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#31
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Re: I feel this needs to be said...(Grades & FIRST Dedication)
Mos tof the CircuitRunners are in teh magnet program at our School. This is one of the toughest programs in the country and our magnet was ranked number 5 in the nation amongst all other schools in the country.
I am not going to lie, the grades of most build team people drop a little but we can usualyl pull them up. Most of us pack our 1st smester with tough classes and then try and get a sslack as posible 2nd semester. My 2nd sem. next year will probably be AP Chem, AP Gov, AP Econ., and AP Lit. My grades will suffer a bit, but I feel that I myself have the choice to make. I would rather have FIRST and maybe make 3 A's and 1 B than have straight A's and no FIRST in my senior year. But the CircuitRunners have a strict policy that states that everyone must have all B's or better to build or travel. Our mentors spnd a long time looking up teh grades of the 100+ of us that there are. |
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#32
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Re: I feel this needs to be said...(Grades & FIRST Dedication)
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#33
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Re: I feel this needs to be said...(Grades & FIRST Dedication)
[quote=Jherbie53].......
I more or less paraphrased than quoted, but your right. You should never miss a class if your in college, and it doesn't matter if its a community college or a university. Unless your sick, car problems, or something more important comes up. I know theres already a thread on this subject, but It also needs to be here. This thread is mostly about the high schoolers, but does apply the college students..................QUOTE] It is not only students who have to make sure their "work" is done.....we the adult mentors have responsibilities to our employers.....we have to make sure our work is done as well.....unlike students.....we do not get second chances. When your parents say that school is a job.....they are not wrong. Pat Chen |
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#34
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Re: I feel this needs to be said...(Grades & FIRST Dedication)
This is a good post to remind students of... part of me wishes it were well before build season! I think most get the point, grades HAVE to come first. Now that doesnt mean every student needs a 4.0 GPA, but every student should have an aim of a passing grade or higher.
I see Tom's point that college isnt for everyone... but high school is the time to figure that out... and guess what? If grades dont come first, college WONT be an option. So unless you decide in middleschool that you arent going to EVER go to college, then grades should be your number one priority. Again, that doesnt mean sacrificing FIRST or the swimteam to get a 4.3 GPA (yes some kids at PHS have that... ugh!), but it does mean getting all your work done and trying as hard as you can with the time you have. Good time management (passing up bowling with your friends to do your geometry homework) will do WONDERS for your high school career. Plus, the aim of FIRST is to inspire students in science and technology... and tell me how many jobs in science and technology there are that dont require a college education? We had a hard time on our team because this year we attracted some students who didnt always have great grades. We had to turn some away from competition. We had to ask a few to stop attending meetings until their grades came up... we even had to give away one's plane ticket because his mother said his grades had dropped. Every instance of this was painful for all of us, but it has to be done. All of our kids have their sights set on college, so they have to keep their grades up. I would have to say most learned from it and brought their grades up, or are still trying. There were many times this year that students or parents came up to me (guiltily) and said that they needed to miss a meeting, or couldnt come to build because they had too much homework or to study for a test. EVERY time my response was the same... I will NEVER be dissappointed if they are skipping their FIRST responsibilities for studies. The team can still survive, their resume for college wont. And in closing, I know too many students who in college decided that they didnt need to care about freshman year, or a class they didnt like... they would squeak by with 2.0's or something, and then think they could make it up later... they were WRONG. So many of them ended up with 2.7's and the such, and while that is not bad, I can tell you right now that as a key recruiter for Harris, corporate WILL NOT let us hire any college grad's with less than a 2.8. Some comapanies are 3.0's. So learn how to get those good grades now... it WILL make a difference. |
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#35
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Re: I feel this needs to be said...(Grades & FIRST Dedication)
I spent most of today typing and retyping replies to thread, I wanted to get it perfect. I finally got it perfect, looked, and Kim has already said what I wanted to say. Thanks Kim!
I hope this thread helps students realize their priorities need to be on school work first and I hope it helps teams that have to deal with this problem. I ask that you keep posting helpful things and stories here, so the thread stays visible for awhile at the very least, the more people who see it the better I think. Thank you everyone. ![]() |
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#36
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Re: I feel this needs to be said...(Grades & FIRST Dedication)
While I really, truly appreciate the comments made in this thread, I can only say that I recommend that you never let schools and grades get in the way of getting an education.
