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#1
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Mentors Not Reading Rules
Are we the only team where there are STILL mentors at the beginning of week 4 who have not yet read the rules completely, but insist on wasting student's time arguing with them about their decisions? This happens every year, very tiring....
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#2
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Re: Mentors Not Reading Rules
We sometimes have this problem. I suggest dedicating one particular student on the team as "the rule guy/girl" and have them be the say-all as to whether a scenario is legal or not. This way, as long as the rules person does their job right, the mentors have no reason to argue with you about rules, especially if they are incorrect.
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#3
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Re: Mentors Not Reading Rules
What you talking about I'm always right...
No but on a serious note from a mentors stand point here is what I expect when I walk into a discussion about something two things need to be brought to the table. 1. A level clear head open to different opinions. 2. Examples and information for an idea Just because an idea is against the rules doesn't mean all information within the idea is invalid. When presented with something that isn't legal hear it out (unless it is of course ridiculous or against what FIRST stands for) then the burden of proof is on you to pull out the rule book point and say something along the lines of "According to the rule book or manual where my finger is pointing I don't think that is an option." At the same time when you are against an "idea" you are not against the person presenting the idea you are against the idea. Don't make things personal. Regardless of it being a student, a mentor, or a guest coming an idea is an expression and disrespecting that expression is very rude. FIRST is about promoting growth and thought not about making people feel scared and vulnerable for speaking up. My final bit of thought as a mentor is that I know I joke a lot, but I don't ever know what students are thinking. So when I step up and call myself a mentor I am stepping up to a standard. Everyone who I influence is allowed to hold me to that standard. When a student goes up to me and infront of other students or alone goes "Hey I know what you did there you thought was funny or whatever but it crossed a line..." At that point as someone who takes the position seriously I am all ears. Conversation is but an ocean where the best ideas sail gently on calm seas not storms of frustration. |
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#4
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Re: Mentors Not Reading Rules
This can sometimes be a problem with new mentors. Our team has a team handbook with team rules for students and mentors to avoid situations like this. It is mandatory for all students to read and understand the game rules. Mentors and volunteers cannot participate in any design/strategy discussions unless they've read the game rules.
It's important to understand that mentors are always trying to do their best to help. Sometimes they are too busy to read the rules or don't understand the importance. I highly recommend that you speak to your team coach and request that he/she speak to the mentors. He/she can provide the mentor(s) with a computer with the game manual loaded, point them to the important sections, and ask them to spend the build session reading. I'm sure that a simple conversation and explanation will resolve this. Good luck! |
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#5
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Re: Mentors Not Reading Rules
I find this to be a problem with students rather than mentors. It's expected that everyone read the rules on our team.
Bear in mind that if someone proposes an idea outside of the rules, it doesn't mean they haven't read them. Maybe they didn't understand some certain nuance, or misinterpreted some aspect. Rather than be confrontational, suggest you don't believe that their idea is within the rules. It becomes incumbent on that person to show you how it follows the rules, whether that be student or mentor. |
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#6
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Re: Mentors Not Reading Rules
On kickoff day, when we return to the shop, and everyone on the team is present, we do an entire group rule reading using a projector and a student reader volunteer. We sometimes pause for discussions or clarifications. We note ambiguities, if something deserves a Q&A question. This way all of the students and mentors have gone through the rule book at least once. Of course, most of us will revisit the manual many times over for reminders and rule clarification throughout the season.
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#7
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Re: Mentors Not Reading Rules
I'd bet the house that a majority of the mentors on my team haven't read a majority of the rules. I'd bet lunch with each that I'm the only one who has. <sigh>
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#8
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Re: Mentors Not Reading Rules
We learned several years ago that if you don't sit down with everyone at the very beginning of the year and read the rules together, there will always be some people who never read them. The only way to make sure everyone is on the same page is to read the rules as a team, immediately following Kickoff. It segues well into a strategy and scoring discussion anyway.
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#9
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Re: Mentors Not Reading Rules
Quote:
Alternatives involve grouping up and having each group read an entire section and then report the rules to everyone else in some sort of condensed but accurate way. And obviously the team doesn't need to read the whole manual, just the arena and game sections, as well as any game-specific/changed robot rules. The members who care will read the manual again in their free-time (as they should) but now hopefully everyone has a reasonably accurate understanding of the rules and won't spend build time arguing for/concentrating on something that's illegal*. (This is not particularly helpful for your current situation) *unless there is a grey area for troll-bots to squeeze under. ![]() |
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#10
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Re: Mentors Not Reading Rules
Quote:
And tournament. At very least the Qualification Seeding section. It never ceases to surprise me the number of folks who don't understand what you have to do to seed high. For folks in Districts, I'd also suggest reading how you qualify for DCMP and CMP. |
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#11
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Re: Mentors Not Reading Rules
Has this information been made available? I remember Frank's Blog mentioning that they're working through the translation from WLT to QA, but I haven't heard of final results.
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#12
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Re: Mentors Not Reading Rules
Quote:
I don't think it's been released yet, which is somewhat annoying. |
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#13
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Re: Mentors Not Reading Rules
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#14
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Re: Mentors Not Reading Rules
A side note on this post is I'm guessing that your team is having trouble on the rule interpretation itself as well. I would suggest when arguments occur bring out the rules and point out why you think whatever situation you are having an issue over is illegal or not. Our team always has an updated copy of the manual open for situations just like the one your team is having. If your mentor or teammates are still having issues over a certain point then first get more people involved from a discussion standpoint in order to get more clarity. If you are still troubled then ask the Q & A which interpretation of the rule is legal. Try not to get so heated over issues like this to the point that it ruins your build season. Remember that mentors are there to help you grow and develop as students, even if you think they are "out to" argue and "get" you*, and that FRC is meant to be a Fun experience and opportunity that you should enjoy.
*I had a personal, and partially shameful, experience like this with a mentor during my Senior and only Student year in FRC. We now are very good friends and now I have the privilege of mentoring her son. Looking at it from both sides of the table will open up you eyes. |
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#15
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Re: Mentors Not Reading Rules
I can't stress this enough. The Tournament is always the first section I read. If your goal is to win an event, you need to understand what it takes to win the event. By reading the Tournament section you learn by what criteria teams are ranked and how matches are win. Once you understand this information, you can read the rest of the rules and start brainstorming strategies to maximize these criteria. FRC changes their ranking criteria regularly enough that it's essential to make yourself aware at the very beginning of every season.
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