the school, and be part of the community. The Pep rally is a great idea, but just be there for a short time. If you guys have a school flag or banner, simply zip tie it to your robot and drive around when people are cheering and other appropriate times. Get into your schools talent shows and other school traditions. Do a halftime demonstration at sports games, and maybe organize a raffle where the winner gets to have a "shootout" vs your robot from last year. If they beat the robot, they get their 50%, if not the team gets 100%. (make sure you follow all school and community procedures for this) Our team has a mass amount of success from inspiring videos on the school announcements. (make them short and exciting) Set up a safe area and let prospective members drive the robot. Promote to your members about what they can get out of FRC and what you guys do. Promoting to prospective members is not the same as promoting to sponsors. -Kyle McGurk |
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#7
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Re: Help for Second Year Team
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Some of the things we've done recently off the top of my head:
A pretty large number of our outreach is geared at middle-school age kids because it's a powerful recruitment tool for our three high schools. We promote the team pretty heavily within our schools too - regular segments on the school TV network, we bring the robot to random events like Food Truck Feasts, fundraisers, etc. This was probably a broader answer than you're looking for, but I wanted to make a few points. When explaining the team to your school community, you have to get over the hurdle of "what is robotics? Is it like battlebots? why don't you put a chainsaw on it?" It will take a while for the community to understand what you do, for us it took about a year. Now that everyone knows basically what the robotics team does, we focus on getting more detail out there - what roles are there on the team? Why should students join? We want to explain that you don't need prior experience to join, that their are opportunities to learn and practice business and creative skills in addition to engineering. My advice: bring the robot to every event you possibly can within your school community. Get some professional banners, pins to hand out, etc. Just focus on getting the word out there and make sure students who are interested have any easy way to sign up and start getting team emails, information, etc. We typically run these recruitment efforts during August-September and have our "fall kickoff" in late September or early October (naturally, team members from the previous year have been continually working year-round, but this is the cycle on which we typically induct new members). For us it is a bit late to have students joining now, but there's no reason they can't and we still have a few trickling in. You have a couple weeks before Christmas break, so make the most of it in terms of promotion. |
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#8
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Re: Help for Second Year Team
If your school has an "8th grade day" or something similar where incoming freshmen go and see all the different clubs and activities they can participate in, you should definitely be there with your robot. My team always gets a big crowd of freshmen around their booth, and a couple of those students will usually show up to our 1st meeting each year. As far as retaining students, I would suggest using an FTC or VEX competition to engage new students and give them experience with a "build season" and the design process. Just make sure they are the ones doing the work so that they can learn.
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#9
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Re: Help for Second Year Team
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Interestingly, our 2nd largest group of new members after freshman is seniors. |
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#10
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Re: Help for Second Year Team
Keep them busy! Over the off-season, we tinkered with a car project (yes, an actual car), built a trebuchet for the local punkin' chunkin' contest, held a silent auction, and sold programs at USC's (that's "South Carolina" for you ESPN-watchers) home football games. Interest meetings and piddling are a good way to scare them off when the real work hits.
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#11
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Re: Help for Second Year Team
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Now your team is located in or near a major metropolitan area, I am sure that sponsorship is out there. But if you want direct help might I suggest contacting 2704 since they did win the Entrepreneurship Award for the last two years at the Midwest Regional and they are about an hour from you |
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#12
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Re: Help for Second Year Team
This is very good advice. We have sophomores on our team who hold leadership positions and do an excellent job. Age and leadership ability do not always directly correlate.
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#13
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Re: Help for Second Year Team
This is very true. This is my 3rd year on our FRC team, however I am only a freshman(middle school students are welcomed to join our team, I joined in 7th grade). Currently I am mechanical captain and lead CADder of our team. This said, you definitely need at least one year of experience on the team. In 7th grade I worked solely on the mini bot. Only at competition did I realize what FRC is really about. This lead me to completely dedicate myself in 8th grade, in which I learned CAD over the summer, and stepped up to take the position of lead CADder of the team for the 2012 build season.
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#14
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Re: Help for Second Year Team
Hello,
I am with Mark Chew Academy, and we advise teams on robotics. I am having a call with a robotics coach from St. Louis Public Schools, and you might benefit from the conversation, the telecom is on 8:30PM Central this Monday - December 10, if interested in participating, send me a PM and I will send you more info. In the meantime I suggest have everyone on the team put some skin on the game, by having a season membership due from $1 to $500. I would suggest $1 for coach,$5 student leaders, $10 for students non-leaders in the team and $20 for mentors. Feel free to check us out on Facebook and like us: "Mark Chew Academy". Cheers, Mark. |
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#15
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Re: Help for Second Year Team
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Sidenote: we do charge a $100 fee for all team members (those with difficult financial situations are able to get assistance). However I don't consider this a major factor in a students' motivation or commitment. |
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