Very little of what I use on a daily basis in my career are things I learned in my formal education, but when I was young I developed a passion for learning that has stood me in good stead during 23 years in the high-tech industry. Learning to learn on my own and writing clearly are the two most important results of my early education. The content of what I learned in high school and college has largely been made obsolete since I graduated, but thinking and learning never go out of style. As for grades, the less said the better. Grades are a bizarre artifact of the educational industry that ought to be eliminated -- and the sooner the better. I have a whole rant that I do on the subject, but let's just say that the older I get, the less sense they make to me. (And for the record, I had good grades in school. This isn't sour grapes.) |
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#37
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Re: I feel this needs to be said...(Grades & FIRST Dedication)
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Early in my engineering career I got involved in the college recruiting team for my first post-college employer, in the defense sector of TRW in southern California. Although Kim's experiences in that kind of activity are more recent than mine, her posts (above here and elsewhere) show me that not much has changed. Grades are still used as a primary screen when evaluating entry-level candidates for engineering positions. So Kim and others are correct to caution all college students not to let their grades slip. [My own experience with college grades is remarkably similar to Kim's, although my extracurricular activities were different.] All that said about grades, Rick's points are more important in the long run. The ability to learn on your own and to communicate ideas effectively are the most important skills -- they are elements of that most prized of team members, the self-starter. Sometime during your career, a fundamental technological change, a global political trend, or a strategic business decision will very likely create a shift in the demand for people with your skill-set (whatever it may be!), and when that happens you will fare much better if you are one of the self-starters. |
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#38
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Re: I feel this needs to be said...(Grades & FIRST Dedication)
I have to agree that being a good learner and a self-starter are definitely very important in the long run of life. And I also have to say that I cant entirely agree with the grading system schools use. I want to think that teachers are "getting it" more and more, by giving students credit for effort, partial credit on incorrect answers, and relying more and more on project work for grades. I had a class at RIT where there were NO exams. It was all on small projects and the final project. So I feel in that case grading is fair... but yes, the fill in the bubble exams really just tell you how good the student is at finding the answer. And dont even get me started on the NY Regents... lol.
But as exampled by many of us here, it is possible to learn to be a good learner, a self starter, a leader AND get decent grades. I dont think the students need to choose. I think they can do it all in this case. All are important, and its definitely NOT necessary to have a 4.0. In fact, my boss told me last year NOT to hire students with a 4.0 (obviously cavioted with the fact that there are exceptions). In general they are too work focused and too book smart to have the common sense that my department needs (we travel a lot to strange places, have to think fast and out of the box often). So I want to propose that most of us are on the same side of the coin. We dont need to choose which is more important (learning or grades). When done correctly and in the right proportion, students can choose both. |
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#39
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Re: I feel this needs to be said...(Grades & FIRST Dedication)
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#40
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Re: I feel this needs to be said...
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Corey |
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#41
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Re: I feel this needs to be said...(Grades & FIRST Dedication)
That is a good point about failing classes for FIRST. Our team has a minimum grade average in order to stay on. Not very high to exclude some kids but high enough that you have to go to class and do well. No failing grades either. It's very fair and keeps the students from cutting and going straight into robotics for the entire day.
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#42
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Re: I feel this needs to be said...
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Anyhoo, again I'm off the main subject and I must of lied earlier when I said that was my "final thoughts on this." I'm not going too lie again, because I just might think of something that I want to say, again. |
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#43
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Re: I feel this needs to be said...(Grades & FIRST Dedication)
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#44
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Re: I feel this needs to be said...(Grades & FIRST Dedication)
There are requirements for sportsplayers' grades... why should FIRST be any different? Yes, help is offered but if someone chooses to not take it, to not focus on education - a point of FIRST - then they must take what comes (ie
ff the team) |
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#45
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Re: I feel this needs to be said...(Grades & FIRST Dedication)
Funny trend on our team regarding grades, the more trips the student goes on and the more involved the student is, their GPA is on average higher. I don't know if this is because they are the people that strive for the best or what but its just an odd relation to grades and first.
-guy |
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