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#1
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Ideas to move in the direction of making FIRST competitions 'fair'
One of the aspects of FIRST that many people have a difficult time grasping and eventually accepting is that the FIRST competition is not fair. We don't try to hide this fact, we have always been very open about it.
There are many reasons why the FIRST competition (the games on the field) are not fair. Teams are not evenly matched. Some teams have vast resources and experience, other have little or none of either. I believe it was necessary for FIRST to be created this way back in 1992. There were only 32 teams, there was only one competition held, so not much could be done to have teams compete on an equal footing. As FIRST grew there were only a few regionals, and eventually the 1st national event - still small by todays standards. Any team that had the funds could attend the Nationals (at WDW no less) every year if they wanted. Now that we are hovering around 1000 teams, with many regionals, some becoming super-regionals, and with 300 teams able to attend the Championship, is it time for FIRST to take steps toward making the competitions more fair? This issue comes up almost every year. People float ideas for different divisions - big teams, small teams, rookie teams, divisions based on funding, years of experience, 100% student built vs mentor designed and built.... Another issue that comes up every year is "FIRST is about inspiration" vs "FIRST is a competition". Big teams with complex and professionally manufactured robots contend that little teams with plywood robots are inspired by the super-robots, even if the little team is trampled by them on the playfield, and has no chance of placing well on their own merits, much less winning the Championship. Over the years I have mentored small teams, and I have watched the students enthusiasm drop on their 1st day of their 1st regional, when they realize they have little chance of placing well, and no chance of winning the event. We have all sat in the bleachers as one by one other teams are picked for the playoffs, and I know how dis-heartened the students feel when the last team is picked, and we are left out. FIRST has taken some steps to keep the smaller teams in the mix. The alliance system, pairing teams at random, gives weak teams the chance to be on the winning side of some matches. At the same time, as FIRST has grown, winning a regional has taken on more importance than getting a nice plastic trophy, it is also an open door to attend the Championship. Saying that FIRST games are all about inspiration isn't the whole story anymore, if the big successful teams get to attend the Championship every year, and the smaller struggling teams don't. So I'm wondering, have we grown big enough yet, do we have enough teams and regionals now, to take some steps toward making FIRST fair, like other sporting events? Ways to allow teams to compete on their own level, where they have a reasonable hope that, if they do well, if they try hard and work hard, they could win of their own accord? I don't expect anything to change this year, but I'm interested in hearing other peoples ideas on the subject of how FIRST could be improved to make the competitions more fair. Please treat this thread as a brainstorming session, and hold your wet blankets and buckets of naysayer-cold water at bay. Let the ideas be presented without shooting them down, and lets see where the ideas might led us? |
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#2
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Re: Ideas to move in the direction of making FIRST competitions 'fair'
The simplest (doesn't require whole new divisions), although cleary not ideal, way would be to make a championships for the bottom 25% (or some other amount) ranking teams or some idea like that. It would work, but not very well.
Maybe a division at championships where you can only compete if you haven't won a regional (or bigger) in 2-3 years? This would replace one of the four divisions. This seems better, but still not ideal. If they truly try to fix this problem, it would take some serious work and thought. |
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#3
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Re: Ideas to move in the direction of making FIRST competitions 'fair'
Cromat,
That only works if your definition of fairness is "equal chance to get to Champs, sort of." Probably the better definition to move toword would be "equal chance to build a good robot." It's a very very complicated issue. Teams with more members will inevitably have better odds than teams with few members. Teams with better shops will inevitably have better ability to do more with less materials than other teams. Teams with more money will still be able to iterate through more designs than other teams. So basically, what you're trying to do is find an optimized solution that maximizes fairness and creative potential, and minimizes draconian rules. Now if someone can actually come up with a good equation for that, the solution becomes a trivial numerical problem to solve.... |
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#4
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Re: Ideas to move in the direction of making FIRST competitions 'fair'
I see FVC as that solution. In this competition huge funds do not make a major difference, and having more team members is not necessarily an advantage. It is not the same as the full FRC, with less prestige and excitement, but rather than teams entering the big competition as rookies and getting demolished, I think that Vex is an excellent alternative. It can be an introduction to FIRST. If a high school has a vex team for a year or two, goes to some off-season competitions with borrowed bots as a pre-rookie, then decides to join the full FRC, the team would not be at such a disadvantage.
