Does Affirmative Action fit under the values of FIRST

When our team was experiencing rapid growth we instituted a process whereby team members had to fill in an application form, indicating which roles they were interested in filling and what experience they had to support their ability to perform those roles. They also had to get signatures from two teachers attesting to their ability to work in a group setting and to have demonstrated good work habits in their classes.

From this we selected the applicants based solely upon their skills and experience. (Strangely we were able to find a space for everyone who applied… the simple process of having to fill in an application form helped keep a lid on numbers.)

It would be ideal to include everyone who wants to be on the team, but it is likely far more important to ensure that everyone who IS on the team has a quality experience.

Not all of the teachers sponsoring our team were technology education teachers. One of the most important adult mentors on our team was a business education teacher. She organized a number of students with business interests to manage our communications, finance and fundraising. Remember… it’s not all about the robot.

Finally, in regard to affirmative action, it can be implemented in a number of ways. The negative responses to a.a. usually come when it is implemented by selecting one candidate over another because of some characteristic… gender, ethnicity, etc. that is unrelated to the job at hand. A different approach, being taken by a number of police departments and fire departments here in Metro Vancouver, is to work hard to recruit applicants from under represented groups, but then to select the very best applicants from the entire pool based on job-related criteria (and yes, the ability to speak multiple languages, in a multicultural city, is an important job related criteria).

Basically, however, if you look at affirmative action from the point of view of “why are some groups underrepresented”, and “how do we increase our appeal to underrepresented groups”, it is possible to have a valid, meaningful, non-discriminatory selection process that selects the very best candidates on the basis of merit, but from a larger pool of applicants.

A good question… one of those learning experiences for the team members that reinforces the idea that FIRST isn’t just about the robot.

Jason

This. Differentiating based on any superficial criteria (gender, race, or other demographic) only serves to reinforce the false idea that they matter. Do not use affirmative action ideas to select which team members are cut, should it come to that.

Here, we have a volunteer mentor (parent) who went through the steps to become qualified to supervise children. The person is also able to hold keys. It basically consists of a background check, and a bunch paperwork. You may be able to do something similar if your school agrees to it and you have someone willing.

You should never make any decision in life based on a superficial demographic, and especially not when dealing with High School Students. If someone gets cut for a reason that they cannot control, then it usually results in a nasty situation.

A long time ago, someone I know was cut from a drive team because ‘The Drive Team needed a female member’ - even though, he was a much more qualified human player than she was. He and his friends weren’t very happy for the rest of the season and that negative attitude infected the rest of the team.

Systematic oppression of people based upon “superficial” criteria is a real thing that happens in the real world. Sometimes, throwing someone a bone and giving them a shot – even if they’re not the best candidate for the task – will save their life.

If you had $1 million dollars to give away, would you give it to a person that already has $10 million dollars or to a person that has $10?

I wouldn’t give it away. I may trade it for goods or a services though. If the person with $10 had the services/goods I wanted I would provide the money to them in exchange for said items. Same with the owner of the $10 million.

But hey, if you are giving out $1 million I’d be more than willing to take it off your hands.

Basically, I think that students should be given a chance based on fair exchange, what they bring to the team in exchange for what they get out of it.

I don’t see how this is relevant, if you decided that your team should only be made up of the most unqualified students or some percentage of under-qualified students, or some percent of lottery students to give everyone a chance that is your choice (Although I personally oppose it). But why should the unqualified girl, or black kid or whatever get on over someone in the same position with only a superficial difference?

EDIT: Also, your analogy has many differences from robotics. If I had money to give away I would give it to the person for whom it would make the most difference (in this analogy the person with $10), similarily in robotics you give spots to people who will get the most out of the team, and that is often the person who puts the most into the team (I mean in devotion not skills).

The difference is not superficial. An African-American student or a female student each face different sorts of institutionalized discrimination throughout their entire life. The reason that they may be less qualified for a position on your team is precisely because they’re African-American or female – nothing superficial about it.

Absolutely not. I’m a girl, and I would not at all like that I may have been chosen for a spot over someone more fitting, simply because I lacked a y chromosome.

