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#16
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Re: Team 254 Presents: CheesyVision
This thread should be locked. The discussion about mentors v students should be maintained just as a point of reference for the inevitable future discussions.
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#17
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Re: Team 254 Presents: CheesyVision
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#18
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Re: Team 254 Presents: CheesyVision
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#19
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Re: Team 254 Presents: CheesyVision
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#20
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Re: Mentor/Student Involvement Philosophies
This thread has been split from the CheesyVision thread.
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#21
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Re: Mentor/Student Involvement Philosophies
This discussion has been beaten to death over the years, but I think it's still a good thing to bring it up occasionally, and for everyone to take a few moments of introspection to understand how it is they work with their team, and how it could be better.
Personally, I don't care how other teams are run, so long as one thing happens: the students are inspired. The only success that matters out there, in my mind, is the percentage of students from a team that go on to major in something relevant and related to their job on the team. If a team has this happening at near 100%, then they don't need to change a thing. If, on the other hand, they find they are driving away kids, then something needs to change. I can't count the number of students I've seen who have left our team when they graduate and are on a completely different career path than they imagined when they started high school. That's all the success you need. |
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#22
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Re: Mentor/Student Involvement Philosophies
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#23
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Re: Mentor/Student Involvement Philosophies
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#24
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This isn't a tech firm, it's a non-profit robotics competition. Many of these teams have low to minimal mentor involvement, and they do perfectly fine. There's a certain extent of mentor involvement that both works well and allows the students to enjoy themselves and be inspired. There's a difference between helping a struggling team and taking over from the students.
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#25
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Re: Mentor/Student Involvement Philosophies
Hey look! Another one of these threads. Is this like an annual gag or something?
In all seriousness though, you run your team how you want to, and we'll run our team how we want to. If you want to imitate our processes, we'd be glad to have a friendly discussion of how/what we do, but I am SO sick and tired of the "Mentor Build Robot" threads. My team doesn't do it, and I don't care if your team does. |
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#26
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Re: Mentor/Student Involvement Philosophies
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Frankly, if I had a student that spent their entire fine with the team doing robot build activities and then decided she wanted to go into theatre, I would feel like I failed that student. It's not my job to turn every student into an engineer. Rather, it's my job to show them the options and nurture their interests so they can be successful in their career path. Honestly, there are very few career paths out there that can't have a start with a well organised FIRST team. |
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#27
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Re: Mentor/Student Involvement Philosophies
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#28
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Re: Mentor/Student Involvement Philosophies
I'm not trying to tell anyone how to feel but I don't think you should feel that way. Part of being a complete person is having a multifaceted personality and many passions. Some of the students I work with are not driven to become engineers. They join our team because the passion of other students and our passions as mentors is infectious and that is what drives them. Talented and driven people like to work with other talented and driven people. I'm just as proud of the liberal arts majors as I am of the material science majors that I've helped to inspire.
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#29
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Re: Team 254 Presents: CheesyVision
Quote:
The level of how much involvement is an art - we certainly have been overly-involved in the past - but as a team gains experience they'll find the right balance for themselves. *Except leading the fundraising team ... I have yet to meet a student who successfully solicits a large business for fundraising without significant mentor involvement... Last edited by JesseK : 11-02-2015 at 15:07. |
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#30
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Re: Mentor/Student Involvement Philosophies
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This isn't a hypothetical situation, I've had multiple students over the years who were at robotics because it was either there or be at home alone while their parents worked. One that sticks out in my mind clearly had 0 interest in building robots. He thought they were cool, but he just wanted somewhere to interact with people. He'd help build or wire if we asked him to. But you could tell his heart just wasn't in it. But he was the first to every meeting and one of the last to leave every meeting. He WANTED to be there. But it wasn't the robot he was interested in. I don't feel like I failed him at all. I don't know where he ended up (I moved across the country the next year). But I at least hope he got something out of the program, and I know that being there made him happier. Definitely not a failure. |
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