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#1
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Re: FRC Class Curriculum Help
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That outline looks good. Basically what I was thinking of earlier. But yeah any additional material and information would be awesome! |
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#2
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Re: FRC Class Curriculum Help
Chriag- Sorry for the long post.
First off I want to say that I appreciate your spirit for wanting to help form a robotics class at your school in order to leave behind a better program than when you started. Our school recently switched from an electronics program to a robotics program two years ago, and we are currently looking to fully taking it to a pre-engineering course in the next two years so i have been looking into this quite a bit lately. First off, I suggest searching the forums as there is a lot of information here on chief of how other teams have went about doing this. Secondly, you will need to make sure the class is built on the standards that your state provides, http://www.doe.mass.edu/frameworks/current.html here they are for reference. This is probably the most important part of the process and you should probably ask the most veteran or newest teachers at your school to help you out with this task. The major principal of it is that the class needs to be able to fulfill enough educational standards in order to get the school support. The nice part of this is at quick glance it looks like for MA you can fulfill over half the Science and Technology standards in one program. My advice to you is look through these standards and you ideas about what the program should look like and try to match up as many as possible. Examples can be wiring the electrical system of the robot can be used to explain the standards in electrical energy. Cadding the robot allows for the modeling standards to be met etc. Finally you will need administration support to pull it through. Try to get as many principals, superintendents, or school board members involved in your program as possible in order for them to see the enthusiasm and growth of the students in robotics. With their support it is much more easy to get a classroom class established. Also it is more easy to find funding with the higher ups on board. If you do these three things then you will be in good shape for having your goal of a robotics class come to light. |
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#3
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Re: FRC Class Curriculum Help
I'd like to affirm Nicholsjj: Getting buy-in from the people who set the curriculum is the most difficult part. You have to meet whatever state standards are in existence for math and science and squeeze in the robotics program to describe as many points of contact as possible. A number of states have adapted something called "A through G," a set of standards that make something like a for-credit FRC-style building program difficult to fit into. If the class is offered as an elective, the honors and college-prep students will be reluctant to take the class: An "A" will pull down their gpa (as unlikely as it sounds). Keep asking the questions!
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#4
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Re: FRC Class Curriculum Help
Now we have convinced our school board to let us juniors have our current engineering class as a robotics class, which is awesome expect for the fact that the school board is forcing the junior class to work on 2 other robotics competitions (FTC and BEST). So we decided that we will attempt to work on FRC by using FTC and BEST as our in class training grounds. So my question is have any of you been in a similar situation and how did you go about it?
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#5
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Re: FRC Class Curriculum Help
Looking at the MA guidelines, it looks like we definitely could satisfy most of those requirements for an engineering class. But that definitely helps with giving the curriculum a more defined shape. Thanks nicholsjj!
As for getting school board members, the principal, and superintendent on board, I feel like that shouldn't be too hard as long as we follow those guidelines and really show how beneficial the class is. We recently gave the school committee a presentation on our team and our last two seasons and they were extremely impressed by us and FIRST as a whole. They said they were eager to help in any way possible so that seems like a good sign. Plus our school has recently been trying to emphasize engineering in the school with PLTW classes so I think this may just be the perfect time to ask. |
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