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#16
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Re: White House Petition for FIRST Funding
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EDIT: As for the criticism, I can understand those thoughts, but I think it's still a great idea to fund education. The government education is underfunded as it is, but that's another conversation for another day, and not for Chief Delphi. I support the idea despite the criticism. Last edited by DevinW : 16-01-2013 at 12:56. Reason: Avoiding the double post. |
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#17
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Re: White House Petition for FIRST Funding
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If you want to help fix some of this problem... document EVERYTHING. Show how much it costs. Show how hard you work. Show the hours you put in. Show the partnerships you have had to form. And if you don't know how? ASK. Then get out in your community, work with your RDs and your Senior Mentors. If you want to spread FIRST spread the wealth of knowledge NOT just money. Maybe instead of focusing on getting the White House to fund teams we should get them to bring HoF teams back in. Maybe we should have them bring in WFA winners for debates on STEM education policy. And I fear that any federal funding would exacerbate this problem to the point of over-saturation of teams. FIRST is a plant, a living organism. What happens if you water a plant too much? We need to grow smart not grow fast. Last edited by Andrew Schreiber : 16-01-2013 at 13:44. |
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#18
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Re: White House Petition for FIRST Funding
Not a bad idea, but such a petition might be better served targeting something like "co-curricular STEM activities" with a nice overview explanation, as opposed to targeting a single entity (non-profit or program) no matter how cool it may be.
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#19
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Re: White House Petition for FIRST Funding
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I will not avoid saying that I look forward to the inevitable, creative rejection letter that will be received if this petition earns enough signatures to merit a response, like most other wh.gov petitions have earned. /s |
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#20
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Re: White House Petition for FIRST Funding
This whole thread is a political discussion. If a petition to government action ain't political, nothing is. If CD has a policy against such, it should go bye-bye.
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#21
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Re: White House Petition for FIRST Funding
No, this post is about getting FIRST into the eye of the general public through a website. It has turned into a political discussion. I would request that if you don't like my teams approach to outreach PM me and we can discuss it.
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#22
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Re: White House Petition for FIRST Funding
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Just to be clear, I've never been behind the idea of aimlessly throwing money-bombs at FIRST. In the past two years, Virginia (the state in which 1086 and 422 operate) has netted +2 FRC teams, but has had 9 rookies register. That means we lost seven teams that last competed in 2011 or 2012. One of the teams was the RAS at Virginia and the Highest Rookie Seed on Galileo. I have actually sat in a room with people and I just kept asking the questions "What are we doing wrong? Why aren't we doing enough?" Because it is obvious we are not doing enough. Virginia veterans are not doing enough to support rookie teams. The Mid-Atlantic does not set exemplary examples you see in the Midwest, Northeast, Michigan, California, Texas, New England, and Canada, and it's something that needs to be fixed even though I have neither the time nor physical availability or training to help. I'm just throwing that out there. I shot off a bunch of emails to rookies last year, only heard back from two, and both said they were fine. Only 1 still exists. Whether it be at a global, regional, or state board, or team, we are doing something wrong and throwing money at the problem is not going to fix it, that much I know. We try to plant trees in the desert. There may be enough money to throw together for a rookie KOP and registration fee, but there are improper human resources, improper or incomplete preparation or training, and a host of other things. Granted, nothing can prepare you for a rookie FRC season, but in trying to spread the gospel of FIRST, we try to sell a product some school districts and communities can't buy yet for a variety of reasons. FIRST is important to us. It's important to me. When we start teams that just aren't ready to exist yet, they will fail, and when the time comes for a team to GROW there instead of just come into existence at the fling of some veteran team's wand and a trickle of cash, it won't happen. Why would the community want to get burned again by robotics? The whole organization is doubtlessly on the precipice of a huge boom. The students who participated in the beginning of the modern era of FRC are now employed, settling down, and may be looking to mentor a team (and 1114 and 2056 can tell you what FIRST alumni-mentors can do to a program). The American economy is starting to actually perk back up. The organizational infrastructure of FIRST is shifting the competition structure to prepare and enable us for this. This isn't a time to push for inorganic and possibly disruptive or destructive growth. That's all, I guess. Last edited by PayneTrain : 16-01-2013 at 14:10. |
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#23
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Re: White House Petition for FIRST Funding
While I agree that the discussion is inherently political and pretending otherwise is a bit silly, I'll let that go to say this:
I'm inclined to agree that the focus should be on sustainability, and not expansion. Our non-profit has created two FRC teams in three years, one of which fell apart after one year due to reasons that had nothing to do with money or build space or even mentors, while the other is going strong and building wonderfully. Invite parents and students from other schools into your team for a year, or two, or three, or five. When they are ready -- with experienced mentors and students, eager sponsors, build space, tools, etc, spin them off into their own team where they can recruit a bunch of rookies from their own school/town/community. If I were a betting man, I'd wager that this kind of organic growth will in the long run be much more successful than showing up at a school with a pile of money and saying, "Hey, who wants to build robots?" The current method is a bit too Darwinian for my tastes. |
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#24
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Re: White House Petition for FIRST Funding
as of the time of this post: 165 signers. The first hurddle, and by far the easiest has been completed.
