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#1
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Dean's List Winner
What do you think makes a candidate deserve of winning this award? Any specific things that are looked for by the judges?
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#2
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Re: Dean's List Winner
If the candidate has effectively changed the team for the better in no way any other student on the team has, then that person should be the Dean's List winner for the team. If a candidate has effectively changed FIRST and the FIRST community, then that person should be the overall Dean's list winner. Of the world.
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#3
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Re: Dean's List Winner
I think that the winner should be determined by the award criteria for the Dean's List candidates posted on the FIRST website. The student should be selected based on that criteria alone. That is the criteria that teams have used to nominate their candidates and therefore should be judged on that criteria. By deviating from this criteria could affect the integrity of the award.
Our team took great care in nominating the most deserving students on our team for the award and we would hope that it would be judged with the same care as we put into selecting ours. --Andrew Spiece Team Leader, Truck Town Thunder, FIRST Team 68 |
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#4
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Re: Dean's List Winner
I could go on a long rant about this, but i'll try not to.
The Dean's list winner is the individual who most recognizes, practices, and preaches FIRST and FRC's ideals. The Dean's List winner recognizes FRC as the competitive sport it is, practices gracious professionalism and coopertition, spreads the notion of FRC being a Varsity Sport of the Mind to the team, school, and community, takes it upon him or herself to spread the message of FIRST in the community, inspiring his or own peers to strive to be the best and to respect the STEM fields, and doing whatever s/he can to improve his/her team. The Dean's List winner, in my opinion, should be VERY ACTIVE in FRC. As an FRC member, they should be a leader and an inspiration figure the team looks at. This team member should be phenomenal, always willing to work and do their best to win, always completing his/her tasks, and inspiring fellow team members to strive for the best. As a representative of FIRST, the Dean's List winner, in my opinion, not only engage in outreach events, but should also have a story where FIRST and STEM affected his/her life. They should always attempt to bring respect to STEM and change the culture of their peers and the community. FIRST is about changing the culture. FRC is a mechanism to change the culture; one that provides a STEM Varsity Sport. The Dean's List winner has to know what the two are, and as such, represent both in the best way possible. <rant> Remember what FRC and FIRST are. There is a difference between the ideals of them and that difference is what makes the Dean's List award so unique. Some teams nominate individuals who do NOT make a significant contribution to the FRC team and do not see FRC as a sport, even if they see FIRST's message. Likewise, some teams nominate individuals who only know FRC and not the parent program FIRST. It has upset me that there are individuals like this who are nominated on teams rather than one that is really what the Dean's List judge panel is looking for. </rant> |
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#5
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Re: Dean's List Winner
Quote:
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#6
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Re: Dean's List Winner
Impact. Positive impact.
Capable of bringing about change through that impact. Extraordinary commitment to the team and to the FIRST ethos. I know a few people like that. They have been very deserving of this recognition and they continue to be.Jane |
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#7
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Re: Dean's List Winner
We have had a student that won the dean's list award each of the two years of it's existence and one of the students, Seth Berg, won the award at the championship in 2010. I will atempt to demonstrate what they have done to be deserving of these awards.
The dean's list award is like the MVP in sports. It isn't just about how well your team does or about how well you do, it is about the difference you make in your organization. Teaching new members, demonstrating leadership, and learning as much as you can from FIRST. These students not only inspire the other students, they inspire the mentors. They inspire the mentors to learn more and come back year after year. They make people gravitate towards FIRST. The dean's list is a great award because it recognizes those who really personify FIRST and it's effect on students and those students' effect on other people. |
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#8
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Re: Dean's List Winner
What to people think of FIRST advising the mentors to choose juniors instead of seniors this year?
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#9
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Re: Dean's List Winner
I think the logic behind Juniors over Seniors is at least partially due to colleges wanting to attract students.
One of our students, currently a college freshman, won the Dean's List award as a Junior and was contact by a number of schools he would have likely never considered applying too. Those same schools referenced the Dean's List award in their correspondence with him. At this point of the school year most seniors either know where they are going or are waiting until April to get notification, if they received a Dean's List award this year it would have much less of an impact on their immediate educational future. Last edited by Phyrxes : 29-02-2012 at 13:32. Reason: Clarity, glad I'm not an English teacher! |
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#10
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Re: Dean's List Winner
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Seeing as how the honor has little more tangible reward (well, a pin) than the ability to put it on applications, I approve of their advice. Especially for the ones who actually win (not just finalists). That recommendation is probably a very nice gold star for an application. |
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#11
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Re: Dean's List Winner
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Another aspect of this is expectations. Look at what mentors expect from a senior. They might be a captain, or a design leader, or hold some other leadership role on the team. The expectations are set pretty high - you expect them to do that job on the team, and there's relatively little room for them to exceed expectations. Now, look at what you expect from a rookie. You want them to show up, learn, and work hard. It's relatively easier for them to exceed their expectations, by doing something that would just be expected of an older, more experienced member. For me, the real question for a team is: Do you nominate a sophomore or freshman? With our team, everyone has an equal chance of improving the team and the community - there's no preference or additional opportunities for seniority. That allows an underclassman (or a rookie!) to be just as influential as a Senior. But, a freshman will have several more chances to be nominated, while a Junior won't (if you rule out nominating Seniors). |
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#12
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Re: Dean's List Winner
..
Last edited by inou8it : 29-02-2012 at 15:28. |
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#13
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Re: Dean's List Winner
I may be biased as a senior, but I don't personally agree with nominating juniors over seniors, unless the Junior has represented the award more than a Senior has. Class should not have anything to do with the award, the award should celebrate those who deserve to be celebrated, regardless of class. I can understand why juniors should be nominated, but some seniors deserve the award as well.
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#14
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Re: Dean's List Winner
We generally look at the student's growth (as a team member and as a person) as well as other "non robotics" activities.
Example: Student "A" High school Junior Third year on the team (FRC) Mentors local FLL/FTC/VEX/SeaPerch/Jason/Whatever Team Eagle Scout or some other community involvement (Key Club, etc.) Plays some high school sport Student "B" High school Junior Third year on the team (FRC) Sub team Leader Goes home and plays computer games, nothing else of note regarding items that would end up on a college application. Its not hard to see which students "gets" FIRST and which one just like robots. Last edited by Phyrxes : 29-02-2012 at 17:33. Reason: Not real students if anybody was wondering. |
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#15
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Re: Dean's List Winner
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Also, the award is old enough now that there is no reason a senior shouldn't have had the chance to be nominated when they're a junior (outside of them not joining soon enough). |
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