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#31
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Re: pic: Growth of FIRST in Michigan
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BUT... ...Gail was blazing a new trail. Others can follow without nearly the heroic effort required. The chart that started this thread off should be inspiring copy cats all over the country if not the world. Dr. Joe J. |
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#32
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The high level (chicken and egg) template seems simple enough. 1) Reach team density critical mass. 2) Optimise costs for teams. |
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#33
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Re: pic: Growth of FIRST in Michigan
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If we ever want Robotics to be a sport which competes with 'real' sports, then we all need to up our game. Sure after 25 years, we have had great success and now have tens of thousands of participants, but in the grand scheme of things, this is nothing. There MILLIONS of kids who play basketball, and that it just one of several main stream sports. If we truly expect 'cultural transformation', then we need to get MUCH larger, and do it MUCH faster. Reducing participation costs and increasing ROI to bring us closer to parity with mainstream youth activities are the best way to achieve this. Ignoring this reality will restrict growth until this change is made. BTW: Here in Michigan, according to the data we have, in 2016 we now have more high school students participating in FIRST Robotics than we have playing Hockey. So we have actually finally passed one of the 'real' sports. Can any other robotics organization on Earth claim this? |
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#34
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Re: pic: Growth of FIRST in Michigan
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However, before you could collect the stats you might need to explain to Virginians what hockey is. More seriously, Virginia's Prince William County schools (with Loudoun and Fairfax starting to catch up) almost certainly have more students in robotics programs (a mix of VRC, FRC, FTC, FLL, VIQ, SeaPerch, and whatever I might have forgotten) than those schools have in several of their sports programs. That's nothing to sneeze at when you consider that PWC has a total population of around 450K. The FIM and PWC/VA examples are very different in some ways, and much alike in others. If both remain successful, maybe their influences will merge into a cultural tsunami somewhere around Indianapolis. Blake Last edited by gblake : 04-03-2016 at 11:05. |
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#35
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Re: pic: Growth of FIRST in Michigan
in FiM events have you ever had the following:
extra paperwork outside of STIMS required by FiM to go to an event? Limitations on the amount of power you can draw in your pits? Trying to find out what is normal/accepted and what is not. |
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#36
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Re: pic: Growth of FIRST in Michigan
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We have had limitations on pit power, but mostly it is common sense things like not using a compressor or a refrigerator or other things that you really don't need in a pit. |
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#37
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Re: pic: Growth of FIRST in Michigan
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Most of the seemingly draconian pit regulations for events in the high schools for CHS events come directly from lessons learned in PNW. I know MAR at the very least has a separate C&R form, probably due to the fact that VirginiaFIRST bears more explicit responsibilities at this level of play than they did in the past. |
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#38
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Re: pic: Growth of FIRST in Michigan
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#39
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Re: pic: Growth of FIRST in Michigan
When decisions are made out of one's control, context tends to make those decisions more digestible.
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#40
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Re: pic: Growth of FIRST in Michigan
+1
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#41
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Re: pic: Growth of FIRST in Michigan
I think Jim and Gail (and others) have made the smoothest road in Michigan. Maybe the state should hire them.
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#42
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Re: pic: Growth of FIRST in Michigan
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Jim, the work FiM has been doing has cleared a lot of the event logistics and cost hurdles but it has done nothing to solve the mentor hurdle. FiM has been able to handle it's astonishing growth in part due to the large number of engineers and engineering companies in the region. I haven't looked at it in a few years but I'd be willing to bet that a large number of FRC teams are congregated around the I75 corridor through Automation Alley (Detroit -> Flint -> Saginaw) where the density of engineers and companies that are long time supporters of FIRST is unparalleled. It also has at least 3 HoF teams within a 45 minute on a side triangle. (51, 67, 27) And more World Championship winning teams exist in Oakland County than exist in most states. This has led to not only a massive growth of teams but also an increase in quality. My point is, there's still one last hurdle to explosive quality growth that FiM cannot help regions with, the road is there but you still have to figure out how to drive down it. |
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#43
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Re: pic: Growth of FIRST in Michigan
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Football: 1,085,182 Track: 1,057,358 Basketball: 970,983 Baseball: 487,770 Softball: 365,528 Combined: 853,298 Soccer: 808,250 Volleyball: 486,594 Cross Country: 472,597 Tennis: 340,116 Swimming: 303,925 Wrestling: 269,704 Golf: 221,405 Lacrosse: 193,235 Since it was referenced, hockey has 45,293. So FRC is starting to push into the realm of being a "real sport" in terms of participation. At my school, the FRC team would rank high (but definitely not at the top) of the total cost/participant. And FRC has a lot of curricular overlap. If I split the cost of equipment also used in classes then FRC is in the middle in cost. It also costs far less, for example, than our marching band. (The band having similar curricular overlap.) So I try to get them to see this as similar to adding a sport. With events that are daily driving distance away the costs per student go WAY down compared to other sports. Moving us to the bottom third. I completely agree that we should be driving FIRST to push down the cost. I would love to see a time when FIRST manages just the championships, or even better something like "super regionals" and then championships. That would make it more like a state athletic association. And the districts manage their competitions. With a majority of the entry fee going to the districts. But I also think that we need to get schools to change how they few FRC and think of funding it like they do their band or their track team. edit: As for mentors, that is one of the biggest hurdles. Allow me to propose one big avenue for creating new mentors: increasing participation in FRC. I also coach track and field. And finding qualified coaches is often a challenge. Particularly for technical events. As participation has grown (and more HS sports are shrinking than growing right now) it has become easier because there is a larger pool of mentors to draw from. If we can drive up participation we can also create more potential mentors. I would bet that part of the large supply of mentors in Michigan is because there are so many FIRST alumni there. Last edited by mathking : 04-03-2016 at 11:44. |
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#44
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Re: pic: Growth of FIRST in Michigan
That is very true, Andrew. Teams on the outside looking in on FiM are acute to the differences between each party.
Even during the economic downturn FiM still had the most valuable resource: great people, and a lot of them. I am obviously partial to looking at FiM through a Virginia-oriented lens, but before the FVC->VRC split that also coincided relatively closely with the great recession and a bunch of other factors, you could draw more parallels between the RCPs that made up Michigan FIRST leadership and those that made up my region. FiM, it can be safely said at this point, had the leadership and foresight (and looming threat of the program's collapse) that no one else had when moving to districts (a system that very smart, dedicated, and competitive people opposed at the time) Virginia had a climate that lent itself to a great explosion of sustaining VRC teams (which is great!) and unstable and folding FRC teams (which is not great). We also have never and likely never will have a single team of the same caliber of the top dozen Michigan teams for a lot of reasons; unsurprisingly that answer is yet again, people. It will be interesting to see over the next three years if my region will be able to become the power it has the potential to be or if the status quo will continue to let our car coast down the shoulder while the rest of FRC blows by us. |
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#45
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Re: pic: Growth of FIRST in Michigan
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I really don't know what you are talking about... Dr. Joe J. |
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