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#31
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Re: Should there be a new division in FIRST?
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It was originally it's own program called C.A.R.D. (Collegiate Aerial Robotics Division), FIRST was thinking about annexing it, but it was poorly run and poorly supported. Since it didn't meet their quality and branding standards, they jumped ship fast.* *Source: I started a team that flopped ![]() |
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#32
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Re: Should there be a new division in FIRST?
Among the many great Collegiate-level engineering competitions there are:
http://students.sae.org/cds/ http://www.aiche.org/community/students/chem-e-car http://www.asce.org/concrete_canoe/ https://www.aisc.org/content.aspx?id=780 And there are many more. Quote:
Plus you get to drive a race car. If you thought being behind the glass in FRC is a rush... |
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#33
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Re: Should there be a new division in FIRST?
We've had several FRC alumni participate at Univ. Of MN in the American Solar Challenge (http://americansolarchallenge.org/ and https://www.facebook.com/umnsvp?fref=nf)
You get to build a street legal experimental solar powered car and then figure out how to drive it a very long distance (1200-1800 miles) while trading off speed, power consumption and watching weather and maximizing sun exposure. I think they've also competed in non-US competitions as well. |
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#34
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Re: Should there be a new division in FIRST?
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I have no doubt that Formula SAE is a difficult and dynamic challenge, and I have the utmost respect for the competition. But I like to participate in games. I've never been a fan of competitive running or bowling or golf- because there's no strategy or dynamic way to play the game differently- they're just skills challenges. FSAE is an engineering challenge, not a game. (That's also why I'm not a huge fan of Recycle Rush, but again, that's a different discussion.) |
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#35
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Re: Should there be a new division in FIRST?
Ahh another Vonnegut supporter
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#36
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Re: Should there be a new division in FIRST?
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#37
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Re: Should there be a new division in FIRST?
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Plus, there is a way to do FRC in college. It's called mentoring. And, if you find the right team, it can be exactly the right level of fun, commitment, and involvement to suit your needs. |
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#38
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Re: Should there be a new division in FIRST?
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#39
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Re: Should there be a new division in FIRST?
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#40
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Re: Should there be a new division in FIRST?
If you are in college and don't have enough to do, then I am very interested in how you are doing college. As already mentioned, there are a ton of college competitions that already exist, and unless your collegiate team is winning that competition year after year, then you have all the opportunities to iterate that you think you are missing out on. If you want a new challenge every year, do a different club each year. There are so many competitions and challenges that already exist, it would be an unwise use of time and money to make another one, none the less one that doesn't give experience that would be relevant for students' future careers.
Whenever someone says "they should have FIRST in college," I hear "I don't want to try something new." |
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#41
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Re: Should there be a new division in FIRST?
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I hate to break it to you, but it's ALL a game. I'll have to see if my dad will post here, but he's stated in the past that his senior design team (Baja SAE) didn't realize there was a game until later. And here's why. You are trying to win, no? You are taking a set of rules, and following them, and trying to do better than your opponents. Sometimes, that involves head-to-head competition. But the vast majority of the time, the head-to-head competition is conducted in one-at-a-time or one-man-in-the-arena formats, even in the real world. (I can imagine the competition for a fighter-aircraft contract now if it was full head-to-head... Yeah, not gonna happen.) So here's the trick: You have to look at the rules, and engineer up your best way of winning the game. If you've seen Spare Parts, or won an RCA/EI/RAS, you might notice that you don't necessarily have to win the engineering challenge to win the game. |
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#42
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Re: Should there be a new division in FIRST?
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Last edited by Downhillsurfer : 03-18-2015 at 10:01 PM. |
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#43
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Re: Should there be a new division in FIRST?
Almost every FRC student who graduated from our team and enrolled at a local university expressed a desire to return and mentor the team the following year.
Not one of them did. And, frankly, that is a good thing. They really wanted to, and they really meant to... but their lives changed. Their lives changed because university is different from high school. They had less free time... in addition to more demanding courses, they had to commute to class. The commuting alone sucked up an hour a day from their free time, and the homework and studying likely a few more. They had new friends, and those friends led them to new hobbies and activities. Many had jobs to help cover the cost of tuition, or volunteered with organizations on campus. They were doing new things and learning new things... exactly what you are supposed to do at university. The idea of hanging out in the shop until nine or ten at night every night for six weeks simply became unrealistic. That's why university projects tend to evolve over several years. Students can get involved as first year students, learn what is involved, and then gradually take on leadership positions over the course of their studies. To a high school student, used to a new challenge every year, that might seem a slow pace... but time moves more rapidly as you age. When you are fifteen a year is almost 7% of your life... but at 25 it is only 4% of your life. And it does seem to go by twice as fast! I've seen this play out in a few different venues... we've had some excellent high school VEX teams in BC carry on as VEX U teams. I admire their dedication, but having a casual chat with one of the team members and looking at their robot I had to comment, "You don't have as much free time as you did in high school, eh?" He had to agree, "We haven't had as much time to work on the robot as we would have liked." This past summer I took a BCIT team to the MATE ROV competition. In MATE, successful high school teams can move up and compete in the college category. (I think there is a film about that somewhere...) As a high school teacher I was really impressed that a high school could keep up with university teams... but now that I've worked with the college teams I learned that I pretty much had it backwards. Most of the high school students essentially have infinite time and support relative to the college teams... it was summed up most adequately when one of my students was approached by one of the parents there to support a very successful high school team, "So what team is your kid on?" the parent asked. "My son is at home with his mother." explained my student. "I'm here to compete." To a high school student, a college division of FRC makes sense. And that's a good thing. But looking back, and taking in the perspective of teaching both high school and post-secondary, the worlds are quite different. Treasure your time in high school, and treasure your FRC experience... but embrace new experiences when they present themselves. When the time comes to be an FRC mentor, you'll be that much better at it for having a wide range of experiences to bring to the table. Jason Last edited by dtengineering : 03-19-2015 at 01:48 AM. |
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#44
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Re: Should there be a new division in FIRST?
I have been a student in a FIRST program since 2006, when I was eight years old. Currently I am in my Junior year of high school, and I often think about what it will be like when I can no longer participate as a student. It is disturbing really...FIRST has been such a large part of my life, that I will miss it terribly. It has taught me so much of what I know, from public speaking to technical skills. I am looking at electrical engineering and a LOT of extracurricular robotics research projects for college. I think it would be cool if Ri3D became it's own competition, and it was solely for those no longer a student in FIRST.
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#45
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Re: Should there be a new division in FIRST?
Being a mentor for a FIRST team is every bit as fun (and then some) as being a student. Don't fear!
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