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#76
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Re: Mentor/Student Involvement Philosophies
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#77
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Re: Mentor/Student Involvement Philosophies
There's always BEST Robotics for those who want zero mentor involvement and a level budget of $0 for all teams. It's a fun enough competition for the kids and they can learn from their mistakes rather than from mentor guidance.
Let me recommend that those who think that robotics competitions should be run that way check out BEST, and stop suggesting that FRC should be run that way. |
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#78
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Re: Mentor/Student Involvement Philosophies
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If there is a single competition out there with a level playing field I'd love to see it. In every high-level competition the playing field is uneven. Sports teams have different budgets to recruit players; racing teams have different budgets for testing, consumables, and driver salary; Olympians from different countries have different levels of coaching skill and training facilities; companies have different budgets, resources, and facilities for developing their products. Life is not even, and FRC is a good object lesson for this. If you are unhappy with your team's resource level, do whatever you can to improve it. A given team's situation can be improved, which is a superior alternative to bringing down other teams' capabilities with rules. |
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#79
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Re: Mentor/Student Involvement Philosophies
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My first FRC exposure was 2004, and my first season was 2005. I after seeing championships those two years, I was incredibly jealous of 254. They were a NASA team, in Silicon Valley, their robots look incredibly professional. They were powder coated, and they had a spare at home to practice with. How could we ever compete with a team like that? It took a couple of years before I really understood that there is nothing that special about their robots, or their fabrication process. I mean that in the most complimentary way possible. They are simple, they just work. I cannot recall ever seeing a feature on one of their bots that would not have been fabricated anywhere else in the country. There was no reason other teams couldn't build the same level of machine in the same time frame with resources available in their area. This is the case for 99% of the top robots in FRC. There is (or rather was) a secret sauce to being one of the top teams in FRC, but it has nothing to do with specific sponsors donating time or materials. However Karthik presents every year at championships on how you do it, and 1114 (and other teams) have posted it right on their website. Timelines, how to analyze a game, its all there. On a slight tangent, when did NASA teams become a negative thing? There are a ton of NASA teams, covering the full range of competitive levels, and budgets. I recently ran into this with local mentors, and have seen it on here. |
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#80
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Re: Mentor/Student Involvement Philosophies
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(PS: I am pretty sure you meant that in a "I'll believe it when I see it" sense and not in the "Let me get my popcorn" sense) Last edited by Wayne TenBrink : 12-02-2015 at 12:54. |
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#81
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#82
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Re: Mentor/Student Involvement Philosophies
If you don't like peanut butter don't eat it, don't try and stop everyone else from eating it.
If you don't like First don't do it. Also don't eat First. |
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#83
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Re: Mentor/Student Involvement Philosophies
Can we please stop with the "dead horse" emoticons and generally cynicism towards these topics? I'm please most of this thread has been productive and insightful, and I fully realize that this topic has been discussed ad naseum before. However, just because its something that has been discussed before doesn't mean that all FRC participants have had a chance to engage in the discussion, or even absorb previous ones. If you're going to dead horse, at least reference some particular discussions from the past (and preferably, highlight particularly insightful posts), rather than simply being dismissive of the concerns presented by those you don't agree with. Regardless of the consensus on Chief Delphi, this is still a contentious issue for many FRC participants. Being dismissive towards a minority opinion is not the proper way to handle it (on or off of Chief Delphi).
