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#1
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Re: 9th garde in the FRC?
Perhaps you can talk the principal into some kind of basic training plan for grade 9s. I.E. FTC / Vex for them in the fall?
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#2
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Re: 9th garde in the FRC?
I can see the principals problem if your middle school is grades 7-9 and your high school is grades 10-12.
Keeping the student bodies segregated for underlying parental, administrative, educational, and social reasons may be important. If that's the case then the suggestion of using FTC as a transition step in the middle school may be more practical. However, if meeting spaces and funding are limiting you to two FLL teams, then that may not work as an argument either unless one FLL team becomes an FTC team. Last edited by Mark McLeod : 24-07-2011 at 11:06. |
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#3
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Re: 9th garde in the FRC?
Quote:
Quote:
The OP is from Israel. Therefore, even 16 year-olds from their school can compete in FLL. Also, the age limit is as of January 1 of the competition year (the year before the World Festival) - for this season, 2011. So, if an American/Canadian/Mexican turns 15 in August 2011, they can compete in Food Factor because they were 14 on January 1, 2011. Similarly, if someone from the rest of the world turns 17 in August 2011, they can compete in food factor because they were 16 on January 1, 2011. I have never done FRC (only FLL), so I cannot think of any reasons right now for 9th grade students to do FRC. Sorry... //Andrew |
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#4
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Re: 9th garde in the FRC?
Sounds like a good time for students/alumni/mentors that have done FRC in 9th grade to give their opinions.
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#5
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Re: 9th garde in the FRC?
I speak from an unusual standpoint.
I started FRC (yes, FRC) when I was in 7th grade. During the same year, I was in the school's Lego robotics class. As such, I had a chance to work with both FRC and "FLL" in the same year. This being said, I think that there is *nothing* wrong with younger students on an FRC team. Lego is beneficial, but there comes a point at which a student grows out of it. I was actually at the Israel Regional in 2010, as a freshman, and (while Yarden can attest it was a huge fiasco that most FRCers don't know about) I noticed that about 10% or so of the students there were also in 9th grade, though I am probably off by 2 or 3 percent, either way. I suggest that you organize a way to bring your principle to the Nokia Center for the 2012 regional. It is amazing how much going to an FRC event can change an administrator's standpoint on robotics. Apart from that, I think Eric H's suggestion is the best yet. It will sound like an attractive idea to your principle because it is not definitive. It allows for one year of trial before deciding either way. Quote:
בהצלחה!! |
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#6
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Re: 9th garde in the FRC?
The international upper age of 16 for FLL was established because there is so little availability of FRC outside North America. As Israel is an exception and does have FRC, you might be able to convince your school that FLL is more appropriate for the younger ages.
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#7
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Re: 9th garde in the FRC?
many good suggestion that I will try to claim,
our principal was at every regional comppetition since 2005/2006 (she had another team in her last school), she is very supportive but very conservative(FRC should be to high school and FLL should be to middle school....) thanks!!! |
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#8
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Re: 9th garde in the FRC?
Quote:
Jane |
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#9
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Re: 9th garde in the FRC?
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Quoted from Wikipedia: Quote:
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#10
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Re: 9th garde in the FRC?
Then, a different approach as far as offering suggestions and advice might be needed. For example - one might state that in countries like the U.S., many of the FRC teams are formed in the high schools, grades 9th - 12th. There are teams that form with members that come from home schools, 4-H clubs, Scouts, and private schools. On some of those teams, middle school students can be found.
-- Are the middle schools and high schools in separate locations and are they in the same districts? By that I mean, here in the U.S., the public schools are in the same school district and the middle schools typically feed into their area high school. So, would a 9th grade student from a middle school automatically join their area high school? Jane |
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#11
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Re: 9th garde in the FRC?
I noticed on another team's website that they had "apprentice" members.
Maybe an option could be that 'regular' members are grades 10-12 and then 9th grade students can be apprentices. |
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#12
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Re: 9th garde in the FRC?
//snipped//
Last edited by GaryVoshol : 25-07-2011 at 11:09. Reason: unnecessary comment |
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#13
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Re: 9th garde in the FRC?
If FTC or VRC competition was available, and if I was in 7th-9th grade, and if I was told that my school would only let me compete on an FLL team; I would simply form an FTC or VRC team on my own (separate from the school), and enjoy the result.
I have never met a 7th, 8th or 9th grade student in my travels (I have never visited Israel) who would prefer FLL over FTC or VRC. I am constantly surprised by the upper age limit on FLL. I know that cost plays a part in that situation; but even so, I remain surprised by how old some FLL students are. I urge you to consider joining one of the intermediate programs (VRC or FTC). Instead of arguing with the school, help grow STEM robotics in your community by offering a 3rd (and 4th?) choice. Blake |
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#14
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Re: 9th garde in the FRC?
Grade 9 is a great year to introduce students to FRC, in this year we usually train them all in the section they have applied for( ex. mechanical, electrical). If i wasnt in FRC during grade 9 then i would not have been able to do the amount of work i did this year. (most of the robot was made by me)
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#15
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Re: 9th garde in the FRC?
Quote:
. I've been involved with GUS since I was about 3, my father help start the team back in the day, and I use to go to every meeting I could with him. Everyone use to consider my to be a regular student on the team, even so much so that I found my way up on stage one year at nationals for a match back when it was down in Disney. ;]. So I really never understood when adults/mentors mentioned something about kids not being able to be on the team, everyone should be able to be on a FRC team! I can say it significantly impacted my life more than FLL. But I was on the FLL team at my middle school for 6th, 7th, and 8th grade, and I'm now in 11th grade and go back to mentor them every year. So I guess what i'm getting at is I don't there should be a set age limit for FRC and FLL, I mean, it should have SOME it's limits, like during the competition, to keep it fair. But I don't believe your principal should set a grade level, where they have to do one or the other! Some kids are really ready for FRC at grade 7, and some still like FLL better at age 18, is all depends on the student. Honestly, I think you'll get kids more hooked on FIRST if you bring them to a FRC event. It just has a bigger impact in my mind than a little FLL competition did. Even just a FRC regional can change a students life forever, I know it changed my life the first time I saw everyone cheering for our team, and it changed my life again the first time I drove a match in a regional, and it change my life again when we won our first Chairman's award, and it changed my life again walking out in front of 1000's of people down in ATL the first year I went, all for the better. Your principal should give the students the choice, it may be a little more difficult this way, but in my mind, it will benefit the kids more, and give them more experiences they will hold onto their entire lives, which is what FIRST is, at least in my mind, founded for. -Dave |
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