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#16
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Re: Questions about FIRST Future
I'd like to see FRC become more sustainable (financially and on the time commitment side as well) and my personal opinion is that an easy way to accomplish that is to get rid of bag day and make the season open ended.
Also, after talking to colleagues in Europe and elsewhere (not the US), it seems that the FRC season does not align well with their educational calendars so making the season more open ended and maybe even year long might help. It has the added benefit of helping with mentor/volunteer/student burnout. It also gives teams time to compete and iterate more (which we know works because districts). Just my thoughts though. Like Dean, I don't have all the answers, just ideas. |
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#17
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Re: Questions about FIRST Future
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JJ you have been a great help this season and I know you are looking out for the best for the program and the students. |
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#18
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Re: Questions about FIRST Future
I'd really appreciate it if FIRST could actually stop their formalities and actually be transparent about these topics concerning the future, goals, etc. They're becoming too much like an anonymous corporation for my taste, regardless of how awesome FIRST is in general. I like to think I'm not exaggerating when I say their PR needs a massive overhaul. Not branding, but media and public relations – something that actually has a tangible impact. The larger they grow, the more transparent and less strictly formal they need to be, if they wish to continue to feel like a family. Right now it feels like the teams are a family, but FIRST itself is distant relatives and the only thing that makes FIRST awesome are the people participating in it – not the people actually working for FIRST. This is not good, and I hope they strive to change this in the future and be less ambiguous about... well... everything.
I don't doubt other people have had different experiences than mine, but I also am fairly sure others feel similarly to me on this one. |
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#19
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Re: Questions about FIRST Future
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Picture what happens when you take a body of people that large and put them in a situation where they get dragged, and sometimes must neglect, certain things like taxes and personal expenses because of the fiat situation FIRST creates. What good is twice the number of teams with less quality and quantity of mentors? I think we put too many eggs in one basket and if FIRST still won't change; the way people engage with it needs to change. I am just not sure that FIRST is yet important and visible enough (since it's not in all 50 States) to make society change around it. Last edited by techhelpbb : 05-02-2016 at 04:19 PM. |
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#20
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Re: Questions about FIRST Future
This a big issue, along with venue rent. In LA I think the combined cost approached half a million.
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#21
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Re: Questions about FIRST Future
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#22
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Re: Questions about FIRST Future
Regionals are expensive, don't get me wrong, but that number seems a little high. I'd hope that isn't the actual case.
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#23
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Re: Questions about FIRST Future
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In Part X, look at column B, which is the end of year. Line 2 is cash -- $23.7 million. This you can spend. If you find a great deal on goats for next year's game piece, this is what you use. The other lines in the Assets section aren't spendable. Line 3 is donations people have promised, but not received. Think "we signed up a new donor at Champs, and they said they'd pay on September 30" Line 4 is money they're due, but hasn't yet been paid, and isn't a donation Line 8 is stuff they have that they intend to sell Line 9 is things they've bought that they haven't yet gotten -- e.g., deposits on venues Line 10 is improvements to HQ and fields, among other fixed assets The 990 is a snapshot as of June 30. FIRST needs to pay bills between then and the fall, when payments are due (e.g., first regional payment for FRC was due on November 23). Imagine if you got one paycheck a year, on December 31. You'd look pretty flush if someone looked at your December bank statement. 25-50% of next year's expenses in cash, at year-end, would not be unusual for an organization that runs an annual program. |
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#24
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Re: Questions about FIRST Future
Thanks for that.
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#25
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Re: Questions about FIRST Future
The district model in Indiana has been great for our team. The chance to compete at multiple events for a comparable price was a big win for Indiana. We are interested in having additional states get on board with the district model and then utilize the agreed upon point system to make inter-state play more engaging.
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#26
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Re: Questions about FIRST Future
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So this is one of the biggest problems that this post brings up. It is extremely difficult for students, schools, and board of educations to back FIRST when they do not have any idea of where things are going. I went to a party Saturday night that had every single high up person for the GABOE CTAE Department in attendance (it was a going away party for one of their people who happens to be my aunt). As the only one at the party who was still in school (for another couple of weeks at least ), a few of them asked about some of the career tech programs at my school to see how much of their work was actually reaching the school level. Through the conversation, I brought up FIRST and how amazing a program it was, and shockingly, it was only in the past couple of years that they were fully aware that FRC was a thing in our state. They asked me a lot of questions about the program, and all seemingly were about growth and how it could be shared with every high school in the state. Sadly I was not the best ambassador, for I could answer only parts of their questions, because I myself had no idea what the future held for FIRST. The Board of Educations for most states can not fully back a program, if they do not know what they should be planning on. On top of that, FIRST is very expensive, and while there are lots of sponsors out there, the overall cost can be overwhelming. For example, there are 447 high schools in Georgia, and each one would operate with, let's say $30,000. That is still 13.4 million, which is very hard to get behind when a lot of GA schools are trying to keep their lights on. Overall, FIRST needs to be more open about their future plans, so that students can be better ambassadors, and Board of Educations can be in a better place to assist them with their goals. |
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#27
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Re: Questions about FIRST Future
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Also I agree that FIRST (and RDs) should be far more transparent about what goes on behind the scenes and what their long range goals are. |
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#28
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Re: Questions about FIRST Future
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Back to thread topic. I too love this program and want to see it continue to grow. But worry that the growth may dilute the product in some way. Does FIRST have a team saturation number? Can their be too many? |
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