As for fully leveling FIRST, government funding for rookies and struggling teams would have a huge impact IMO. A few thousand dollars to a team or a government incentive for companies to sponsor FIRST teams would allow newer teams to get some of the resources that the veterans have. This goes back to Dean's homework - make sure your representatives know about FIRST and receive invitations to events in your area. At the same time veterans should reach out as much as possible to both local and distant teams. Check the little box on TIMS that you are willing to mentor a team, and then if a request comes in, see how much you can do. Maybe you can just be an e-mail or phone buddy for a rookie coach, or you could help set up a basic powerpoint presentation for them to get more sponsors. -Steve |
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#5
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Re: Ideas to move in the direction of making FIRST competitions 'fair'
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If that is the limitation, then a parallel for the FRC would be a more restricted KOP class of robots, or a design that uses the KOP drivetrain... something along those lines. At regional events the top 3 teams with the best performace in the "Limited KOP class" might go on to the Championship? Early on FIRST teams were very restricted regarding what could be used on the robot, I think at one point it was something like the KOP, one sheet of plywood, 8 feet of PVC, four square feet of sheet metal.... Would that be similar to the way the Vex competition is set up now? Quote:
Last edited by KenWittlief : 10-26-2006 at 09:27 PM. |
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#6
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Re: Ideas to move in the direction of making FIRST competitions 'fair'
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I would rather not see FIRST limit the available components on the full robot. But, yes, essentially that is what Vex is right now. Right now FIRST allows students to become involved in such a variety of areas that anyone can find something meaningful. We have one mentor who specializes in custom transmissions, and sometimes students work with him during the design process. If we were to restrict drivetrains (or any other component) then current mentors may find lose their current area of specialty, and students would not be able to learn as much in that field. For having the divisions such as Student Built, I think that this may hurt the program a bit and the guidelines would have to be very clear. If a mentor suggests something and makes a sketch in AutoCAD, then watches the student, does that count? What if the mentor cuts the piece himself for safety reasons? And might teams decide that they have a better chance of making the championships/finals by not recruiting engineering mentors? (I would hope not, but there is a possibility) This year I think that FIRST took a step towards fairness with their new alliance selection process (regardless of people's feelings about this, it indisputably gave weaker teams a better chance). Maybe they have something else lined up this year that would help younger teams. -Steve |
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#7
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Re: Ideas to move in the direction of making FIRST competitions 'fair'
I would like to see something that promotes most of the students on a team talking with other teams about the process of building the robot. Talking about how they came up with their ideas. How they found their money.
Some of this is contained in the Chairmans Award submission. Most of this type of information is given to the judges, but I want teams to talk about this with students/mentors/teachers/parents/people just visiting their nephew on Saturday/ on other teams too. I loved being a judge at IRI because most teams jumped at the chance to tell me all about their team and robot. The enthusiasm was amazing. I've heard a lot of presumptions about how teams win. Rather than assuming, I want the how of their win to be questioned. Not in a "you shouldn't do it that way" but in a "How can I learn from them" way. What are the benefits of the way they did it? What are the negatives? How compatible is that with how we want our team to run? Sometimes people need a little encouragement to meet new people to share and interact. I'm not sure how that could be accomplished, but I'm sure someone has an idea. This doesn't necessarily directly address the issue of 'fairness' with regards to winning the robot competition, but I think helps with inspiring teams that don't often, or ever, win the competition. Wetzel Last edited by Wetzel : 10-26-2006 at 11:58 PM. |
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#8
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Re: Ideas to move in the direction of making FIRST competitions 'fair'
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With the ever increasing amount of off-the-shelf resources, such as the IFI and AndyMark transmissions and wheels, IFI Kitbot frame, and the EasyC programming environment, it's becoming easier and easier for rookie teams to build better robots. Rather than seeing strict rules put in place to stifle the "better" teams, I would rather see more resources being developed to help rookie teams build competitive robots. Instead of lowering a team's expectations, let's raise the amount of competitive resources available to them. ![]() |
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#9
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Re: Ideas to move in the direction of making FIRST competitions 'fair'
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Games that have multiple angles to approach from encourage new teams to focus on an area they believe they can do well. If they don't have the experience to develop a complicated arm system or a top-notch autonomous routine, there should be plenty of other ways they can solve the problems presented by the game to remain competitive. I think the 2006 and 2004 games are the best examples of this in recent history. I can't wait to see what opportunities the 2007 game brings. |
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#10
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Re: Ideas to move in the direction of making FIRST competitions 'fair'
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If the rookies have a nice base available to them, along with secondary scoring objectives, the game will be more available to all. There were a lot of corner dumpers this year that could beat some of the shooters. In Phoenix, we were barely shooting correctly and were beaten pretty easily by corner dumping teams (I'm thinking 1006, fast eddie or something like that). |
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#11
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Re: Ideas to move in the direction of making FIRST competitions 'fair'
I have to say there is a little generalization taking place here. At both the Midwest and Milwaukee regionals this year, rookies not only placed well but were in the winning alliance. As a matter of fact I think there were four rookies in the final match at Midwest and three at Milwaukee. The current alliance and scoring structure goes a long way to giving low scoring rookies (or any team) a chance to keep pace with other teams and be in a position to pick alliance partners. I believe that all teams at both these regionals had a great experience. When rookie teams are picking, they do not have the historical knowledge to pick powerhouse teams, they just go on instinct. It is up to the veterans to help insure that all teams at an event feel special, get help when needed and enjoy the weekend.
