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#211
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Re: Another Culture Change
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#212
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Re: Another Culture Change
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I don't care if my team wins. I care if they try their hardest to win. |
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#213
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Re: Another Culture Change
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"Aim for the Moon...That way, if you miss, you'll still be among the stars." - W. Clement Stone |
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#214
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Re: Another Culture Change
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#215
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Re: Another Culture Change
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If I may put some words in his mouth, his point is that there are so many off-the-field goals that a team can (and should) pursue, that using on-the-field performance as the "600 pound gorilla" metric for assessing an FRC team's success is something that should not occur automatically or otherwise become a habit. The blue banner is only one of many targets a team can shoot for. On the field performance is interesting and exciting, and some teams choose to make it the foundation they derive many other good things from; but while it is a useful way too decide if a team's robot is excellent, it is not the right way to decide if a team is "excellent" (whatever that might mean). I can imagine many hypothetical teams that would be excellent in many important senses of the word that are also pertinent in FIRST; but who would not build an excellent robot. I recommend devloping a habit of explicitly not using blue banner counts to evaluate teams. Blake Last edited by gblake : 22-03-2011 at 23:11. |
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#216
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Re: Another Culture Change
I was trying to go for the point that on field success can be achieved without actually winning the competition, but Blake's point is also valid. Not everyone's aim is to walk away with a regional win - there are other goals and metrics for success a team can choose to go for.
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#217
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Re: Another Culture Change
I wasn't trying to put words in anyone's mouth but my own.
I am of the opinion that if you are not striving for that most important of Blue Banners -- the Chairman's Award -- then you are not being all that you can be as a FIRST team, and that your students and mentors aren't getting everything out of the experience that they could be. |
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#218
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Re: Another Culture Change
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Note that I don't define success in terms of winning, since FIRST has many definitions of success as has been discussed at length. Now about my team specifically, we are a team that is both student and mentor built. While there are times when the mentors are teaching students (especially those new to the program), often students and mentors work as equals on the team. Design discussions involve suggestions from both students and mentors, and build consists of students building part of an arm while a mentor takes another part of the arm to be welded (since there are no welding facilities at the school). There have been years where certain subteams are more student or mentor built depending on resources but the average is still that they are on equal ground. If a team were to see us at competition, it would be easy to mistake us as an entirely mentor built team, even though that's far from the truth. For example at this year's regional, we had 7 mentors, 3 teachers/chaperones, and 10 students, though the numbers varied by day. Of the students on the team only 3 were usually in the pit, since 3 were on the drive team and the other 4 were distributing buttons, watching matches, etc. If you came by our pit at the wrong time you might see 3 mentors on the robot and no students (or mistake some of our students for mentors), and think "wow, the students don't do any work on that team". In reality the drive team was off discussing strategy for the next match and the students in the pit were quickly eating lunch, but if that's the only time you see our pit the wrong impression will stick with you. So please teams, don't assume students aren't learning because you saw "only mentors" in the pits with the robot, or somehow "know" that mentors built their robot. You likely have just seen a team at the wrong time, and it's hard to shake first impressions. Interestingly, our team has always had close to a 1:1 ratio between mentors and students because of the low number of students we usually have and the high number of mentors who like to get involved. And while we've always fielded robots that are at least mildly competitive, we have never won a regional competition and have only been finalists once in 11 years. Heck, this year was only the third time we've finished in the top 8 at an event. So I have to question the notion that a mentor heavy team will dominate other FIRST teams, because that has never been our experience. |
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#219
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Re: Another Culture Change
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Just a point of curiosity... I am not trying to argue but please consider this. At the Alamo regional, a tube occasionally hung on a robot where it was not intended. When that happened, there was a penalty assessed on that robot if it also held a game piece. The rules state that you may only possess one game piece at a time. So much has been made over knowing the actual facts that I have to ask about the 1114 incident... was this an intentional act by a student to damage a robot or a tactic to cause that robot delay wile trying to dislodge the game piece? I'm not sure it is against the rules to hit a robot with a game piece but I would like to know if there is a specific prohibition to doing so. In any case... did the student admit he was trying to damage the robot or is that just a perception? Steve |
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#220
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Re: Another Culture Change
It should be that opposing alliances forcing teams into penalties receive a yellow card, while opposing alliances forcing teams into red cards receive red cards.
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#221
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Re: Another Culture Change
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What I meant to say about the high school students is that it is unlikely for the students at WildStang's high schools to be much better than the students of any other high school. From a probability standpoint, the inherent abilities (i.e. talents) of one population of children will not be far superior to another group. The difference is more attributable to the level of education, training, etc. What you said is also true: success breeds success. People like to be a part of a winning team, so when the team is successful you start to attract even more students which means you can get better students (once again, probability: if you are taking 20 students on the team, your 20 will be better if 60 show up to try out than if only 30 show up.) |
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#222
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Re: Another Culture Change
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Not to sound rude, but I was asking JVN specifically, not because he could give a better answer, but I assumed there was more to that event than what he wrote. In that case, he could possibly elaborate on what was actually objectionable. As it stands, I think it's hard to see what the problem is unless you are making (less than charitable) assumptions about the mindset of those who said such a thing. |
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#223
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Re: Another Culture Change
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What context could the above have happened in where none of those points are true? I don't get what you're seeing at all. |
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#224
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Re: Another Culture Change
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To specify "Student-built" would, to me, say that the in-the-way team does not belong in the competition, and should be so embarassed by their "Adult-built" robot that they should cower in shame and allow the "proper" team through - you know, the team that "deserves" to be there and has a place in the "high school competition". I wouldn't classify this as a display of jealousy as I would contempt. Neither of those are Inspiration, and neither of them have a place in FRC - or life for that matter. That's (how I view) the purpose of this thread - how do we as a culture-changing-entity transform that negative, contagious, contemptuous energy into positive, infectious, inspirational energy? Last edited by Taylor : 23-03-2011 at 10:08. |
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#225
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Re: Another Culture Change
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1Not to say they deserve what they get, or that it's fair |
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