1.) They must be trained technology education teachers. As far as I know, this requires a degree, so we can’t ordain anyone. Mentors, other teachers, and parents don’t count.

2.) So far, we have a system that allows everyone to be doing something, be it machining, design, videography, etc…

Thanks! Thats really useful information. And I agree, it is more of an ethical issue than a legal one.

Yes, as answered above. As long as we keep it at around 50, everyone is doing something all the time, since any given night, only 40-45 will show up.

It’s the exact same brick wall we’re running up with.

The school does have a TSA option, but I don’t know how much we want to form an FTC of VEX program. It doesn’t really solve the funding problems. It also raises the issue of there being a higher level of the team that some people aren’t on. It could even turn into an equality issue if more minorities were on the FTC team.

When I use the term ‘best’ I mean most inspired. Most ready and willing to be enthusiastic in FRC.

Our team is pretty heavily built upon everyone having a role in the team, and coming to most, if not all meetings during the build season. There are some members who are essential, and would be there every day. I worry that we would be unable to propagate a new crop of ‘essential members’ if everyone couldn’t be there every day. It also adds a whole new level of complication and headache.

They gave us the extra teacher last year, by executive order, so we’re hoping for it again this year. We’ve also prepared a presentation for them, hopefully we’ll be able to give it!

1.) We want to influence the most people in the best way each. Essentially a net goodness. So, for example, if we can influence 20 people with 5 units of arbitrary goodness, that is not as good as influencing 10 people with 10 units. Or atleast to keep it equal.

It’s not 100% up to us as the team.

Socioeconomic status is another thing we are being asked to help include on the team, as well as race, sex, etc…

Good point.

Thats our last plan if all else fails. I responded earlier why mentors can’t be included.

We really do have to meet at the school; we do homework at the school until the meetings start, have an excellent machine shop at the school, and our space is sufficient enough. I responded earlier about subsets meeting at different times.

Our school district is the Ithaca City School District. There has been quite a lot of conflict in the last few years about the teachers union here: Most all teachers are part of it, and there were some serious issues with getting their contract renewed.

1.) We’ve noticed this too, but we’re not going to weed 30 people out by making them fill out forms.

2.)Good point, but since we’ve already had our first new members meeting, the recruiting phase is pretty much over.

3.)True, but we still want the most dedicated, interested people on the team, if their interest is in the robot, then great. If it’s in web design then great. If all they want to do is community service, thats great too.

Not possible at our district, as aforementioned.

I would be so mad if that happened to me.

An interesting perspective, but will the person you give the 10 million to squander it?

So, that should cover responses. I will write up my opinion later tonight, but I have to leave right now. Thanks for all who took the time to put in their opinions, it is very much appreciated.

As an African-American I myself have never faced discrimination to my face (years ago when I went to a store with my friend after I passed by the front desk one of the clerks said to the other pointing at me “Keep an eye on that $@#$@#$@#$@#$@#$@#.” He almost went over the counter after the idiot) and I do think Affirmative Action is flawed but lets not kid ourselves here,there is hatred and discrimination still in this country and in this world and it needs to be dealt with. The staus quo is all fine and dandy when it favors one group of people every time all the time but to think that the “lower classes” are just going to get tired of being second class citizens and are going to suddenly lift themselves up by the bootstraps is inane.
So to those who say that Affirmative Action is a great evil does that mean you support the staus quo or do you have something better that will cure the ills that hundreds of years of wrongdoing have caused so many who have so little to fall behind?

EDIT: -SNIP- looks like this got posted earlier after all.

Now my opinion!

I think that affirmative action is the completely wrong way to go about it–as far as cuts go. I am all for targeting recruiting to certain socioeconomic groups that would not usually be interested, but I can see no way shape or form in which it would be fair to choose one candidate over another purely for their race, gender, or socioeconomic condition. As the vice president of the team, I will do everything in my power to make sure this does not happen.

Thanks everyone for your opinions, it has been really great to hear other sides of the story, as well as multiple people backing me up. Keep the opinions coming, and I’ll keep you guys updated as to what ends up happening.