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#84
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Re: Mentor/Student Involvement Philosophies
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This started a fundamental change in how our club operates. Outreach became a vital part of our club's activities. We'll show off our robot to pretty much anybody at pretty much any time. We march in parades. We visit local tech companies. We go to elementary schools. We talk to the Chamber of Commerce and School Board. We know just how important our FIRST program is in our community and we make it our mission to make sure that the rest of the community knows it, too! We then ask for help. Sometimes we get help. Sometimes we don't. We always offer to come back, though.... We write letters to friends, community leaders, family members and so on. We make sure that everybody knows just how expensive it is to run a good club... And it is amazing how generous the community can be. We now operate on a budget of well over $100K. We serve over 100 kids (but only charge $50 to participate for the year)... We have plenty of money for training materials, extra robots, etc. We have the monetary capacity to do anything we want to do in order to compete at the highest levels. It wasn't that hard: it just took patience, a little time and a little work. Instead of being envious of teams that benefit from generous sponsors, go out and get them yourself. We look at our team as a small business. If our business is going to thrive, we need to maintain a strong and steady cash flow. That money is not just going to come to us. Rather, we need to actively seek it out. |
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#85
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Re: Mentor/Student Involvement Philosophies
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#86
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Re: Mentor/Student Involvement Philosophies
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![]() Sorry, I know, not helpful - but we need a little comic relief in here. There are some great insights so far though. |
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#87
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Re: Mentor/Student Involvement Philosophies
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#88
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Re: Mentor/Student Involvement Philosophies
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I will say that this last sentiment though, isn't one that I am particularly fond of. My first year on the team I was very frustrated at how suggestions like "just go out and get sponsorship" and "it only takes a little time and a little work" were not at all helpful. The specifics of the 'how' and the 'what' it takes to secure multi-thousands dollar sponsorships are often very challenging. Some people are in much better positions to get in touch with generous corporations than others. For us anyway, it took a lot of time and a lot of work. And "just going out to get sponsors" failed for a long time until we refined our approach, and we are no where near 100K, but are still comfortable financially. For instance, all my high school team needed to do to get a couple thousand was to roll up to the school board and give a full presentation, robot demo, Q&A, and student testimonial. If it were that easy for my current team last year we would still be swimming in green ![]() All of that said, there are currently tons of companies that make getting money as simple as filling out a grant application and maybe giving a presentation or two. And I cannot express how truly grateful I am to those organizations. Opening your doors to all teams is magnificently generous. Sorry, that's probably a long rant to basically say that I agree with absolutely everything else in your post. I don't mean to derail the conversation! |
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#89
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Re: Mentor/Student Involvement Philosophies
OOOHHH! Life isn't fair I'm told. How many of you squawking that sentiment have access to a sponsor with CNC equipment? Consider yourself lucky. And I'm willing to make a large wager most teams don't. We had one once. But with the economy as it is, they couldn't support us any longer. So we adapted to what we have. And then there is the lack of machine shops. Kansas City use to have shops scattered throughout the city. Not any more. Most of that work has moved to Mexico or China. I started working in a machine shop back in 1974. I have seen and experienced the change. And I don't see NASA building a shop here anytime soon.
Getting back to the rules, for the Robot: 4.4 Budget Constraints R9 The total cost of all items on the ROBOT shall not exceed $4000 USD. All costs are to be determined as explained in Section 4.4: Budget Constraints. Exceptions are as follows: A. individual COTS items that are less than $1 USD each and B. KOP items R11 The BOM cost of each non-KOP item must be calculated based on the unit fair market value for the material and/or labor, except for labor provided by Team members (including sponsor employees who are members of the team), members of other Teams, event provided Machine Shops and shipping. How many Squawkers here could build a robot for less than $4000 if they had to count CNC machining time at $100+ per hour and all materials? (Programming and run time for just 1 or 2 parts would be even more costly.) Very few in my estimation. I don't care if you continue to use your machine shop sponser, you just need to count it in your budget. Do they have rules in other sports to even the playing field? Yes they do! Ever heard of "salary caps"? NASCAR has a host of rules to keep the cars alike. Do I need to go on? So there you have it. Life is either the 'haves' or the 'have nots'. The 'haves' never want to change the rules because they would lose their advantage. Seems to work out the same in First. Last edited by mentorDon : 12-02-2015 at 16:03. |
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#90
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Re: Mentor/Student Involvement Philosophies
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Guess what? We get by without it, and we keep on pushing for machining sponsors around us throughout the year. So far, no luck - but that doesn't mean we don't push really dang hard every year. Life's not fair. Good things come to those who bust their butts and work for it. Does that always get you what you want? Certainly not, but at least you're better for having tried. I'd rather see continuous effort towards improvement (with minimal results) than keyboard-warrior complaints about what others have. It's the same-old we see in this community every time a discussion like this comes up - raise the floor, don't lower the ceiling. |
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