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Re: The Evolution of Chairman's Teams
As a mentor who has been supervising our Chairman's team since 2007, I want to weigh in here. I think, just as there are many approaches to succeeded on the field, there are many approaches to succeeding in the Chairman's arena. I don't think that you need the resources to do international outreach. As other posters have stated, I think it's important to pick you areas of focus and concentrate on them. What kinds of outreach do you want to do? What is important to you as a team?
We have a comparatively small, inner-city team. We're not, and probably won't ever, have the resources to go to China or any other country to do outreach there. But there's a huge need right in our own backyard, and that's what we've chosen to address. When we started this journey with our first submission in 2007, I told our students we're doing this NOT to win the award, but to grow as a team, year-round. We started with simple things - shake-the-cans at local grocery stores to raise money and spread the FIRST message, demonstrations at local schools, libraries, museums, etc.
Flash forward to 2016 and we're hosting an FLL tournament for the third straight year, mentoring an FLL team, helping a team in the Netherlands by shipping stuff to them, translating documents for a 3-D printing project (we have many students who speak multiple languages) and making blankets for kids in the custody of the Department of Children and Family Services. Things I never thought we'd be doing nine years ago. Plus, we continue our grass roots efforts, demonstrating the robot at the typical places listed above but also at fairs, parades, festivals and even a camp for children with cancer.
My message - striving for the Chairman's Award is not one-year thing. It's a long-term process, with rewards that go well beyond the blue banner. And you don't need to be big, flashy or international to win, as demonstrated by our team, which has won district Chairman's Awards in 2014 and 2015 and a district championship Chairman's Award in 2015.
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Denise Smoker, Mentor, Team #558, Elm City RoboSquad
Finalist, N.E. District Championshp 2014 (thanks 195 and 5122)
Judge's Award, N.E. District Championship 2014
Winner, Hartford District Event 2014 (thanks 177 and 5129)
Chairman's Award, Southington District Event 2014
Winners, Southington District Event 2014 (thanks 195 and 999)
Creativity Award, WPI Regional 2013
Finalist, CT Regional 2012 (thanks 1071 and 2067)
Engineering Inspiration Award, CT Regional 2010
Judge's Award, CT Regional 2009
Johnson & Johnson Gracious Professionalism Award, CT Regional 2008
Woodie Flowers Award (mentor Ernie Smoker), CT Regional 2008
Winner, CT Regional 2007 (thanks 195 & 1124)
Daimler-Chrysler Team Spirit Award, CT Regional 2007
Finalist, CT Regional 2006 (thanks 181 & 356)
Imagery Award, CT Regional 2005
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