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#16
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Re: [FRC Blog] Helping Rookie Teams
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And the reason for that is this: If one of the other aspects fails, and the parents are behind the team, they can and will do as much as they can (and/or assist the students to do as much as they can) to keep the team alive for another year. If the parents are not involved, the team will fold very easily if one of the other legs (mentor or funding) is yanked. I am willing to bet that of the FRC teams that have folded over the years, the vast majority did not have their parents supporting them. Probably most of the rest had "minimal support" and a shallow mentor base. |
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#17
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Re: [FRC Blog] Helping Rookie Teams
Students are awesome, they love it once they get involved. Dedicated teachers and mentors are the core of a team and lack of them is a killer. Maybe teams with good mentor situations can do a lone-a-mentor-ish type of thing. We talked about that in Texas one year and I put my name in the pot but got no calls.
Perhaps FIRST could facilitate a more structured effort? |
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#18
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Re: [FRC Blog] Helping Rookie Teams
Eric is right. Committed parents will step into whatever role is necessary to sustain a team -- I know several who have remained committed long after their kids graduated. Some become mentors, some become key volunteers, some sustain booster organizations. Generally, I think these key parents become committed because they get the FIRST vision.
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#19
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Re: [FRC Blog] Helping Rookie Teams
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I guess what I am trying to say is, its the parents who are the most influential in keeping a school's FRC Team successfully running. They can get the school boards to allow and push the program through. They are the ones who are care free about the success of the team, only driven on the success of the kids because their kids were there. |
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#20
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Sheesh. I feel lucky my 3rd year team is doing well.
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#21
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Re: [FRC Blog] Helping Rookie Teams
As a member of a now second year team I have a few comments about what we found most helpful in our Rookie season. Besides what has already been said about parents and mentors, which I fully agree with, there is more. The main thing, I found, was getting support and mentor(ing) from other teams. I would like to thank team 348 for their huge support and also team 125 for their workshops and mechanical help. The support of veteran teams really cannot be underestimated. Having veteran teams was incredibly helpful in every stage of the process from registration, to build season, to loaning parts at competition.
One thing my team will be trying out this year is a "ride along" type of program. There is another local school with interest in the program but does not have the resources at the moment to sponsor a team. This year we will have a small number of their stundents on our team so they learn the process and have a head start when creating a rookie team next year. Has this been done by anyone else? If so, any helpful hints? |
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#22
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Re: [FRC Blog] Helping Rookie Teams
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There is one caveat that I would suggest throwing in there, and this is something that both of you should keep in mind. If more than 5 students from that school play on your team, and then start the team at their school, that school's team will not be considered rookies, but rather a "new veteran" with the same rookie year as you guys have. Plan accordingly. This is FIRST's standard, I'd have to look up where it's located. |
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#23
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Re: [FRC Blog] Helping Rookie Teams
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