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#151
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Re: Mentor/Student Involvement Philosophies
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We can't have reasonable discourse about two different methods of running teams when actually nobody is doing the second method as stated and it's an inflammatory construct designed to push public opinion to the opposite side of the spectrum. |
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#152
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Re: Mentor/Student Involvement Philosophies
One of the issues that this brings up is how FRC events are perceived by the viewing public. Over and over again, I hear people in the stands say "There is no way students made that by themselves." In just about every case, they are correct.
But that's the point. This is what makes FRC unique (for the most part). It's very hard for the vast majority of the public to translate "Robotics Competition between high schools" to mean "Robotics Competition between teams consisting of professional engineering mentors, sponsoring companies and high school students" instead of "between high school students". - Mr. Van Coach, Robodox |
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#153
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Re: Mentor/Student Involvement Philosophies
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"Who cares who truthfully does the work?" If someone takes the view "I do not care who truthfully does the work," then that would entail that they would not see anything worthy of consideration in the extreme case of "a team of professional engineers does the work." Pointing out something worthy of consideration that might be lost in such a situation is not a straw man, and serves valid rhetorical purpose even if there are no teams that realize the hypothetical. |
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#154
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Re: Mentor/Student Involvement Philosophies
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Some engineers are better than others. The criticism that gets leveled against teams like 254/1114/et al is often couched in terms like "resources" and "CNC," and often gets refuted with notions of working harder, but a simpler, more likely explanation is probably that the folks on those teams are better engineers and better mentors than most. That doesn't make other people bad mentors, it just means they're less effective in certain areas than others. That's okay. You could give my team all the money, manufacturing support and time in the world and, in the end, I think we'd still produce a product that is inferior to these teams and that's because they're better at managing an FRC team than I am. I'm not bad at it; they're just better. |
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#155
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Re: Mentor/Student Involvement Philosophies
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#156
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Re: Mentor/Student Involvement Philosophies
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#157
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Re: Mentor/Student Involvement Philosophies
Sure. There are losses in both directions - I'm equally sure I wouldn't have gained anything if I had been on a team with no mentors at all that had hobbled together some barely-working box-on-wheels and not won any matches.
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#158
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Re: Mentor/Student Involvement Philosophies
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I've spent some time reading and watching mentors on elite teams describing their process, and their analyses of various things about games and robots, and I don't really learn much new. What I haven't seen from them, is a frank discussion about how to motivate a team. I don't even know if it's possible, because I think some people are just natural leaders, and they don't really know how they do it. I've had the opportunity to spend quite a bit of time hanging out with Fredi of 842. He seems to be one of those natural leaders, who can motivate a team to do things that no one thought possible. He's told me he doesn't really know how he does it. As food for thought....they didn't have an engineer mentor on their team until my son joined them in 2011. I know we've had several coaches/faculty advisers over the years, but the same couple of mentors. Our robots and game playing have varied drastically from year to year, depending on who was coach, and which students were on the team. Our best performance was with a team heavy in seniors, who had been coached by a very enthusiastic coach their freshman and sophomore years. When they graduated, the team seemed to fall apart. I talked about "magic" on the Einstein thread, and got no response. I still believe there is magic on some teams. I don't know what it is, and I doubt the folks on the teams know what it is, either. Last edited by MrForbes : 02-13-2015 at 03:27 PM. |
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#159
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Re: Mentor/Student Involvement Philosophies
Threads like these make you feel either terrible for building our program ground up on our own (no school support or regular education budget), OR very proud that while being in pretty much the most rural part of our State (and middle of the ocean) to be able to compete in FIRST Robotics.
I can understand why there would be frustration/misunderstandings/anger for other "better" teams. But I guess for us, we decided a long time ago that if we were going to continue, we better figure out how to keep getting better. I think we arguably spend the most amount of money on Robotics. I always complain about FIRST rules and issues that prevent us from competing like the other teams.......but its never been to dumb down the playing level so that we could compete. For 16 years now, we keep trying to get better despite the dynamic challenges that we all face as FRC teams. Maybe I'm in the minority, but when I look back at old robots, even some of the better teams...........I cant help but think they all look outdated. Raising the bar is what it's all about, and the best part of going to competitions is seeing all of the cool robot designs we never thought of. Last edited by waialua359 : 02-13-2015 at 03:34 PM. |
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#160
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Re: Mentor/Student Involvement Philosophies
Once we know how magic works it's no longer magic; it becomes science.
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#161
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Re: Mentor/Student Involvement Philosophies
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Here's something really controversial - has anyone ever dared to consider that, in this case, the great unwashed masses might have a point? |
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#162
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Re: Mentor/Student Involvement Philosophies
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#163
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Re: Mentor/Student Involvement Philosophies
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Sometimes what we try works, sometimes it doesn't - but this should be a learning opportunity for everyone, mentors and students. Who spends how much, who has what equipment, who built what part, who has access to this or that ... If that's your focus, you've missed the point. We say the robot is the bonus. The learning, however it happens, is why we are here. |
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#164
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Re: Mentor/Student Involvement Philosophies
So, here's a thought. How is having a robot that is somewhat mentor-driven any different from a team full of students purchasing COTS items and utilizing great products such as the AM14U2? Many of the products from vendors like AndyMark, BaneBots, IR3 and VEXPro are designed by active FIRST mentors for the teams.
Food for thought. In the meantime, maybe we can work on building ourselves up to each other's levels rather than tearing each other down from them. -Nick |
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#165
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Re: Mentor/Student Involvement Philosophies
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2003 - SoCal Delphi Award & Semifinalists...without an engineering mentor. With so many stories of current struggle, there are others who did in fact make it. Oh, and sometimes those guys end up with a feature-length movie about them starring George Lopez and Jamie Lee Curtis. |
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