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FIRST LEGO in Louisiana

FIRST LEGO in Louisiana. S tudents T alking about R esearching, A nalyzing, and T argeting E xsting G lobal I ssues on C limate. Scot Marshall, Senior Mentor. 2008 Louisiana Champion Team 1417 - St. Dominic School The S.T.R.A.T.E.G.I.C . Team [New Orleans]. Computer Logon.

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FIRST LEGO in Louisiana

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  1. FIRST LEGO in Louisiana Students Talking about Researching, Analyzing, and Targeting ExstingGlobal Issues on Climate Scot Marshall, Senior Mentor 2008 Louisiana Champion Team 1417 - St. Dominic School The S.T.R.A.T.E.G.I.C. Team [New Orleans]

  2. Computer Logon • Domain: TheACSA • Username: hstud • Password: ACSAhigh123

  3. There’s a FIRST for Every Age FIRST Robotics Competition (1992) FIRST LEGO League (1998) FIRST Tech Challenge (2005 Pilot) Junior FIRST LEGO League (2004 Pilot) K 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 Grade 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 Age

  4. FIRST is a Year-Round Activity CHAMPIONSHIP Junior FIRST LEGO League 4W A FIRST LEGO League Basics Build 12W A FIRST Robotics Competition HS Robotics Class ? 6W 5W FIRST Tech Challenge ? ? Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Jan Feb Mar Apr Not Active in Louisiana yet

  5. FIRST Things First For Inspiration and Recognition of Science and Technology • Began 20 years ago (1989) • Expect to reach over 160,000 Students in 2009 • A 501(c)(3) with a small staff at HQ in Manchester, NH • $22M annual operating budget • $9.7M in scholarships to FIRST participants last year • Over 2000 corporate sponsors • Over 60,000 volunteers world-wide • 5 programs reach every layer of education and industry Sport for the Mind: Combining the excitement of sport with science and technology

  6. The FIRST Team Core Values • We are a team • We have fun • We do the work to find the solutions with guidance from our coaches and mentors • We honor the spirit of friendly competition • What we discover is more important than what we win • We share our experiences with others • We display gracious professionalism in all we do • Gracious Professionalism: • Gracious attitudes and behaviors that are “win-win” • Gracious folks respect others and let that respect show in their actions • Gracious professionals make a valued contribution in a manner pleasing to others and themselves as they possess special knowledge and are trusted by society to use that knowledge responsibly

  7. The Complete FIRST Participant 2005 Champion St. Dominic Sea Dragons • Unique Headwear • (Temporary) Hair Color • Face Paint • Team T-Shirt • Team Name – Sea Dragons • Team Number - 5315 • Yearly Theme – Ocean Odyssey • Color Theme – Purple, Grn, Gld • Sponsors, Logos • Cheer, Song, Chant • Team Buttons • Team Handouts • Noise Maker • Posters • Laptop • Pit Display • Pit Decorations No Advertising!

  8. FIRST in Louisiana • Building LouisianaScience and Technology • A 501(c)(3) All volunteer across Louisiana & Mississippi • A core of 35 that organizes 100+ volunteers to provide: • FIRSTLEGOLeague • BayouRegionalFIRST Robotics Competition • Educational outreach to mentors and students • Tulane University & University of New Orleans sponsor • Seeking additional corporate and private supporters • Seeking mentors to continue building the vision American Petroleum Institute

  9. FIRST in Louisiana Junior Parish Ascension Bossier Caddo Calcasieu E. Baton Rouge E. Feliciana Iberville Jefferson Lafayette Lincoln Orleans Ouchita Plaquemines St. Bernard St. Charles St. James St. Tammany Tangipahoa Terrebonne Washington 1 1 7 7 1 1 1 6 1 2 9 1 1 1 3 1 1 4 2 1 9 2 11 1 1 1 7 1 1 1 1 1 4 1 1 6 1 1 1 1 1 7 1 1 6 1 1 Inception 2008 2008

