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#31
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Re: How involved are your mentors?
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Also I firmly agree to your second point so long as the line between assisting building/designing the bot and building/designing the bot is drawn. That's my issue. |
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#32
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Re: How involved are your mentors?
Exactly. Mentors don't really do much actually labor on our team, if a job needs to be done and there is a student who has the ability to do it, and a mentor who knows how to the mentor gets the student and teaches the student. Not really 50/50 because we only have a few mentors but more of a 70/30 student/mentor
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#33
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Re: How involved are your mentors?
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I've seen a few teams since I've started in FIRST where the robot was clearly build by a bunch of mentors because the students are nowhere to be found in/around the pits... And they're usually not good robots. Back on subject though, on 816 the mentors prefer to step back and let the students do things, if they're able. When a student is not able to do something by themselves then one of the mentors will work with them side by side. |
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#34
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Re: How involved are your mentors?
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"Mentors are a wonderful necessity for a team, they just shouldn't be the only ones making the bot." (Also possible to use "primary" in that slot.) I've got no problem with a mentor piling in to work. I have a problem if the mentor displaces a student for no apparent reason--major screwups are a reason--and then doesn't have the student stick around and watch, or assist. Or if the students are locked away from the robot by the mentors. I REALLY don't have a problem if a student pushes a mentor out of the way to do some work, and accepts advice as they do the work. (I have a problem if the students completely block the mentors out, too.) Back when I was in high school, my team was about 50-50. As an example, there is a picture (it is on CD, but not in CD-Media) of a student drilling into one side of a sprocket. A mentor is on the other side applying cutting fluid. Another example: A mentor didn't know CAD. Two students did. Guess who did the detail design and the build drawings for the parts they were working on? Yep, the students. Guess who made sure they got it right? Yep, the mentor. But on other components, mentors took the primary lead. |
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#35
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Re: How involved are your mentors?
As a mentor I try to follow:
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Having said that, if we are short handed with students then I will build/ make/ assemble robot parts. I'm not going to let them miss ship date because someone isn't there. And the only time I <gently> push a roboteer away from a robot is when they are about to or are doing something that isn't safe. I would like to see a 100% roboteer designed and built robot, but we have a problem that the roboteers that have the level of skills to do that graduate and go off to an engineering college. (I've tried starting a "Super Duper Double Senior" program, so far no takers) So to summarize: Quote:
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