Okay, let’s put Madison’s million dollar proposition another way. I don’t have a million to give away, but I do have volunteer hours. Hundreds of them every year, freely given to an FRC team. I couldn’t imagine trading this time for goods or services.

Having to reduce team size for what seems like an arbitrary reason stinks, plain and simple. My view is as a mentor though and if I had to participate in the reduction, I’d think long and hard about what kids benefit the most. Is it the kids who already know how to dedicate themselves to the cause, or is it the kids who haven’t yet learned this? I don’t see where ethnicity or gender would come into this thought process.

Ivan

My team is already one of the biggest teams in MN (over 50 members last year) predicting more this year. With this in mind, we are planning to start multiple FTC teams to make sure everyone has a task to work on. (We have never done FTC before). We plan to have a few veterans lead the FTC teams, but the FTC teams will be the default placement for all freshmen who join, kind of like a Junior Varsity. Grouping FTC mainly by age prevents any attacks about equality.

If needed we will pull up a student on to the FRC team if they have certain skills that the FRC team requires. Our goal is to allow everyone join the team and feel like they are on our team while keeping them busy with meaningful tasks. The FTC teams might help in our intial design process for FRC, but we haven’t really figured everything out yet.

While our teams will meet concurrently, having all the freshmen or all the new members on FTC teams could allow you to more easily meet at different times of the day so you only need 1 teacher.

In terms of money, FTC tends to be less expensive.

I hope this helps and good luck.

Education and Opportunity. Not entitlements. Just the right not to be Kept Down by The Man.

Opportunity and entitlement is certainly a very, very fine line.

If these issues were simple enough for me to have a succinct opinion about, they wouldn’t be challenging.

Methinks the goal would be to equalize opportunity to succeed from the very beginning of one’s life, regardless of race, gender, etc, without resorting to using race, gender, etc. as a criteria for selection.

Then again, nothing’s ever that simple.

I don’t know who I heard this from, but its a brilliant idea:

  • Hold a meeting and include as many people qualified to fill the role of “extra teacher” as possible. Give a presentation and tell them what you do and how great it is.
  • Pass around a calender and ask if each teacher will sign up for a day or two to supervise.

I’ve been told that some teachers, after seeing what really goes on, WANTED to come more often to supervise.

This allows the teachers to help out without giving a huge time commitment. The days that don’t get volunteers might require some voluntolding by high-er ups (as you mentioned this has happened before), surprise voluntolding (students asking teachers really nicely), or condensed meetings (only x amount of kids working on projects a, b, and c can come).

Solutions that don’t involve barring students! :smiley:

Ahh, didn’t catch that one, I did mean most skilled but referred to it as best. Further clouding the issue.

And I didn’t think of Katie’s solution, unless your school requires you to pay the teacher, see if you can get shifts setup. Maybe a teacher will sit around grading tests after their exam days that they would normally do in their office instead.

I would ask folks to temper their discrimination concerns with the understanding that not all programs have the same goals. Madison and several others are trying to help show that some times those factors come into play more than you might think.

Both Purdue ME and a previous employer had programs that sounded really neat. You got to take products apart and reverse engineer them. The employer based one even had a competition format. The traditional “best candidate” would be someone with a ton of experience working on these sorts of things, but that was the exact opposite of the programs goals. These programs were specifically designed to help young engineers gain hands on experience. The organizers of the programs did not care who won. Their goal was to make these individuals into better engineers.
Both of these programs discriminated on age (or year in school) and experience. Groing up on a farm working on tractors, and building cars during afterschool projects actually made me a poor candidate for the program as I had those experiences already.
There were also a lot of older engineers I felt should have gone through the program, but the company wanted to invest in those they may get the most return on, which were not the folks ready to retire.

If your goal is to win matches… Pick the most capable candidate. If your goal is to change lives… Sometimes you pick those that need the most change. Different teams have different goals and different measures of success. Often it is not about how many points made on the scoreboard, but the points you have made in the students mind (compassion, sportmanship, professionalism, work ethic…).