  10. December 5, 2009 J. D. Meisler Middle School Metairie, LA 2009 Competition Host

  11. Louisiana Centers for Learning FLL FTC FRC Higher Education Shreveport Monroe Alexandria North Shore Baton Rouge Lake Charles Lafayette New Orleans

  12. Educational Tools • Live Participation • Local Live • Seminar • Remote Live • WebEx • Teleconference • Post-Event • Video-on-Demand

  13. There’s a FIRST for Every Student: An Educator’s Perspective • The competition requires students apply engineering principles, science, math and computer programming.  • FIRST promotes excitement for core academics in math and science that few other activities do for all students.  • A natural extension of the competition is more student interest in robotics and engineering electives. • It is the ultimate in hands-on learning for all students - gifted, honors, regular, and children with special needs  • The layers of mentoring provides incredible synergy • A national competition that is supported locally by public & private schools, universities, nonprofits and industry • It is cheaper than football • FLL Team expenses are $700 per Rookie team, $350 for returning teams • FRC Team expenses are $7,000 to $20,000-25,000 depending on lodging

  14. The NXT Generation

  15. The 1-Day FLL Competition • 25% Design • The students perform a 10-minute design review of their robot and its apparatus for 2 judges (no mentor) • 25% Performance • Best of 3 tries on the competition table - 2.5 minutes • 25% Research • 2 minute set-up, 5 minute presentation, 5 minutes for questions, 2-minute take-down (no mentor) • 25% Teamwork • 1 minute explanation from the judges, 7 minutes to solve as a team, 2 minutes questions (no mentor)

  16. 2008 FLL Challenge • 2008 Climate Connections • Est. 137,050 kids worldwide • 10,375 teams • USand Canada • 76,000 kids; 7,600 teams • Worldwide • 42 countries • 454 Qualifying events • 89 Championship tournaments

  17. 2007 FLL Challenge • 2007 Power Puzzle • Est. 105,000 kids worldwide • 10,500 teams (15% growth) • USand Canada • 70,000 kids; 7,000 teams • 260 Qualifying events • 70 Championship tournaments • Worldwide • 35,000 kids; 3,500 teams, 38 countries • 130 Qualifying events • 38 Championship tournaments

  18. FLL Challenge History • 1998: Pilot – 2 Tournaments • 1999: First Contact – Astronauts in Space • 2000: Volcanic Panic – Volcanic Eruption • 2001: Arctic Impact – Arctic Research • 2002: City Sights – Urban Planners • 2003: Mission Mars – Robotic Exploration • 2004: No Limits – World of the Disabled • 2005: Ocean Odyssey – Undersea Ecology • 2006: Nano Quest – Molecular Science • 2007: Power Puzzle - Energy Louisiana Participation

  19. FLL Challenge History • 2003 Mission Mars • Teams • 5,000 teams • 42,000 kids • 200 tournaments • China, Brazil and South Korea joins FLL International with a Pilot tournaments. • 1998 Pilot • Teams • 1.600 kids • 2 Pilot tournaments • FIRST and LEGO Company pilots the FIRST LEGO League concept. • 2000 Volcanic Panic • Teams • 15.000 kids • 50 tournaments in the USA • FLL International Pilot Tournament in Norway hosted by FIRST Scandinavia. • 2001 Artic Impact • Teams • 18,500 kids • 59 tournaments • FLL International Pilot Tournaments in the UK hosted by Young Technologists and in Germany hosted by Hands-on-Technology. • 1999 FIRST Contact • Teams • 9.500 kids • 9 tournaments in the USA • Official launch of the FIRST LEGO League program in the USA. • 2004 NO Limits • Teams • 6,000 teams • 50,000 kids • 210 tournaments • Japan, South Africa, Turkey and Mexico joins FLL International with a Pilot tournaments. • 2002 City Sights • Teams • 3,001 teams • 27,009 kids • 119 tournaments • France joins FLL International with a Pilot tournament in Paris. Singapore Science Center hosts first official FLL International tournament in Singapore. • 2005 Ocean Odyssey • Teams • 7,460 teams • 60,000 kids worldwide • 56 tournaments (US) • 12 tournaments (outside US & Canada)

