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#31
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Re: How did you findout about/became involved with in FIRST?
I was born this way, baby.
![]() No, really. I started going to FIRST events with my family, when I was a baby. The first one I remember, I was probably 4 or 5. I even got to drive the Placebo-bot at competitions back when they were a thing. As I got a little older and moved, my father judged at the New Jersey regional (still does), and would find teams he trusted (thanks 103/25!) and stick me with them. They taught me about the robots, and I was hooked- I knew I had to build robots. The private school I went to flat-out refused to offer FIRST LEGO League when I was there, and so when I switched schools in 8th grade, I knew it was time to start an FRC team. I walked into the high school, asked to speak with the principal, and so 1923 came to be. You could say this is my 20th year in FIRST, but as far as team experience, this coming season will be my 8th. I still work with my Midknight Inventors, but I'm also proud to mentor two FRC teams in partnership with Clarkson University. This stuff is my life, and I wouldn't have it any other way. |
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#32
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Re: How did you findout about/became involved with in FIRST?
Spring 2005, I was teaching math at a small rural school an hour southeast of Indianapolis. I got a call from the principal at Southport High, asking if I could come interview for a position. I didn't even remember applying there.
I accepted a job teaching Algebra, Project Lead the Way, and coaching FIRST Robotics. I had never even heard of the latter two before the interview. My first roles were to move the materials from this room and closet on the second floor of the building into this big workshop space and room they were going to convert into a computer lab. Oh, and take two summer courses to teach the PLTW classes. Oh, and chauffer a half dozen students to this thing at Lawrence North. So we get there at IRI 2005. I had just finished my PLTW STIs, didn't have a team shirt so I wore my PLTW polos. Never seen a competition before; didn't even really know the game. I was pleased and confused to not see buzz saws on the robots. The kids were great; they pretty much ran everything. We had a pit right there by the field (it was our rookie year; we were kind of 'special guests' of 234, our mentor team). Ho.Ly.Cow. It was amazing. There was this absolute Beast of a machine that could pick up several tetras individually - set them on its base - then pick up the whole pile and lift it to the top. There was this cute little Pink robot that ran to the loading station, grabbed a tetra, spun around, and grabbed the other - WITHOUT BEING DRIVEN. There was this red and clear robot with a huge GM on it - it was as fast and as slick as could be. One of the guys from that team, a fellow in an AE cap, approached me later and said they were starting a new event in Toronto, and they'd be honoured if we'd consider coming. (he managed to pronounce the U) There was a team called Bomb Squad with this cool spiral thingy. Then there was our team. We had a forklift with a pivot arm that had a doorknob on the end. A freakin' doorknob. Our driver almost hit this guy in a striped hardhat on the head during a match. He seemed cool, though. I had just learned the difference between a resistor and a can of cream-of-mushroom soup; our robot looked like it was made from parts off the clearance rack at Lowe's, and I was supposed to lead this effort in 2006? Goodness. That's how I was introduced to FIRST. |
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#33
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Re: How did you findout about/became involved with in FIRST?
In 5th grade, my dad heard about FLL and convinced me that it was a cool thing to participate in, and one thing lead to another we started our own FLL team for our Elementary school. When I moved to middle school they did not have a team either, so I started another FLL Team with a friend of mine. That Friend of mine stayed with me through middle school, and we both ended up being convinced to go to an engineering high school, and encountered The Leopards. I ended up joining team 57 The Leopards. So I guess I have a Robot fueled addiction
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#34
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When I was in 7th grade, our FLL teams took a field trip to the SBPLI Regional at Hofstra University. When I saw the robot for the 1st time, I was
WOW!!!!!!!!! How were they able to build this? Another thing was that the coach of the high school team was a Tech Ed. teacher at the junior high I went to, so I had somewhat of an idea of who she was. The Red/Blue Alliance system confused me back then because I didn't know how it worked. Another thing that confused me was the Gracious Professionalism. I knew a little bit of it from FLL, but I didn't understand it fully. One thing that surprised me was that there were different departments on the team. I always thought the team always worked on the robot, but there were extras, like making buttons. Now being a Junior, I fully understand what goes on in FRC and spread the knowledge to the younger ones, in fact at my regional today, I actual gave an FLL team a tour of the pits and explain what goes on in the program! |
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#35
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In the late 90’s, I had heard about the robotics team at our town’s high school, but didn’t know much about what they did, but it sounded cool..and interesting.
When my son was a high school freshman in 2009, he wanted to join the team, and because the mentors/advisors encouraged any parental help they could get… I hung around to help. It was so cool when we finally got into build season, and then finally seeing a competition. That is when I learned what FIRST was all about. The following year (2010-2011 season) the advisors (who had been running the team for a very long time) wanted to get out of running the team, were looking (pressuring) for some of us “helping parents” to take over running the team. So after much consideration, I and another parent took over running the team for the next 3 years while our sons were in high school. What a great experience for the students, our sons and the mentors as well! It was a lot of work, but very rewarding to see the students have fun and grow as people. 2013 was my last year as an advisor for the team and being a full-time mentor, as it took up way too much of my time for three years. I still dropped by during build-season a bunch of times this year, to lend a hand to the students and to help work on the robot. It’s a hard thing to give up completely. My son was on the drive team for three years, and was the team co-captain for his Junior and Senior years (and on his own merit, not because of me). He is now in college majoring in Electrical Engineering, and tries to make it to the competitions when he can to offer moral support to the drive team and help out in the pits. We plan on being there this Saturday in Lewiston ME, to support BERT at the Pine Tree District. |
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#36
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Re: How did you findout about/became involved with in FIRST?
