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#61
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Re: What would you do to improve the FIRST experience?
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Overall, I think our students (and it sounds like yours too) have a healthy respect for their own and others' safety while working. After all, they made "Safety Always" one of team slogans! |
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#62
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Re: What would you do to improve the FIRST experience?
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If you want to design and create custom parts, FTC offers far more opportunities. Designing and creating more custom parts doesn't equal more inspiration (at least not in my book); but it can equal more fun. It can also equal less fun, and/or a barrier to entry. YMMV My bottom line: Let's not ascribe malice to either program, or attempt to kick either to the curb. Both encourage students to stick their toes into STEM waters at low-ish cost, and with low-ish mentoring requirements. If both tripled in size, they/we still would only be nibbling at satisfying the total North American (not to mention the rest of the world) needs. Tell students, adults, and sponsors about both and let them pick the one that is right for them. Don't attempt to make the choice for them, graciously and professionally let them choose the one that best suits their circumstances. Blake |
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#63
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Re: What would you do to improve the FIRST experience?
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I just started a couple of weeks ago, just after the season was effectively over for us. I had heard that we did need to improve on safety after the regional. I haven't had the chance to see what kind of safety program is currently in place yet. It isn't such a bad thing to be exposed to what audits are like in a corporate structure, though. No matter what system in place is being audited, it can be a painful experience. It can be a powerful lesson in grace under pressure. |
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#64
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Re: What would you do to improve the FIRST experience?
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For your reference while working on an improved algorithm, I wrote up a script that calculated the {max, min, median, mean} for the number of unique partners each team played with and against for each event this year. These are the numbers that the FTA/Scorekeeper look at after they generate a schedule. Since it's a large amount of data, I won't post it here, but you can access the files on GitHub. Hope that information is helpful! |
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#65
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Re: What would you do to improve the FIRST experience?
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Think about this. It is possible to create and store, in advance of any tournament, for any/all possible numbers of participants, "canned" match schedules that satisfy any constraints desired, and that include N matches (where N is much larger than the number matches expected in any reasonable tournament).Even a slow, modern computer could accomplish (or repeat) the day-of-the-tournament part of the process in a trivial amount of time.The number of schedules to be created and the storage space they would consume are both more than zero, but both are trivial in modern computers.On the day of a tournament: Furthermore, I can't think of any reason not to publish the pre-computed, canned schedules. If the canned schedules were published in advance, then, on the day of a tournament (or well before?), tournament organizers could publish that event's random real-to-placeholder team assignments, and the event's randomly chosen starting point within the N matches of the canned schedule being used. Once that info (above) is published - voila! - scouts/anyone could easily produce a perfect copy of the entire event's schedule, without having to retype it, scan it, web scrape it, etc. I believe that adopting this approach to creating match schedules would improve the FIRST/VEX/whatever experience. Blake PS: Also, just think how much fun people could have debating the "fairness" of pre-computed schedules (the entire thing, or selected stretches). If the practice was adopted, someone could start a thread on both evaluating that, and determining how many angels can dance on the head of a pin. Many hours of popcorn-munching entertainment would follow. Last edited by gblake : 04-19-2016 at 04:05 PM. |
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#66
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Re: What would you do to improve the FIRST experience?
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For me this adds up to a near reversal of the current relative emphasis on FRC vs FTC. In order to reach more students, and especially in areas that might need STEM programs more that others, I would make FTC (or something similar) the primary/flagship high school emphasis of FIRST, and would let FRC become an advanced program, for those students and adults in locations that want to pay (in time and money) for a more complex challenge. FTC is the far easier way (far less intimidating, faster tangible results, easier what-if experimentation, etc. etc.) to introduce an uninspired novice to STEM robotics. FTC is the far less costly program. FTC is the far less time-consuming program. FTC is the far more hands-on program. FTC events are far easily to produce, etc. Blake PS: Remember that simply convincing K-12 students to try a STEM education/career is a success. It isn't necessary to actually train them (deeply) in any of the various STEM disciplines. That happens in vocational schools, colleges and afterward. Last edited by gblake : 04-19-2016 at 11:20 PM. |
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#67
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Re: What would you do to improve the FIRST experience?
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#68
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Re: What would you do to improve the FIRST experience?
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I don't think it would have applied to your particular case though, since the with/against numbers for your team (and all others) could still have been in an acceptable range, even with a couple repeated opponents. |
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#69
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Re: What would you do to improve the FIRST experience?