  20. Sample Task Assignments Research Project • Researcher • Script and Choreography • Research Report Team Spirit / Marketing • Team Shirt & Artwork Design • Research Project Props • Scrapbook • Press Relations • Community Outreach • Fund Raising Management • Project Scheduling • Rubric & Awards • Evaluation & Judging • Competition Rules • Forums Robot Competition • Strategy • Hardware Design • Software Design • Robot Operator (2)

  21. The Coaches’ Promise(the really hard part!) • The children come firstFLL is about the children having fun and getting excited about science and technology.  Everything my team does starts and ends with that principle. • The children do the workThis is their opportunity to learn and grow.  The children on my team do all the programming, research, problem solving, and building.  Adults can help them find answers, but cannot give them answers or make decisions. • My team is comprised of 10 or fewer members(all team members participate on only 1 team), registered as an official FLL team, and all team members are no older than 14 on January 1st of the Challenge year. • FLL communicates with my team via my primary email address, and I am responsible for reading and relaying all aspects of FLL guidelines and rules to my team, other coaches, volunteers, and parents. • I will encourage my team members, other coaches, volunteers, parents, and team supporters to develop and practice a set of FLL values that reflect FIRST’s goal to challenge culture in a positive way by inspiring others through our team’s actions and words.

  22. JFLL Challenge History • 2006 Pilot • 3,500 kids ages 6-9 • 702 teams • USand Canada • Geared to children aged 6 to 9 years old • Utilizes a modified FIRST LEGO League (FLL) framework. • Teams of up to 6 children and an adult mentor receive a mini challenge, based on the annual FLL research project. • Uses an open-ended LEGO building set, to design a model depicting an aspect of the FLL Challenge. • Teams spend approximately one month exploring, investigating, designing and building a model made with LEGO bricks. • Teams create a "Show Me" poster that depicts the teams’ experience during this process, through drawings and words.

  23. Design Rubric • Innovative Design • Strategy, Process, Problem-solving • Locomotion & Navigation • Goes defined distances efficiently • Adjusts speed, position sensing for optimum speed and accuracy • Turns accurately and consistently • Allows for variables (battery discharge, obstacles) • Moves between two points with very good accuracy and consistency • May use various sensors • Programming • Kids do the Work • Structural • Overall Design

  24. Project Rubric • Topic & Language Use • Completeness, Teamwork • Background, Data & Graphics • Analysis & Conclusions • Presentation thoroughly links to research questions • Relevance to FLL theme is clearly stated • Alternative views considered with well-supported position on issues • Conclusions are clearly supported by data • Analysis clearly relates well to research question • Original, important insights are shared • Style

  25. Teamwork & FLL Values Rubric • Roles & Responsibilities • Clearly defined roles • Workload is distributed fairly and team members understand each other’s roles • Team members fill each other’s roles (happily!), if needed • Team members give concrete examples of learning time management • Gracious Professionalism • Problem-solving & Team Dynamics • Confidence & Enthusiasm • FLL Values

  26. At the End of the Season… • We had fun! • We did something we didn’t think we could do • We figured out how to managetime, deal with setbacks, and communicate ideas • We respected and considered ideas from everyone on the team • We learned that research helped us better understand a problem and build a realistic solution • We learned how useful and fun applied math and science can be • We improved over last year • We helped our community The true goals of FLL have nothing to do with winning medals or trophies. If you can look back on the season and know you accomplished at least one of these goals, you have achieved the most important goal

  27. A Perfect Score

  28. Important Dates

  29. Time to get into it!

  30. Scot Marshall Louisiana FLL Technical Coordinator scot@LaFLL.org www.LaFLL.orgwww.YouTube.com/PRforLaFLL Curtis Craig Louisiana FRC Technical Coordinatorcurtis@LaFRC.org www.LaFRC.orgwww.YouTube.com/PRforLaFRC Barbara Pailet BLaST Chairman BHPFED@AOL.com For More Information

