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#136
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Re: Mentor/Student Involvement Philosophies
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I'm not sure how you came away with that impression based on the quoted rule. It's quite clear that FIRST wants teams to develop relationships with companies and consider them team members. It literally says that. It then says that if a sponsor is a team member, you do not account for cost of labor. |
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#137
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Re: Mentor/Student Involvement Philosophies
If I had one, I would give an CNC of your choice for a top notch CAD mentor. With good CAD the need for high end machining is less. Without good CAD, high end machining is difficult.
With Solidworks & Autodesk donating their products, the ability to model the robot is there for teams with the will to do it. Our team isn't there yet, but we are working on it. [sarcastic irony] BTW one of my favorite things to do is to walk around and say "The Mentors obviously cadded your robot" [/sarcastic irony] With 80/20, modular gear boxes, plywood & VEX stuff you can build a competitive robot without a mill or a lathe. A complete practice field is a huge advantage. That is why we actively encourage teams to come use ours. |
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#138
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Re: Mentor/Student Involvement Philosophies
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#139
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Re: Mentor/Student Involvement Philosophies
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I would, however, agree that these rules are encouraging teams to build relationships with sponsors and to integrate those employees into their teams. But the way the rule is written does draw a line in the sand. Sponsor-machined parts are not by default free of labor costs. |
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#140
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Re: Mentor/Student Involvement Philosophies
Just going to offer a bit of perspective from a current mentor, former student. This is not some normative claim about how teams ought to be run, just a couple of observations based on my own experience.
Team 449 is a decidedly student-run team. The robots are designed and manufactured by the students - mentors provide valuable input, but they do not do the hands-on work. That approach was a conscious choice made by our head mentor, and I am exceedingly grateful for it. When I was in high school, I was already a nerd. I did not need "inspiration" in the form of "seeing people do cool things with technology." I knew that cool things could be done with technology. What I needed (and received) were hands-on lessons on how to do things. This is sorely lacking in high-school education (and even in many undergrad programs), and is exceedingly valuable. There is a huge disconnect between knowing some of the theory behind a problem and being able to actually construct a solution. FRC is far-and-away the best program I have encountered for learning how to do the latter. Robotics was probably more valuable to me than the rest of high school put together, all-told. I am fairly sure that I would not have gained much of anything from watching a team of professional engineers construct a robot. Does that mean there is nothing to be gained from that model, or that that is not an appropriate model for any team? No, of course not. But it does mean that there is something lost when you marginalize student involvement. It'd be nice if the atmosphere here were such that people could say this without inciting massive debates, because it's really not (or shouldn't be) a contentious claim. It does not immediately follow from this that "mentor-run teams are bad" or "student-run teams are good" - a team should try to maximize the return for the students, and this is only one factor in that calculation. If you think your team's effectiveness is maximized by an approach that does not emphasize students doing work, that is fine - but there should be no offense taken when someone points out that there are costs involved in that approach. I understand fully why some teams choose to have mentors do much of the work. On 4464, I do far more work on getting the robot finished than would be permissible for a mentor on 449. They are different teams in different situations, and their needs are not identical. This does not mean that I won't admit that there is valuable experience that the students on 449 receive thanks to their approach that the students on 4464 do not. There is nothing wrong with pointing this out, nor does it reflect badly on anyone. It's just one piece in a much larger puzzle. Re: the team resources discussion, it is amusing how discussion of this always progress nearly identically to political discussions on socioeconomic disparity. I think it'd be nice to see a bit more understanding of the facts that there are teams with limited resources who are not in that situation simply due to incompetence or lack of motivation, and that teams with more resources are, indeed, at a competitive advantage (in the most general sense - I am not going to argue the specifics of how big this advantage is and how it scales). There is no perfect meritocracy distributing support to FRC teams. This obviously does not justify bitterness towards successful teams - but I think a lot of the vitriol we see when this subject is brought up is as much a result of frustration at the perceived condescension towards disadvantaged teams as of the disparity in resources itself. I don't think I'm the only one who has noticed this. Last edited by Oblarg : 13-02-2015 at 14:24. |
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#141
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Re: Mentor/Student Involvement Philosophies
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#142
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Re: Mentor/Student Involvement Philosophies
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It reminds me of this campaign from Android. |
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#143
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Re: Mentor/Student Involvement Philosophies
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However, it often seems on Chief Delphi that people treat any mention of student/mentor workload issues as if this were being claimed. These threads would not become so inflammatory without problems on both sides. In reality, this is a complicated issue and there are reasonable arguments to be made either way. The manner in which people usually post about it here does not usually reflect that. It is very easy to argue against a caricature of a point rather than the point itself. This happens on both sides of this discussion with alarming regularity. Last edited by Oblarg : 13-02-2015 at 14:38. |
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#144
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Re: Mentor/Student Involvement Philosophies
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Obviously you didn't intend it that way, but the only interpretation of that statement is that the team of engineers is doing 100% of the work and a student would be sitting there watching and twiddling their thumbs. That was the construct you presented, which we both clearly agree is not the issue being debated. |
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#145
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Re: Mentor/Student Involvement Philosophies
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#146
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Re: Mentor/Student Involvement Philosophies
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See above. |
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#147
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Re: Mentor/Student Involvement Philosophies
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Regardless, you make some very good points about resources. The level of a team's resources (finances, experience, shop access) goes a long way in defining a team's limits. Team's with more resources definitely have an easier time. However, if a team works intelligently and efficiently within small set of resources, I content that they are much more likely to be successful than a team who lacks a solid strategic plan and is inefficient within a large set of resources. Last edited by Karthik : 13-02-2015 at 14:46. |
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#148
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Re: Mentor/Student Involvement Philosophies
I'll throw out a scenario to think about.
Take any of the top 5 teams in FIRST, remove all their resources (machines, facilities, money, sponsors, etc...) over the summer. They have to start from scratch resource wise. I guarantee they'll still be in the running to win regionals (or districts) the next year, and likely worlds. Last edited by AdamHeard : 13-02-2015 at 14:49. |
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#149
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Re: Mentor/Student Involvement Philosophies
Could be.
What is the difference? It's not money, sponsors, machines, facilities. Is it the students? They change every few years. Is it the mentors? Is it the coaches? Is it where they live? |
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#150
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Re: Mentor/Student Involvement Philosophies
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If I had mentioned "like team 254" in that statement, yes, it would have been obnoxious and incorrect. I did not. I think it's worth noting that the "team of engineers" hypothetical has been used multiple times by people on both sides of this issue, often to the tune of "if a team wants to do that, then there's nothing wrong with it." That doesn't carry the implication that any teams necessarily do that. Last edited by Oblarg : 13-02-2015 at 14:51. |
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