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#1
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Does robotics attract the right students?
I do not mean "wrong" as in we are attracting bad kids, but we are attracting kids who already have a set goal of going into STEM. Aren't we trying to attract kids who are on the other end of the spectrum? My mentality was that majority of the kids on the team would have joined regardless of the mission as long as it had robots. I can confidently say majority of the students who are on robotics already had the vision to become engineers and scientists, or at least were entertaining the thought of it.
What can we do to attract kids other than those who already have a goal in STEM? I know there are teams with dedicated business, and other non "build" departments within the team. However, is that really fulfilling FIRST's mission? I noticed many of the students end up doing something non build related. I am in no way trying to put the build team up on a pedestal, but I do notice it, like with many others have. Are we doing the job correctly if 80% of the team is in the stands cheering with a handful of people in the pits working on the robot? I have never been a "non build" team member; I have always been a programmer and on the drive team. It breaks my heart to see kids feel "disposable"; hell, I am the lead programmer and I feel that way sometimes. Are we allocating the jobs correctly? I know, not everyone was made to be a Programmer, Welder, Electrician or anything, but with the ~100 students who signed up for the team makes me worried. I know that all 100 will not show up, but a big chunk will. There are simply not enough jobs for that many kids, and I worry that many of them will be turned away from STEM for that. |
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#2
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Re: Does robotics attract the right students?
I had an interesting conversation about the self-selection of participants in extracurricular activities with an attorney who is running for state legislature come 2012.
Here are some statistics on the five public high schools in Bellevue, WA, all of which have FRC teams, taken from the Washington State Office of Superintendent of Public Instruction (OSPI). Code:
International(492) Newport(948) Bellevue(949) Interlake(1899) Sammamish(2412) Years with team 11 9 9 7 5 Grad Rate 100.0% 96.0% 95.3% 89.4% 86.2% Science test scores 92.3% 80.1% 74.9% 69.1% 51.4% Teacher Experience (yr) 11 12 9 10 10 Student:Teacher Ratio 16 17 18 16 13 This suggests that whether or not students are on the team has no bearing on the fact that the presence of FIRST programs (or, at least FRC) enhances the educational environment of the schools. --- Moreover, I personally don't agree with the self-selection thing, if for no other reason than that I personally was not a STEM fanatic when I first joined my FLL team. I do think that peer pressure, in this case a fantastic thing, causes students who otherwise never would've joined a team to show up at meetings with their friends or boyfriends or what have you. Even if everyone in this group isn't all retained, there are undoubtedly many who become immersed in STEM. |
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#3
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Re: Does robotics attract the right students?
Do you have any data on the scores before FRC? Could the presence of FRC not be the cause of this correlation, instead could the correlation be the result of schools that were already committed to Science (and therefore likely to have better test scores anyway) being more likely to start FRC teams. This would seem especially likely if the scores have not changed much since the teams were started. Though if you can show the scores went up since then your point makes more sense.
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#4
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Re: Does robotics attract the right students?
We try to ask teachers in the school to identify students that would benefit from FIRST - typically the students that appear to have potential but may not be living up to it.
I think it's good to have a mix of students on the team. The overachiever types, the underachiever types, "in" crowd students, "out" crowd students, athletes, art students, etc. In that situation everyone learns a lot from the other students that they normally wouldn't hang out with, and hopefully some of the underinspired get a little inspiration from the alread-inspired (or at least they can see how the ambitious people operate). |
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#5
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Re: Does robotics attract the right students?
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Also, students interested in nonSTEM careers can benefit as well, and not just from learning the basic skills of team dynamics, time scheduling, leadership, public speaking, etc., that can be learned from being on the team. We have had students on our team who have focused on web design, graphics, videography, and have gone to college to study these areas. As for the problem of too many students on the team, well that is a separate problem. I bet this has already been discussed in other threads. |
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#6
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Re: Does robotics attract the right students?
I find it very rewarding to look at the collection of students in our shop and seeing students who are enrolled and succeeding in multiple AP classes working hand in hand with "at risk students" who are struggling to get through high school on a standard diploma.
Do they all want to be engineers? No, but many of them want to go into technical fields and providing them the opportunity to be exposed to project design and management before college is awesome. |
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#7
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Re: Does robotics attract the right students?
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Hope this helped! |
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#8
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Re: Does robotics attract the right students?
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We graduated 6 this past year, and all of them were profoundly impacted by what they did on the team - and some of them never worked on the robot! It was amazing to see them all considering majors that related to the areas of the team they worked with. Quote:
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#9
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Re: Does robotics attract the right students?
What Eagle33199 said. Either make your program bigger, or make your amount of students smaller. As a quote from Karthik, "Always work within your means". It's pretty self explanatory, so I think you know what to do from here.
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#10
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Re: Does robotics attract the right students?
Let's assume for the sake of discussion a hypothetical situation in which 100% of your students that signed up for the team (1 or 100, doesn't matter) already were unequivocally convinced that they wanted to be an engineer since the age of 5 and have already signed up for their college of choice by the time they joined the team. The fact in this situation is that even if you aren't "converting" non-STEM students into STEM junkies, you are providing them with an experience and education that they will not get elsewhere. At least once a week, I hear students on our team that are undeniably good at math and science comment about learning something new in the implementation of math and science. We have statistics from even our short 3 years in FRC that show that even the already STEM focused students benefited to some extent from our program. Basically, IMHO, in the end the mix of students isn't as important as spreading the word of FIRST and giving the student a unique experience.