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#70
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Re: What would you do to improve the FIRST experience?
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To put that in perspective: I was a vocational student before I left high school. I left the later part of the day and was taken to the vocational school to spend several hours working on a real world skill. FIRST wasn't available to me back then, my motivator was I already knew what I liked doing because I did it in my family business. I don't know if 2 years at the start of high school would drive most people to commit like that. 2 years in high school and a few years before that would give a lot of people a great idea where they want to be. Last edited by techhelpbb : 04-19-2016 at 06:08 PM. |
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#71
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Re: What would you do to improve the FIRST experience?
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I think it's very interesting this year how younger teams are ranking much higher than previously. Look at how many events had rookies as the first qualifier. At SVR this year, 3 alliance captains were rookies or 2nd year teams. This is a function of RPs often not being a function of W-L records. I suspect that the 2007 results may have been just as much about the scoring system as the match scheduling. (BTW, something is wrong int he OPR calculations for Galielo in 2007--they imply that the OPRs for the other teams are strongly negative. Archimedes and Newton have the same problem. Curie might be correct. I suspect the problem is in the bin-method of scheduling took away a key element of solving the matrix problem. So it's not the scoring method that messed with the OPRs; it's the way that teams were matched up. So the bottom line is that the OPRs are worthless for comparison in 2007.) Don't confuse random and lucky with fair. I'm not sure how being lucky creates equality of scheduling. And as someone pointed out earlier the schedule isn't truly random--it's already constrained, AND it's subject to the judgement of an official that it looks "sufficiently" balanced. Why not make the balancing method transparent rather than heaping arbitrary on top of arbitrary. I have an idea of how to structure the schedule in a very simple way that solves the constraint problems and can be executed very quickly. But I don't have time to put a demo together until after Champs (I have other scouting duties to attend to first.) I'll have something in May to show. |
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#72
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Re: What would you do to improve the FIRST experience?
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#73
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Re: What would you do to improve the FIRST experience?
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However, One of the odd things with FIRST is that it's difficult to convince middle/elementary aged kids (and in an extent parents) to invest their time in FIRST unless there is an FRC team they can see themselves joining later in high school. If there isn't an FRC team that students know they can join later being on a JFLL-FTC team may not seem to be worthwhile of their time. To (quickly) make sustainable FIRST programs it almost has to begin with an FRC team. I think FIRST needs to put more emphasis on the importance the lower levels of FIRST are to a successful and sustainable FRC team to rookie teams. |
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#74
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Re: What would you do to improve the FIRST experience?
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In terms of current partners becoming opponents, it's not a direct issue per se. However, the consistency of it in the week one schedules helps allow for reverse engineering of how the algorithm functioned, and demonstrates the rigidity of an over constrained algorithm. Quote:
With regards to OPR in 2007, I still stand by it being a pretty poor metric. The end game was cooperative and the primary scoring method was both exponential and cooperative (multiple teams building a row together). Both of those things play very poorly with OPR. Further still, facing off against tougher competition actually hurt your scores, since smart placement of their tubes denied longer rows. I suspect this played a significant role in why low numbered teams were implied such large negative contributions. |
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#75
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Re: What would you do to improve the FIRST experience?
Reform safety awards, and pit safety in general. The teams that go around giving out mostly useless safety giveaways (Easter eggs with 2 Band-Aids and a hair tie, for example) are not actually trying to improve other teams' safety. Every team I've seen has those supplies already. They just want an award. In my experience, the best way to be safe is to make sure everyone in the pit knows how to safely use their tools and has some common sense. I don't know how you give an award for that , though.
OK, that rant's over. On to the next thing, which is doing something about teams where the mentors build the robot. I know that this is often thrown around unfairly, but at least where I am (CHS), at almost every event I have been to, I've seen at least one team where the mentors are fixing the robot with no students around. This indicates that the mentors understand the robot better than the students, which means that they likely designed it. I understand that the mentors take an active role on many teams, and some teams do need a lot of help, but when the mentors are working without any students around to help or at least observe, the students don't learn anything and in many cases, get to play with one of the best robots at the event. This is not only unfair to the students on the team (always veteran teams, I might add), since they get little out of FRC, but to the other teams where students were heavily involved in the build process, only to get beaten by professional engineers. It has gotten to the point where, on my team, any winning robot is dismissed as "mentor-built". This is often untrue, and is especially unfair to the teams who win without needing a mentor-built robot. My point is, FIRST should be about learning, not just about getting a winning robot. |
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