Almost two years ago I got together a group of about 10 my friends who were all FIRST alumni (mostly from teams 610, 771, 1114) with the idea of starting a FIRST team through our university, Queen’s University. Queen’s is one of the top Engineering schools in Canada and has always attracted a large contingent of FIRST students every year, this year I would estimate probably 10-15 new FIRST alumni.
We approached the department and received support for starting a FRC team with a local high school that is actually right on campus (really convenient). We formed K-Botics team 2809 with K.C.V.I. the high school on campus last year and had a very sucessful rookie season, winning rookie all star in Toronto, and Rookie High Seed on Curie. Its been a great collaboration so far, we are quickly becoming the Applied Science (engineering) department main outreach program, being featured in many publications.
For our Applied Science department it makes economic sense to support us, our team is an advertising tool to entice some of the most inspired engineering undergraduates to study at Queen’s. Last year alone 6 of our 7 graduates went on to study science or engineering, and 5 are studying Engineering at Queen’s. That doesn’t account for students from other teams that are now going to be part of our mentoring program this year. For the Department they can directly link the funds they support the team with the funds they receive from incoming FIRST alumni as student tuition.
It will be interesting to see if the cycle of new FIRST alumni coming to Queen’s will sustain the team. We have other mentors, like teachers from the high school, executives from our partner company Transformix, and other local mentors to try and keep the team running at a high level every year. But for us there will be a new group of young mentors every year just like there is a new group of young students every year, its an interesting challenge that will see our team evolve over the years.
We have been working on growing FLL in the area, helping to double FLL in the area to about 10 teams. This has came from our collaboration with the powerhouse FLL team the W.A.F.F.L.E.S who are an amazing group of local home schooled students, a couple of whom have already joined our FRC team. A couple weeks ago we ran a practice FLL tournament for local teams and should be able to run a full FLL tournament next year.
I personally think a University can be a great partner in an FIRST program, especially when its powered by a passionate group of University students who understand FIRST. For us it has worked out great because most of the FIRST teams in Canada are based in southern Ontario, and most of those students end up attending a handful of engineering schools in Ontario. Hopefully there are more situations like ours where a group of FIRST Alumni can start FIRST teams with the support of Universities.
If anyone ever needs advice on how to start a FIRST team at a University or College shoot me an email and I would be willing to help out.