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#1
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Kick-Off Worksheets
Anybody have any worksheets or guides to help guide team members through brainstorming on Kickoff day? We've had a problem in the past of nobody spending enough time on the manual and I know there are many teams that spend the entire first day going through the manual and brainstorming. I'm looking for some paperwork to help us work through that.
Thanks for sharing!. |
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#2
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Re: Kick-Off Worksheets
My team doesn't have paperwork per-say for kickoff day, but we have a test that students must take in order to be on pit-team, meaning they can come on the sleep-aways and be in the pit with the team. The test is very difficult, and requires the students to read the manual to really understand the game.
Just a suggestion, and this can also help with students being able to answer questions for judges while in the pit. |
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#3
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Re: Kick-Off Worksheets
In my opinion, the first few days should consist of reading through the manual, understanding the game and the constraints, posing any questions that may need further clarification (from Mentors or FIRST), and digesting all of the information for that day.
In all honesty, robot design should not be discussed really at all until mid to late week 1 (again, this is my own opinion, so do not take this to heart). In terms of paperwork, I cannot necessarily help you out, but I can recommend you create some incentive to read the manual thoroughly, such as creating a test the night of kickoff for students to take first thing in the next days meeting, and the person with the highest test scores get something in return. After taking the test, go through each answer and explain what the answer was and where to find it in the manual. This will also get students acquainted with navigating through the manual as well. It is difficult to get students to follow the engineering process, but when you do, great things happen. |
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#4
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Re: Kick-Off Worksheets
Here's a thread from last year on some general kickoff strategies.
http://www.chiefdelphi.com/forums/sh...d.php?t=123247 |
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#5
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Re: Kick-Off Worksheets
The most important thing immediately after kick-off is to have the team read and understand the manual. If they don't, any discussion regarding design or game strategy won't make much sense.
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#6
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Re: Kick-Off Worksheets
I thought the most important thing right after kickoff was to have a credit card and a solid internet connection handy to buy all the game pieces before they sell out.
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#7
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Re: Kick-Off Worksheets
Yes, the list of To-Do items for kickoff day is as follows:
1. Read the rules. All of them. 2. Generate trade study charts and brainstorm game strategy approaches, including order-of-magnitude scoring estimations 3. Inventory entire KoP, contact FIRST with any missing parts if applicable. 4. Configure the entire new Control System and mount to a dev board 5. Generate a list of materials to prototype with and build field elements with, and must-have parts to buy (either from hardware store or AM), purchase parts the next day |
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#8
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Re: Kick-Off Worksheets
On kickoff day, we have at least 5 separate brainstorming parties where 3-10 people go to someone's house and brainstorm, so we all look the manual to address questions that come up. If you have kids in groups like that they'll probably have a good grasp of the game.
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#9
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Re: Kick-Off Worksheets
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#10
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Re: Kick-Off Worksheets
Both, I had one at my house last year and we talked a lot about whether we would want to catch, and how important assists would be, but then after we came up with some shooter/intake ideas. The idea is just to have somewhat refined, but diverse ideas for the full team strategy&design brainstorming meeting.
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#11
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Re: Kick-Off Worksheets
There are lots of ways to get started. We try to first understand the rules of the game, then talk about how to play the game. After we have a good idea of what we want the robot to be able to do, then we go over the robot rules to see what is allowed, and brainstorm robot design ideas.
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#12
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Re: Kick-Off Worksheets
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#13
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Re: Kick-Off Worksheets
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Also, I like the students to think about mechanism design ideas before the "Robot in 3 days" reveal videos come out. Once that happens it seems like creativity becomes more restricted |
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#14
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Re: Kick-Off Worksheets
We break our students into small groups and ask them to calculate the maximum number of points possible in a match.
This requires team members to look carefully at the game rules, scoring values, multipliers and time constraints. Then we ask them to analyze the game pieces/field features and how we can manipulate/overcome them. This requires team members to start thinking about the mechanical systems. Then we ask them to rank the attributes that they think will be most desirable for the Robot. This helps to establish priorities. Then we watch Ri3d. ![]() |
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#15
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Re: Kick-Off Worksheets
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