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#11
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Re: Does robotics attract the right students?
These are good questions, and they are worth discussing.
First off, here is FIRST's Mission Statement, which I think helps to answer your questions: Quote:
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#12
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Re: Does robotics attract the right students?
IMO FRC teams pragmatically generate, at best, better problem solvers. It doesn't matter if the student is an English major in college because he/she was on the CA team or business team. Being motivated to participate and succeed in a large-scale project is what benefits any student, regardless of that student's educational background. Better problem solvers nets us a better-prepared employment force that can handle changes in industry, ergo can keep themselves employed (and on a more selfish note, will keep my 401k portfolio from tanking every few years...).
Yet regarding producing new Engineers -- I recall reading a study where most engineers in college were already curious or motivated to enter engineering before they entered high school. I'll have to find the article. In practice, this seems to hold true since our team has had much better recruiting opportunities with the kids we (and by extension, the county) have already inspired with FLL/VEX/SeaPerch at the lower grades. This engineer recruitment cycle may seem like we're taking the 'easy' road by not trying to recruit high students who aren't already interested in engineering -- yet we don't see it that way. We see it as simply inspiring new engineers at a younger age, then using our robotics programs to better prepare them for hard problem solving, with the hope that most of them will continue on to engineering as a career. Additionally, many of the high school students recruit their friends, and also go to the FLL teams and mentor them, creating a sort of organic self-sustaining generator of new engineers. It works for us, and tbh I'm glad we have the problem of 'too many applicants' every year. |
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#13
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Re: Does robotics attract the right students?
The students that I work with never touch the robot. They instead write the award submissions, spec sheets, and outreach programs for our team. Many of them are insanely talented in graphics and other arts. Yes many of them also simply cheer on the team at competition when they aren't giving presentation or talking to other teams or judges but so what, that’s exactly what everyone on the robots side does when they aren’t driving or fixing the bot. The big question is, what does this have to do with FIRST's mission?
These students, who may not have had an understanding of what science and technology can do for them now have appreciation of it. They get why it’s important for everyone to study STEM even if they are not planning on going into a STEM field. They understand how studying STEM can lead to more creative and innovative students in all fields of study. I ask you this... how many of the world’s great innovation were developed from ideas presented first by writers and artists. Here's a hint, watch Star Wars or Star Trek and read some Julies Verne and keep a notebook as you will need it to keep track. |
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#14
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Re: Does robotics attract the right students?
There is more to the STEM robotics domain than FRC. FIRST has more programs and there are other completely separate programs.
If anyone connected to an FRC team wants to attract a more diverse set of students, or wants to influence students who aren't already pointed toward a STEM career; I recommend either finding some way to get them onto that FRC team, or convincing them to try a semi-relaxed 3-month stint on a VRC team, or try coding up a good BotBall entry, or.... The question, as it is posed is really an ill-formed question. It mashes together an assumption that FRC is the only program under discussion, that it is the FRC program's job to attract the "right" students, and that the influence of local circumstances is less important than the program's features. I do agree that David raises an important point, but the topic is so tangled up in program-type, and local circumstances that useful answers (instead of useful suggestions) are very hard to come by if the questions and ensuing discussions aren't carefully structured. There are way too many variables involved for a broadly framed question to have an answer other than "It depends." On the other hand, the door is wide open for plenty of useful suggestions for ways to attract many types of students into whatever STEM program is right for the students in question. Some folks have already posted them. Personally I'm a fan of using the lower-cost and highly-accessible VRC and FTC sorts of programs to involve/attract as many students as possible, and then building bigger-budget (assuming the "community" is engaged and supportive) programs on top of the solid foundation created by them. To David's point, and speaking broadly and in metaphors; I think a walk, then trot, then run approach; will wind up attacting more students of all stripes than trying to start off running. Pyramids are more stable, and enclose more volume, than towers. Blake Last edited by gblake : 25-10-2011 at 14:50. |
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#15
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Re: Does robotics attract the right students?
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This made me think about something that happened to me recently. I was wearing my old team sweater and a stranger came up to me and started talking about FIRST. One of the first things she asked me was where was my purple jacket (at my university, almost all the engineering students get leather jackets and dye them purple). When I said that I don't have one because I'm studying Film and English, she was confused. "But you were in FIRST!" This in turn made me think: am I a "failed FIRST student" because I wasn't "inspired" enough to become an engineer? I would say no. I got into FIRST because I was a member of my elementary school's LEGO robotics club. I had fun. So I joined FRC in grade 9. I decided the next year to forgo working on the robot in order to work on awards and scouting. I decided building wasn't my thing, so I did something else. And now I'm studying Film. This quote sums up what FIRST is all about: Quote:
Only a select part of the population can be employed as engineers, just like only a select part of the team can work on the robot. But these people who aren't working on the robot are just as if not more important to changing the culture than the students who become engineers are. Just because a student can't work on a robot and therefore doesn't become inspired to become an engineer (or turn away from STEM) doesn't mean that they have failed FIRST. Instead, they are spreading it into areas that otherwise wouldn't be concerned with FIRST at all (like Film and English students ) |
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