Simply put, a coin toss.
When I was a freshman at Harrison High School, during activity period, I was kinda split between the robotics team's (1747) call out and a board game club's competing call out. It's a good thing the quarter landed heads up... or else I wouldn't be posting this (and I probably wouldn't be an EET Junior right now either). It was odd as I was the only freshman that year. But the team took me in anyway. While it wasn't my only extra-curricular in my high school years, it was my favorite and honestly the only one that I could say was in any way a success (and a huge success too!). Band? I was a lousy tuba player at best. Last chair. Emphasis was on winning awards (contrary to the "student centered" claims made by the department). Hated it by the time I quit at the end of my Sophomore year. Tried a few other things, didn't like them. FRC? Tons of fun. The awards, including a 2010 dean's list nomination/semi-finalist that I am very grateful for (thanks HBR!), were icing on the cake. But the best part for me? Portability. As fate would have it, my dad finally escaped a really lousy job and moved on to a much better federal job... but that also meant moving after my junior year. Luckily, yet another team, 2783, took me in. While there may be separate teams in FIRST, we truly are at the core a single connected community. While a coin toss got me in the door, it's the awesomeness of FIRST that made me stay and keeps me involved to this day. Last edited by ratdude747 : 01-04-2014 at 03:16. |
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#37
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Re: How did you findout about/became involved with in FIRST?
Larry,
Where are you taking EET? I thought schools were phasing that out. I was one of the first graduates in the program at Bradley. |
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#38
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Re: How did you findout about/became involved with in FIRST?
well it was 1998, I was 7. My dad was asked by a co-worker to help out with a high school engineering program for a 'few hours a week for a few weeks' and of course i tagged along ... things have changed quite a bit since then.
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#39
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Re: How did you findout about/became involved with in FIRST?
Before I joined FIRST I was obsessed with becoming an animator. My ex wife told me there was a program that I could get my hands on if I became involved with FIRST. I tried it out and over the years I found myself more resourceful than skilled with the program and increasing frustration with the contest (it had nothing at all to do with anything the team did) caused me to lose all passion for it. Meanwhile I discovered and new passion for serving FIRST itself. Unfortunately my travels caused me and my wife to drift apart to an eventual separation and divorce and so in a way I'm om a "it's complicated" relationship with FIRST.
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#40
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Re: How did you findout about/became involved with in FIRST?
The first time I had heard about FIRST was when my dad was telling me about FLL and brought me a book about it when I was little. When my high school actually offered a robotics club and a chance to join the FRC, I jumped at the chance.
The past three years on this team have been amazing to say the least. Going from writing the Chairman's Award as a freshman to being a primary driver and captain of the Spirit Squad in my junior year, it's been a great experience. |
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#41
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Re: How did you findout about/became involved with in FIRST?
My adventure with FIRST began with with my computer teacher recruiting me to join our schools robotics team (FLL). I went to the open house and was interested and as the season rolled on I realized I wasn't having that much fun so I was planning on quitting. Then came the Austin Qualifier, there was an FRC robot (the game was Lunacy) that was there and I immediately became hooked in trying to build an FRC robot. A Dean's list finalist began explaining to me what FRC is and how if I continued in FIRST I could eventually build a robot like the one he built. I was determined to build a robot as good as the one I saw, So I dedicated myself to FLL and 5 years later I'm an FRC student with my own FLL team. I only wish I could remember the team that introduced me to it....
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#42
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Re: How did you findout about/became involved with in FIRST?
Well let's see. Back in July of 2002 my son Michael was invited to a picnic by friends he met who were friends with my younger son Chris. He called it a picnic for the robotics team. Come September he wanted to check out the meeting, so my wife took him. The next week she "Got a headache" & asked me to take him. When I met "Engineer Dave" I was hooked. When the new game was revealed in Jan '03 Mike volunteered me to make a miniature ramp because he knew I liked to build things. He also volunteered me to help with the Scrimmage. Boy, I didn't know what I was getting into. Mike graduated in 03, got a FIRST Scholarship to UMASS & now Works at Pratt & Whitney as a Mechanical Engineer. Younger son Chris came on board from 2003-2008. Chris graduated in 07 & is now a navy corpsman in Hawaii with the marines. I have been doing the scrimmage ever since.
Of course it doesn't end there. One of the team mentors & a direct liaison to FIRST pushed me into volunteering at the CT Regional. That was in 2010. I'm still volunteering & was very happy to be Field Supervisor for the Groton & Southington District events in CT. |
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