To the OP:
Bah.
To the OP:
Bah.
I think you really need to study up on the values of FIRST.
To the OP:
Go look at MORT’'s fully powdered, fully CNC manufactured robot from this year.
Some facts:
Professionalism is something that is taught. It’s absurd you think students aren’t capable of designing nicely machined and powdered robots. The fact that they can is a testament to their mentors.
You need some self reflection if you think your own kids aren’t capable of this.
PS as a former Philly mentor myself, I know your team very well. If you want to be more competitive maybe you need to change up how you strategize, design, build, and iterate your machines.
Alright this time I’m gonna be the one to suggest a mod shut down the thread, all that has needed to be said has been said and a lot of the responses have been getting less and less GP.
40+ posts between midnight and way too early in the morning on a topic that’s been rehashed literally 1000 times on this forum??? You all must be like me and couldn’t sleep with excitement for the Detroit division announcement to drop… Any moment now…
Can’t wait to compete with my mentor built robot at Champs. We were hoping to get an exemption from FIRST to run an all mentor drive team. /s
Yeah where is that announcement.
Hi Bobby,
While I do not think that there is anything wrong with mentors working with students, I also think you are grossly underestimating what students can do by themselves. Since you are in MAR, I think you should know that one of this year’s DCMP winners, 2590, is almost entirely student built. No mentors touched the CAD, and the students built every part in the school. There was no “factory”, just the high school’s tech lab and a lot of extremely dedicated students. I know that the students on the team take it as a huge compliment when someone accuses them of being a mentor-bot.
Next year, I encourage you to stop by other teams pits to learn more about their build process, it might surprise you.
It always irks me how these type of posts always downplay how smart and talented high school students can be. In this day and age of COTS and VexPro, it is not an unreasonable task for high school students with a little mentor support to design and build a clean robot.
I just wanna throw my name into the hat. 2976 has just one professional mentor, and we have a strictly student led, built, strategized, etc team. We qualified to champs this year, and are actually doing quite well for ourselves in Houston. The way we did this was by building within our means, and by building efficiently.
Folks, we need to tone things down a bit. If team chooses student built as the best way that is not disrespecting teams that more mentor driven. Also teams that are mentor driven by choice are not disrespecting student run teams.
Teams choose the way that works for them and we should be accepting that behavior. I have seen much creativity and inspiration in both styles.
Instead of the mentor student built battle. May be we should be focusing on FRC’s dirty unspoken of problem. Take any regional or district competition. Look at the bottom 25% of the robots. They have problems. It’s common for everyone to rave about the top 25% but little is discussed about helping the bottom 25%. If your team is successful, What can you do to help the bottom. We try, it’s hard.
This. ALL of this - this is why we mentor this is why we do what we do.
Some of the best teams, IMO, are those that leave students inspired, empowered, and prepared. I could sit here and name at least 20 (probably more like over 100) teams that consistently win events and have COMPLETELY student built machines, from prototype, to CAD, to build, to program. Yes, these teams have mentors that teach them how to do what they do but THAT IS HOW YOUR PROGRAM DEVELOPS. Students take what they learn from mentors and pass that along for generations, just like families pass on traditions.
These teams I referenced also earn both machine and team awards at events… but that’s besides the point. Everyone else in this thread has said it and I’m going to say it too… when you have students that are motivated you will see incredible results. Because not only will they be motivated to invoke change in the program but they will inspire others to join and those others will have the same infectious spirit.
@OP, I will also have to disagree. My team is not a top tier team by any means, and our capabilities this year were below what we hoped they would be at going in, but our robot still looked nice. And while we didn’t win the regional, we came back from 46th to 21st with no mentor at all present. We encountered several problems with manipulators on our Robot that were not preset on practice day, (being the only day we had a mentor there), and on our first scheduled match we noticed “oh dang we are really underpreforming from yesterday”. After which for most matches day one and the first few of our matches day 2 were lost. putting us at rank 46. After which the team members, without a mentor even being present, managed to fix the problems on the bot and get us up to rank 26, thanks to the help of our alliance teammates and getting the spare RP we managed to climb up to the so called “ideal-range” for rankings. While we were not picked to be on an alliance we still managed to climb up nearly half the teams in rankings without a mentor form our team even present at the compition.
The floor for performance in FRC has continued to rise over the past decade, and many of us are thrilled with how much better the bottom 25% looks today. There are many factors at play here: the COTS revolution; the improvement in game design (Auto Quest, for one); and experienced teams that are organized and effective at empowering in the off-season, the build season, and during competition. There are plenty of reasons to feel optimistic about this issue.
and get us up to rank 21*
Really wish I could edit my posts.
you can’t?
Nope. I am unsure at this point if it is a reputation problem or a post count problem. I’ve had this account a little over a year now and yet I still cannot edit my posts, nor post new threads without the ‘new user’ waiting period
^^ This.
This summer, as well as build sessions, we’re doing a handful of short courses. Most of them have adult mentors teaching, but we have three incoming seniors certified in AutoCAD, and they’ll be teaching that one. Coach Travis and I are among the students in **that **class.
This has become the bigger part of this argument for me. For a very long time, I had to just sort of take the people that claimed you could have a beautiful and functional robot that was largely or entirely the product of student work at their word. We didn’t really have any teams like that in MN when I was a student. We had some aesthetic teams that weren’t particularly good, and some good teams that weren’t particularly aesthetic. That’s changed a bit now, but that’s how I remember it when I was a student.
Last year, I had the opportunity to watch a local team make a Championship winning robot. I am talking about FTC 8686, Height Differential. Some folks from Minnesota will recognize them… it’s a team of four guys, who practice on a field that takes the place of a living room in one of their houses. Last year, through six tournaments, I watched them create this beauty.
I don’t feel qualified to tell their story entirely… I am not a mentor for them, though some of my friends are. I can only speak of what it’s like from outside their team looking in, and being inspired by what they’ve been able to achieve. Yes, they didn’t get where they are without some fantastic support from their mentors… but those kids designed every part on that robot. Many of the parts were milled by them, parts printed, and I can vouch for the fact that their powder coating was also done by them, at the GOFIRST shop. Yes, some parts were machined or printed by a sponsor… but they were sponsors that they visited, learned from, and in at least one case interned at over the summer.
So imagine my surprise when I overhear a team at the Championship complaining that Caterpillar builds their robot. It’s insulting, and it’s offensive to the incredible amount of work those students put into that robot. I’ve never been a member of a team that built an incredible robot for FRC or FTC, but the more I think about people actively and loudly declaring students’ work is not their own, the more is anger me.
This attitude also perpetuates a myth that excellence isn’t actually achievable. It is. Yes, it can be hard to see a path there sometimes. That path can take many a twisting turn. It has hard climbs. It has setbacks. But teams are more than capable of overcoming those setbacks, making those climbs, following the path, and part of the job of mentors is to help teach how to navigate that path that we’re all on. Sometimes that means showing the way, other times it means following.
Any chance of video?