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#256
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Re: [FIRST EMAIL] Stop Build Day Survey
I have to admit that when I received this survey, I was concerned that some hidden negative effects might outweigh the obvious positives of eliminating the Stop Bag Day. HOWEVER, after reading through all these arguments and Jim's excellent paper, I'm feeling pretty well convinced that an elimination of SBD would be net positive for FRC.
That being said, it seems like a lot of the potential positives of #banthebag rely heavily on the well-resourced and experienced teams reaching out to the lower-resourced teams in their communities and making sure that all are able to fully realize the benefits of eliminating SBD. The good news is that FRC teams already have that mentality in place. Wouldn't it be great, though, to have a #banthebag activities guide to give folks a good baseline? So, I'd like to take a moment to spur a brainstorming of what events/activities teams could host if SBD is no more. Here are things I've read so far: - Scrimmages - Bumper builds - Pre-inspections - In-season demos with competition machines to "Make it Loud" - In-season workshops If you're a team that's already working past SBD, surely not having your competition machine in a bag will free up some time and resources. How can you leverage those for your community? -Andy |
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#257
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Re: [FIRST EMAIL] Stop Build Day Survey
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The current rules package for FRC robot fabrication causes my team, and many others, to have to adjust way out of our comfort zone to to meet everything from routine schedules up to overarching goals. Have to shut down fabrication for almost 1 out of 6 weeks during build season for midterm exams? "Sorry, that's out of your control as a team, but you have to work around it." We do. Live in a place where they shut down schools and virtually padlock the doors to keep you out over the threat of snow? "You'll come up with something! It's all part of THE PROCESS™." However, these problems are out of our control and as team leadership, we have made it a priority to not let problems out of our control define how we achieve success as an organization. When it comes to potential removal of stop build day, your core fear seems to be that you and the rest of your team leadership will fail to adjust for, finalize, and maintain objectives and expectations that could affect the sustainability of your program. Does the mentorship of the team have no say in how often meetings are held? Do students hold your family members hostage with guns pointed to their heads until the student leadership feels like they have had sufficient meeting time? No one on this board is going to make the decision to keep or end stop build day but each of us has the opportunity to set the guidelines for our teams concerning how we handle either approach. |
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#258
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Re: [FIRST EMAIL] Stop Build Day Survey
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#259
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Re: [FIRST EMAIL] Stop Build Day Survey
And has made the argument that his kids end up working past SBD anyway. He only wants SBD so he can trick people into thinking that the season ends after 6 weeks.
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#260
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Re: [FIRST EMAIL] Stop Build Day Survey
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Not trying to be obstinate, just trying to understand your very strong pro SBD stance while you currently exist in a district environment which is the closest thing we have to eliminating SBD. Jim's paper had a very reasonable intermediate step of giving everyone FRC wide 8 hours a week (every week, not just weeks you're competing) unbag time. I've seen almost no discussion of this, just the posts about how the sky will fall if we eliminate SBD and the opposite posts that it's insane we continue to have SBD. This intermediate step is unbelievably easy to implement, saves those who need saving from themselves, and gives huge benefits to all teams at very little cost. It would be SO much better than the current system for teams like us and teams who can't afford a practice robot. There are so many things teams like ours could do to help those with less resources if such a plan were implemented. We could host scrimmages, we could help teams fabricate upgrade parts, we could do pre-inspections and help teams correct issues with their robots in our shop with the benefit of all our raw materials, components, and tools. The list goes on and on. |
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#261
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Re: [FIRST EMAIL] Stop Build Day Survey
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Come up with a new solution for how your team views those six weeks? Take two or three days off in the first few weeks of build to properly digest the game and develop concepts offsite and remove "groupthink" which often hurts teams. Advocating that no stop build day automatically increases or doubles your team's work hours is ridiculous. Only you have control over when you meet as a team and no one is forcing you to meet more or less. If you don't want to get "burned out more" the solution is easy... don't. There were a few seasons I got severely burned out as a mentor along with the team. We made decisions as a team to reduce our hours and I learned too take it a step further by taking my own time off. |
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#262
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Re: [FIRST EMAIL] Stop Build Day Survey
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I don't want a 12 week build season. Removing the stop build day automatically creates a 12 week build season. I want the FRC available to new or casual participants, and a 6 week build season makes it easier for new or casual participants to get involved. |
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#263
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Re: [FIRST EMAIL] Stop Build Day Survey
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#264
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Re: [FIRST EMAIL] Stop Build Day Survey
I have found exactly the opposite to be true. Condensing the build into six weeks creates such an intense schedule that it is very difficult to convince the marginal mentors to dive in and participate. If we had the option of spreading the work out over a longer period of time we could create a more flexible schedule for those who aren't willing to completely devote their life to the team for six straight weeks.
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#265
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Re: [FIRST EMAIL] Stop Build Day Survey
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The issue is that it would be a meaningless term that would confuse less aware FRC teams who would think you would be required to totally stop working then. I would hope we could all move to a system where we don't have to do anything as silly and nonsensical as making a "stop build day" that means nothing, but come to think of it, it isn't substantially different than the current system other than avoiding resource duplication. |
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#266
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Re: [FIRST EMAIL] Stop Build Day Survey
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Normally our robot is shipped out either on the last day of build season or the next. |
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#267
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Re: [FIRST EMAIL] Stop Build Day Survey
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We require attendance to let students miss school for competitions. You can understand what would happen if there was no time commitment required to be "on the team," especially with a school of that size. After stop build day, student and mentor participation is reduced significantly, and those that do meet it's voluntary and not counted on attendance. Managing a team our size is no small feat, and an official "SBD" makes the team draw down very easy. I understand and appreciate wanting to work on the robot during competition season, but without an official end of the build season would strain our mentors, particularly the teachers. It's not hard to imagine it's the same elsewhere. Quote:
Last edited by efoote868 : 08-09-2016 at 15:08. Reason: fixed typo |
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#268
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#269
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#270
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