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#12
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Re: Ideas to move in the direction of making FIRST competitions 'fair'
ok 1745 is a team with small numbers(15 kids), little funding(last year we spend $248 on the robot), and little engineering support(I'm the most formally educated mentor on the team).
and we like the way that things are now. yes it may not be "fair", but the way we see it FIRST isn't about winning a robot contest, its about trying your best to complete a really really hard task in a really really short amount of time. just showing up with a finished robot is winning enough for us, any thing more is icing. |
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#13
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Re: Ideas to move in the direction of making FIRST competitions 'fair'
i don't know if I buy it....in our rookie year we went and won at the Peachtree Regional as a rookie with almost no money. I see teams all the time that I know (since I talk with them) don't have a lot of resources build great, competitive machines. Also, I have seen some big money teams squander their resources and end up building a machine that isn't indicative of all their support. I think there are some hasty generalizations being made in this post that may or may not necessarily be accurate. Please consider this as you try to "make competitions more fair" because I think there is an issue with the problem statement that was given.
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#14
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Re: Ideas to move in the direction of making FIRST competitions 'fair'
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The answer could be regions. Have each regional split up into regions (there would be regions for half the amount of alliances, so at the standard 8 alliance regional there would be 4 regions, at a super-regional with 12 alliances there would be 6 regions, etc.). These regions would be split as evenly as possible (7 teams per region at an event with 28 teams, regions not divisible by 4 may have a few regions with 1 team more or less than the others). Most competitions have 8-12 matches played per team in qualifiers. Of these, some would become "region games", in which all of your opponents and partners are made up of teams only from your region. Every team in the region would need to play the same number of region games if possible; ideally a team would also play against and with every team in their region at least once, but the odds of that working out are low I think. Then, when it comes time to declare alliance captains, each Region Winner (the team with the best REGION record, and if that is tied some kind of tiebreaker will need to be invented) will be guaranteed a spot as an alliance captain. This means half the alliance captains will be Region Winners, while the other half are still open to the teams who placed well but just didn't win their region (wildcard spots, bascially). Since Region Winners are based off of your region record, a team that goes 3-8 in the competition overall but 3-0 in their region can become an alliance captain (for winning their region). Now of course the odds are that a team not doing so well will have to face at least one powerhouse team in their region, but if they get the right alliance partners or have a lucky match they can beat them and win the region with that, rather than having to get lucky in numerous matches to place high enough to be an alliance captain with the current system. Now if you found a way of classifying different teams you could try to create regions of all rookies, all teams without mentors, etc. Some teams might get left out if there aren't enough rookies to make a full region, or there's too many, or something like that, but it will give some a better shot. Regions could also be used in Championship divisions as well. |
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#15
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Re: Ideas to move in the direction of making FIRST competitions 'fair'
Well, about the point u made about small teams.
Our team 65 (Huskie Brigade) has 20 Students every year. We do have the resources of GM, but every student has atleast 2 or 3 jobs if not more on the team. Last year, not all of our team even went to Nationals. We had to do everything with a little team. WE know how it feels to be scrunched for the extra hands to do things. We have a strict team and do not let our duties waiver. For the less experienced teams or teams with less resources, they need to be reached out to. Thats one of the reasons we are in FIRST, its to help others. A note to all the newer teams, you should ask for help. Many if not all the other teams will help in anyway they can if possible. I wish all the teams could have an unlimited amount of resources, but that is not the case. We know how it feels to not have lots of money or equipment because GM only sponsers the robot and travel part of our team, we have to raise all the money for the other things such as scouting and other things on the side. But it is worth it, when the team can come together and raise money or help out other people, it makes a good impact on many people. I think that FIRST has made it as fair as possible until some complication shows up, and they will deal with that too |
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