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#1
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Re: Is FRC truly competitive?
I think FRC is not a competition. There is a competition inside FRC, where teams work to create an effective robot, strategy and drive team to outperform their peers in an arena (not a MEGA kind of competition as ebarker said, but a competition nonetheless). However, the point of FRC is in line with the point of FIRST. "Winning" FRC is not a matter of beating the opponent, it's a matter of making a difference in your community. The game is a component of that - it encourages students to pursue STEM careers and it gets lay persons interested in those STEM fields, and it serves as a good starting point - but it is not the goal in and of itself.
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#2
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Re: Is FRC truly competitive?
I honestly believe FRC is truly a competition, the definition of competition according to, "dictionary.com" is a contest for some prize, honor, or advantage. In FRC we all compete for a prize, and an honor. Even if that honor isn't the prestigious blue banner and gold metal around your neck, it can be the honor of having your team successfully complete a competition season. That might stress that it's more of a competition than other sports. The great thing about FRC is that it isn't just about winning, it's also about self and team achievement. Which is sometimes just as good as winning the gold.
-Dave Source: http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/competition |
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#3
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Re: Is FRC truly competitive?
It's kinda in the name, and if you're not trying to make the best possible product given your set of constraints and resources I'm not quite sure what you're doing.
Product being a team and robot that effectively achieves both the game challenge and the mission statement of FIRST, in regards to promoting and spreading the culture we've created. |
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#4
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Re: Is FRC truly competitive?
People try their best to win it. Sure, a lot of other things happen as a result, and we use those things as motivation as well. But competition, against teams, or against "the field," is a driving factor. It drives us to come back better at each tournament.
And without this drive to come back better each time, I don't think FIRST could have grown into what it is, and what it will be. |
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#5
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Re: Is FRC truly competitive?
Competition is a zero-sum game if and only if the only thing to be won is the 'prize'. This means that in almost all pragmatic cases--and indeed I can't think of an exception besides perhaps, and only perhaps, gambling where the gambler derives no pleasure from the activity--competition is not a zero-sum game.
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#6
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Re: Is FRC truly competitive?
Sam, you have brought up a very interesting topic.
From Merriam-Webster Quote:
The semiconductor industry is extremely competitive. Each time a competitor releases a new product with a certain attribute or ability my professors company was among the first to buy it off them to see how it works. They reverse-engineered the product and later released a product with some similar attributes and also some added ones. The same happened vice versa many times over. These companies were constantly leapfrogging themselves, creating better and better products. Does any of this sound familiar at all? We are competing, but we allow each other to see our advances and learn from them (and often use them). But maybe what we here in the FRC do is technically not competition. If that is so, why don't we come up with our own name for it, or maybe that name already exists. Would Gracious Professionalism describe what FRC does rather than competition? It seems a bit awkward to be. Maybe we can adopt something else... |
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#7
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Re: Is FRC truly competitive?
This quote came to mind:
Quote:
By being a part of FIRST, everyone learns, everyone benefits. We're all winners in that aspect. But as JVN said, we are taking part in a challenge. And through that challenge, we do all learn. But at the end of the day, and not all of us like to admit it, there are winners, and there are losers. That's how it goes, it's the nature of the beast. It's not the sole focus of FRC to win the game and go home with a gold medal, but that's part of what we do. We learn, we design the best robot we can using what we've learned, we build it using what we've learned, and we compete as graciously as possible. The matches, the game, the winning and the losing is all just an ends to the mean; learning. No, competition is not the focus of FIRST. No way you can say it is. Building the future is what FIRST is about. The competition is set to give the kids something to strive for. It's hard to just say, build a robot and have it do something. When you have a competition, you give kids an incentive to push themselves, to come up with solutions that no one else comes up with. The competition may not be the main ideal of FIRST, but it is a part of it. FIRST is truly competitive, just not for the sake of being a competition. I hope this helps! Last edited by LeelandS : 22-12-2011 at 00:55. Reason: Found original quote |
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#8
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Re: Is FRC truly competitive?
