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#1
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Re: Terrible Volunteer Experience
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#2
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Re: Terrible Volunteer Experience
Not a horrible idea, since, most people who fall under the forgotten/broken/lost safety glasses category will likely need a new pair.
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#3
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Re: Terrible Volunteer Experience
Someone should just start putting sponsor logos all over them and hand them out. They already do this with water bottles that nobody wants (so many Platt bottles at SVR...), so why not with safety glasses that everyone needs and wants?
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#4
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Re: Terrible Volunteer Experience
I remember receiving a free pair of Andy Mark safety glasses at Worlds. Although for the life of me i can't remember how I got them, or where I got them.
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#5
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Re: Terrible Volunteer Experience
I couldn't find them, though I didn't look very carefully.
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#6
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Re: Terrible Volunteer Experience
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I agree that the volunteers are instructed to act certain ways, be cheerful, and abide by GP. I was a volunteer inspector on Wednesday and Thursday, and we were told how to act and inspect very clearly. I trust that other areas (safety glasses hander-outers, etc.) were well informed how to act. This volunteer should have been asked to leave her duties. Maybe Volunteer Coordinators can hand pick a few undercover auditors who do things that have historically raise the ire of these over-zealous volunteers to see how things are handled. In this case, it would be good to have an auditor try to enter different doors into the pits without safety glasses and then see how they are addressed if they give similar excuses for not having glasses as said in this thread. Heck, since we are giving out a few thousand dollars worth of safety glasses, I might try this myself (hide safety glasses, hide name badge, see what happens). Sincerely, Andy Baker |
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#7
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Re: Terrible Volunteer Experience
Having been one of the volunteers that has helped run safety glasses tables at past events, I can tell you that there are some guidelines that go with them. These are a couple of the guidelines that I was given:
1. the safety glasses are for guests and visitors, they are not for teams 2. everyone must sign the safety glasses out and sign them back in To varying degrees, I was told that teams should bring their own glasses and should 'know better', serving as role models of responsibility. I have also been told that the safety glasses station is one that comes with gate keeping responsibilities. Reading through some of the commentary, I can see that the volunteer was following those guidelines. To kick it up a further notch, the safety glasses volunteers were probably told that teams should know the importance of having their own safety glasses by the time they get to Championship level. The message is correct. The messenger needs some work in the area of interacting with others and in conducting herself in a professional manner. Regarding the age/mentor confusion... I have confused ages before, not correctly assessing the age of the student: junior high, high school, and/or college. It has made me feel like a total dork and, when that has happened, I have apologized. Sometimes, an apology is not enough but it is always a good start. I'm sorry that happened but do follow the correct procedure in following up with your complaint. And, if you get a chance, think about the positive interactions that you had at the Championship. I hope there were many that far outweighed the rudeness of the safety glasses volunteer. A side comment - there were a couple of safety glasses stations that were located in very cramped quarters and, in my mind, were a little dangerous for the people that were running those stations. The teams, moving as a large enthusiastic crowd, could have easily run them over but for the tables that served as a protective border between the volunteers and the crowd. If I had been assigned to one of those cramped stations and blocked in by the crowds, I would have asked to have been reassigned or I would have stepped down from that station and explained my reasoning to the VC. That's an .02 from my perspective. Jane |
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#8
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Re: Terrible Volunteer Experience
I will say that while 99% of the volunteers at Champs were completely respectful, courteous, and cheerful...but, I did find myself sometimes longing for the next time I could play in Michigan again.
There were times where the pokey stick guy was basically a sleep. Which I can understand that it has to be the most boring job ever, but that's not really acceptable. On Thursday balls that flew out of the field we not quickly chased down and returned to the field. Now, most of these things are very very small, but it just showed that many of these volunteers had very little experience with this game. As the weekend moved towards eliminations, things started getting better, so atleast there was continuous improvement. But, there was one person that really bothered me. I believe it was the Field reset lead on Archimedes. It started during practice on Thursday when he was trying to get a penalty called on us for grappling the bridge. I guess this is fine, but I would prefer my penalties get called by a referee. He also was constantly rushing my drive team to get the robot setup. I know there is a schedule, but this is also a competition. We are trying to do some advanced things in Hybrid modes, and they don't work unless the robot gets setup correctly...which takes a little bit of time. Usually the field hasn't even connected before we are done with setup. There is no place in FIRST for rude volunteers. Especially being rude to the students. Volunteers might not get paid to be there...but neither do we, actually we have to pay (a lot) to be there. I would prefer that the volunteers on Einstein understand that all of us down on the floor are interested in seeing the matches too. Overall my teams interactions with the volunteers were positive, at that's all that matters. |
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#9
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Re: Terrible Volunteer Experience
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Instructions like this can't fix all the bad volunteer experiences, but in some situations I think they can help. As far as safety glasses, I like the two-minute loaner idea. How do the sign-outs work now? |
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#10
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Re: Terrible Volunteer Experience
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At regionals you sign your team number and name and get a temporary pair. I was told at champs no one can sign them out at all. |
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#11
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Re: Terrible Volunteer Experience
I've run into more then one volunteer working the pit entrances who was just plain rude and nasty. I concluded that it's not a matter of the individual, it's the position. I can imagine that sitting in the same place for hours on end having to deal with the same 'problem' again and again would wear thin. It will get the best of anyone, given enough time. The bummer is that a lot of visitors, parents, friends etc. get a full dose of cranky FIRST volunteer right away.
I had a chance to talk to Bill about this at CT. It seemed like it wasn't the first time the issue had been brought up. My suggestion was that volunteers be rotated through the position so that none were required to hand out glasses for more then a couple hours. He mentioned that had been looked into in the past and would be again. |
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#12
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Re: Terrible Volunteer Experience
Years ago they gave safety glasses to anyone. Many teams did not bring any with them. On Saturday they would run out of them and send people around the pits to look for them. It was common to find the entire team in loaners and find 10 more pairs in their pit. The event would finsh with 2 or more empty totes. That is why they want the teams to supply their own. That said not allowing an adult to sign for a pair seems a little to strick.
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#13
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Re: Terrible Volunteer Experience
My wife was a safety glass distribution engineer last year in St Louis. She did not have a very positive experience. Sounds like the same problems persisted this year. I think it's mostly miscommunication between teams and FIRST.
FIRST doesn't have enough safety glasses at the Championship to be able to loan them to teams. (Last year on Wed or Thurs they overnighted more safety glasses to St Louis for the weekend) The volunteers at Championship are instructed to only give glasses to visitors. As pointed out already, teams are instructed to bring enough for themselves and they will not be loaned glasses. Maybe this needs to be a separate e-mail blast before Championship to get the point across. Also, if you do have a problem with a volunteer, you can go to pit admin who can get a hold of the volunteer coordinator responsible. |
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#14
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Re: Terrible Volunteer Experience
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Well the kids are in charge of packing - the thought of kids forgetting a pair is not crazy. What I was suggesting is that adults could sign out a pair...just in case. To provide no alternative if a team forgets theirs is kinda unforgiving of FIRST. The real issue was the way it was handled - with hostility and in an un-graciously professional way. |
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#15
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Re: Terrible Volunteer Experience
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But I agree completely. It was not handled in the appropriate way. And you're right, FIRST needs to be a little lenient here. All of this would get better if there were more safety glasses available. And if people actually brought them back when they were done borrowing them (this is the hard part...) |
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