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#1
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Mentors not wanting to stay
One of our biggest problems this year is our mentors not wanting to stay and letting us work on the robot. We have had several times where we asked them to stay later and we are told we are done when they want to go home. We only have three mentors and two of them rotate days to watch us. We have all so had days where we did not have school, not weather related, and we asked them to come in and they wouldn't. We currently have the robot in the bag not completed that we bagged around 6 o'clock yesterday because they did not want to stay later. Several people on our team feel like they are there to just baby sit us. Any time we have tried to talk to them it seems like the response always is you will do what I say and usually is in a raised tone of voice.
I was just wondering if any other teams have had problems with there mentors and them wanting to stay. I know it is hard on three of them but they knew what they signed up for. |
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#2
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Re: Mentors not wanting to stay
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Keep in mind your mentors are donating their time to be at the shop with you and not every mentor is capable of staying all hours a team could possibly meet. Maybe it is something to have a team discussion over but keep an open mind to what your mentors can or cannot give. Just like sponsors you need mentors to run. |
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#3
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Re: Mentors not wanting to stay
One of the hardest parts of mentoring an FRC team is balancing one's personal schedule. Many teams want to meet right after school (usually around 3:00)... but many mentors can't get off work until 5:00. Sometimes schools have vacation/holiday that doesn't match with mentors employees, so students want to meet but mentors may need to work. Many mentors also have families, and need to balance their involvement with the team with actually seeing their families once in a while. It's tough, it's really really tough.
I suggest talking with your mentors about their other time commitments. Work to understand why they are committing to the schedule they have so far, and express your gratitude for their time. Work to make it less confrontational and more constructive. Then you can talk with them about your desire to expand the program. Ask them for help recruiting more mentors - with more mentors you can probably meet longer and get more done! |
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#4
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Re: Mentors not wanting to stay
1. Are the students really being productive? If my team is not being productive for several hours and then wants to stay late, why should I?
If I have students that are busting their butts and want to finish a task, I'll stay as late as needed. 2. I'm assuming you are based out of a school? If so, you need to find the teacher that is crazy enough to put in the required time. Petition your school district to give the teacher a coaching stipend. To be a successful team you need a teacher that is willing to make this a year long adventure and a stipend may help you recruit one. 3. It takes a special kind of lunatic to be the school sponsor/mentor for an FRC team; when you get one be thankful. |
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#5
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Re: Mentors not wanting to stay
To a degree, mentors are certainly there to babysit(in the sense that there needs to be an adult around, you can't just leave a bunch of kids unattended while working with potentially dangerous equipment).
I can't speak for all of them, but I think mentors already give as much as they can. If they have other obligations or simply just want to call it a day for whatever reason then that should be respected. If you've already tried talking to them about it and they can't fill that need for the team then try to explore other options like finding more mentors or just dealing with the situation as best you can. I can't say I know your teams situation but when I see kids just screwing around most of the day(or most of build season for that matter) instead of doing the things they were supposed to be working on then the last thing I'm going to be doing is staying longer than I planned on. |
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#6
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Re: Mentors not wanting to stay
I know in our situation, most of our mentors are college students so we can't always be at meetings and the school limits when the team can meet (Monday and Wednesday afternoons, Friday nights, and Saturdays). I'd like to stay later but the fact of matter is we have obligations to attend to as well. I'd talk to your mentors about your situation and see if you can make a plan for what needs to be achieved at each meeting.
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#7
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Re: Mentors not wanting to stay
First of all, being in the district is a good thing. In accordance of section 5.5.2 of the admin manual, you have 6 hours to work on your robot on the 7 days before a competition. So you still have 6 hours to work on your robot before your first competition.
Secondly, that is sad to hear that your mentors don't want to stay over but remember, they are volunteers, and they do need their time. My biggest tip would be to have members on your team do as much as possible at home by themselves. I'm not sure what all your team does, but try doing as much CAD, Scouting, PR, and other prep work at home. Basically, since your time at the shop is limited, only do the stuff that can only be done at the shop in that time. Make sense? Lastly, I'm not sure if you were on the team last year but your team had a heck of a rookie season last year. You guys got to worlds last year by being good at mid season changes. Your robot started out last year pretty good but you guys made a major change part way through that let you play at an even higher level. I bet your team can do the same this year. Don't let a bad first competition performance put a damp on your team. If you have any questions or want to talk more in private, fee free to PM me. |
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#8
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Re: Mentors not wanting to stay
I know they have a busy schedules and they have family. Its not like we have asked them to stay late all six weeks. It has just been the last couple days and for all of them not to be there on bag day and not wanting to stay late on day up set some of the member on the team. The fact that we only needed one part ,which broke that day, to be finished and they would not let us go get the part mad us a little mad. We are only a 15 minute drive from andy mark and could have easily got the part and fixed the robot. I personally and on the drive team and we have had hardly any practice time. We did go to a week zero event but left fairly early because we had some major problems. I was on the drive team last year and las year we had a different mentor who always stayed late and two keep in mine two of our mentors are teachers and the other is a retired electrical, so having practice around there work schedule is not a problem.
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#9
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Re: Mentors not wanting to stay
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#10
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Re: Mentors not wanting to stay
Does this include the pit setup day before the first day of quals (Thursday)?
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#11
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Re: Mentors not wanting to stay
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Edit: The admin manual also states that you can work on your robot at competitions when your lock up form has been seen by an inspector and the pits have been opened for robot work. I believe most events allow robot work on pit setup night. If they approve work in the pits on pit set up night, this is NOT including your 6 hours of Unbag time. Last edited by logank013 : 02-24-2016 at 11:36 PM. |
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#12
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Re: Mentors not wanting to stay
Have you asked your mentors what it would take to get them more personally invested?
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#13
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Re: Mentors not wanting to stay
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#14
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Re: Mentors not wanting to stay
I understand your frustration, I was on a team in high school where we had a fantastic group of mentors who, on the weekends, were willing to stay with us as long as we were being productive. On school nights we closed the shop before 11 usually so we had to go home and sleep or do homework.
The team that I now mentor, as a college student has a very different schedule. Our kids don't get out of school until roughly 4:15. Secondly we have kids coming together from 3 different high schools. So we have very limited time to work during the week because we have to bring the kids in right after school and then send them home earlier than we would want to so they can go homework and get some actual sleep. On the weekends however it is a very different story, we obviously have more free time but, we have very few mentors for our team. We have 4 adults that are there most nights and 3 college students, myself included who are there. With few people its hard for us to put in the long number of hours on the weekends to try and make up for the lost time. Just in the past 5 days, not counting today I spent nearly every minute that I wasn't in class or sleeping at the shop, and I was burnt out after last night. So while I may want to stay later on the weekends and do more work I know that I just can't handle doing that all the time. My suggestion is that you really find out what is holding them back from spending more time at the shop and see what you can do to change the situation. |
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#15
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Re: Mentors not wanting to stay
Consider asking for more parents to get involved to serve as mentors. A good number of our team's mentors have students on the team so that helps keep them motivated and interested. It also helps spread the load when you need adults to be present for certain things (i.e. running to AndyMark to pick up a part.)
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