If you didn't use the acronym, it would be "I think FIRST Robotics Competition is not a competition". That's like saying an ATM is not a machine! In a competition, at least 2 sides compete to determine who has competed better than the other, and therefore who has won.
I say if there are at least 2 opposing sides, each competing to win, then it is a competition. |
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#9
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Re: Is FRC truly competitive?
FIRST Robotics Competition. How is it a Competition instead of a Coopertition?
Off the field, it's definitely a cooperative environment. Teams supplying each other with parts, talking about strategy, sharing scouting data. But on the field? There is a winner. There is a loser. Every match. Yes, that is the case. But does the loser really lose? Well, yes. Whether it's by one point or by a hundred, the loser gets a larger number in the loss column, and the winner gets larger number in the win column. Intangibly, however, it is not a complete loss. Strategic knowledge is gained. Robot skills are displayed for the benefit of scouts (think something like the NFL combine). If you're going to define competition such that net gain is zero, then FRC is not competition. But, I would argue that whoever says that net gain must be zero is wrong. Note the intangibles I mentioned above. Or, I can think of a few very competitive companies--they're rivals in their fields--that are constantly pushing each other's envelope in the pursuit of new customers. Experience vs quality vs cost vs service vs continuous improvement vs adaptability... The battle rages on, and the only losers are the ones who can't keep up with customer demands as the winners of customer money produce parts for the customer. In that sort of competition, net gain is positive, and yet it is still a competition, without much if any cooperation. FRC is still a Competition. But it is one that has a higher ideal--Coopertition--as its end goal. The only question is, who's gonna get there first and give the rest of us a hand up? |
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#10
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Re: Is FRC truly competitive?
Quote:
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#11
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Re: Is FRC truly competitive?
Of course FIRST is competitive. If it wasn't they why do the better teams bother scouting, testing and improving their robots, training their drive teams, coming up with strategies for each and every match and diligently working in the pits on their robot between matches to keep them at top form.
If you really want to see how truly competitive FIRST is look no further than IRI or Saturday afternoon in April in St. Louis. |
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#12
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Re: Is FRC truly competitive?
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#13
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Re: Is FRC truly competitive?
Do all FRC teams hold to all of the values of FIRST and Gracious professionalism and trying to learn and STEM and be with mentors and believe we are all winners and disinterested in getting the first place trophy and more interested in getting the chairman's award?
No. FRC is a competition. |
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#14
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Re: Is FRC truly competitive?
Quote:
the FIRST Robotics Competition is about FIRST, first, No it isn't. FRC isn't about FIRST - that is a myth. ( it is also the 1st instinct of any institution to promote itself, but I digress ) FIRST is about the mission of FIRST, not the institution of FIRST This is a concept that is lost on a lot of people, including the occassional judge. Dean and Woodie have been clear on this issue, both in their public announcements and in the direct conversations I've had with them. JrFLL, FLL, FTC, FRC are all just tools that help drive that mission. There are things that are outside of those four competitions that teams do that help drive the FIRST mission. FIRST has had a call for months for information from teams that do things outside the realm of normal competitions, applications of lessons learned from FIRST to other real world problems, other applications of creativity. Those other activities also help drive the mission of FIRST. Coopertition accelerates the development of teams. The teams and their robots compete fiercely and everyone gets better. Teams push efforts to promote the mission of FIRST in their community, and they compete, and they all get better ( think Chairman's ) All of the awards are a competition. Running a winning team, whether it is a robot win or a chairman's win, requires a lot of demanding attributes that employers demand. |
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#15
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Re: Is FRC truly competitive?
This is a question that I often ask myself and some of those close to me in FRC.
Is FRC truly competitive? It's really not a black and white question. The level of competitiveness seems to vary heavily based depending on the region and the teams ideals. From what I've seen, the highest level of FRC is highly competitive. Teams are constantly striving against one another to be the best, to win, to outplay, or out build their opponents. Then once you move down a few tiers you'll find teams with a different attitude than those in the top tier. Many of these teams have the attitude of 'we're all winners' as long as they show up with a moving robot. Which, yes they've accomplished the basic goal of the competition (depending on who you ask) but are they really winners? Are they really competitive? Guess it depends on who you ask. |
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