Thanks to Jeremy G, from Lancaster, CA, for getting us over the hump! |
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#25
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Re: White House Petition for FIRST Funding
36 hours into it and and we have over 400 signers. Not bad :-)
If you are so inclined, please post the link on your teams Facebook page and twitter feeds. |
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#26
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Re: White House Petition for FIRST Funding
I don't think limiting to FIRST is such a good idea. There are other robotics programs that schools should be able to participate in.
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#27
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Re: White House Petition for FIRST Funding
Now I don't want to get all political or controversial here, but...
I must agree with what some are saying. I don't like the idea of federal funding for multiple reasons. First off, yes, FIRST is incredible and (proper) growth is excellent. But I don't think the government should be paying for it. Now I'm no expert, and I'm probably about the farthest from, but I think we should be cutting spending, not adding to it. I think if we want growth, we as teams that already exist need to get out there and facilitate it. Just my two cents. |
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#28
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Re: White House Petition for FIRST Funding
Wow. Lots of piling on here. Let's all take a step back and breathe.
Nobody's writing a bill here. Just a note to the White House that says, "Hey, we like this thing, it helps us and it helps our future, and we wouldn't mind it if some of our tax dollars went this way." It's not a mandate, it's not a demand. It's a suggestion. If nothing else, it will perk up the White House's ears a bit and let them see that these programs - which they know about; we've sent teams there and a few presidents have appeared on broadcasts - are still around, are still viable, and are worthy of consideration for federal funding. Maybe they'll come out and say, "You know what, this program is great, but we already do fund it through NSF and NASA grants" - and that's fine because that means they're thinking about it, talking about it, addressing it, and the first step to culture change, or any successful marketing campaign, is creating Top Of Mind Awareness. Add another signature to the list. Last edited by Taylor : 17-01-2013 at 09:16. |
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#29
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Re: White House Petition for FIRST Funding
I agree with many of the criticisms raised and if this was actually possibly going to become law I wouldn't vote for it. However, the history of responses on this website shows that it is just a way to get some kind of response from the government and spread awareness of an issue. I signed.
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#30
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Re: White House Petition for FIRST Funding
I had been interested in an idea similar to this. I called it:
"Mentor Match". If your program was an approved Mentorship Program, then mentors could apply for a Federal Match when filing for their taxes. The match would be an exemption that would be the equivalent of up to the minimum wage value x 200 Hrs. maximum. For instance, if you make $20/hour of $40K/year, your federal income tax rate is probably on the order of 10%. 200 hours = $4,000 deduction which would in turn be paid to your charity to the tune of $400. Assuming a minimum wage of $7/hr, then the cap would be $1,400. This would be the approximate deduction for someone making $100k/year or more (At $100K your income tax rate is around 14%, 200 hours at $50/hr = $10,000 * 14%= $1,400). My thought was to keep it fairly general in the sense of "Mentorship Programs" so that programs like Big Brother Big Sisters, Scouts, 4-H, .... Might be able to get some additional benefit from the hours a Mentor provides. |
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