  31. The FRC Generation

  32. The 3-Day FRC Competition • Inspection, Pit Construction, Practice Rounds, Repair • The robots are inspected to verify they meet weight, dimensional, technical, and safety requirements. • Teams practice on the field to make last-minute corrections • Qualifying Rounds, Judging, Awards • Typically 2 teams of 3 compete as a Red and Blue alliance in the challenge for the year. Alliances are random selections by FIRST • Matches are about 2.5 minutes each • Qualifying, Finals, Closing Ceremonies • The top 8 teams pick their 2 other permanent partners of the alliance. Best 2 of 3 move on to semis and finals. All 3 teams on the winning alliance go to Atlanta to the Championships • Clean-up, Packing, and Departure • All teams, robots, playing field complete. Doors close by 6:00 PM

  33. 2008 FRC Challenge • 2008 First Overdrive • 32,675 kids worldwide in 7 Countries • 1,307 teams, 1,047 returning • 18,300 Mentors • USand Canada • 31,250 kids; 1,250 teams • 35 Regional events • Worldwide • 1425 kids; 57 teams from 5 countries • 2 Qualifying events Update Statistics when available

  34. 2007 FRC Challenge • 2007 Rack ‘N’ Roll • 32,675 kids worldwide in 7 Countries • 1,307 teams, 1,047 returning • 18,300 Mentors • USand Canada • 31,250 kids; 1,250 teams • 35 Regional events • Worldwide • 1425 kids; 57 teams from 5 countries • 2 Qualifying events

  35. FRC Challenge History • 1992: Maize Craze • … • 2000: Co-Operation FIRST • 2001: Diabolical Dynamics • 2002: Zone Zeal • 2003: Stack Attack • 2004: FIRST Frenzy Raising the Bar – Ball Placement and Robotic Chin-ups • 2005: Triple Play – Robotic Tic-Tac-Toe • 2006: Aim High – Soccer and Basketball • 2007: Rack ‘N’ Roll – Pick and Place Swim Rings Louisiana Participation

  36. What Skills Are Developed? • Management • Requirements • Scheduling • Strategy/Tactical • Reconnaissance • Statistical Analysis • Criminal Justice • Photography • Drafting / CAD • Graphic Design • Drawing / Artwork • Video • Software Programming • Website Design • Web Search • Information Organization • Word/Excel/PowerPoint • Psychology • Sociology • Team Spirit • Motivation • Presentation • Research

  37. What Skills Are Developed? • Transportation • Lodging • Food • Snacks • Drink • Coffee • OSHA /Safety • Construction • Wiring • Machining • Sensors • Gears • Motors • Fasteners • Connectors • Valves • Relays • Composites • Metals • Marketing • Fund Raising • Networking / Contacts • Public Relations • Press Relations • Purchasing • Budgeting • Writing

  38. Why Should I Mentor? • You Make The Impossible Very Possible • The Students Need Your Experience • The Faculty Advisor Needs Your Expertise • The Robot Needs Your Brain

  39. Learning Centers • Sustaining jFLL, FLL, FTC, & FRC Teams • Industry • Technological Applications of Robotics • Mentors • Funding Support • Academia • College, University, Vocational/Technical • High Schools • Shreveport

  40. Funding Sources • in the past, NASA has given growth grants of $6K for the first two years, and that we expect that to continue for the 2008 / 2009 season,  Hopefully, this will be finalized in the next couple of weeks • Lockheed Martin sponsored teams in excess of $100,000 last year

  41. FIRST on the Southshore6 FRC; 7 FLL

  42. 2007 FIRSTLEGOLeague Scot Marshall Lockheed Martin Test Engineer Louisiana FLL Technical Coordinator www.LaFLL.org www.YouTube.com/PRforLaFLL St. Dominic Sea Dragons at 2005 FLL Championship American Petroleum Institute

  43. FIRST LEGO League Values • Respect each other in the best spirit of teamwork • Behave with courtesy and compassion for others at all times • Honor the spirit of friendly competition • Act with integrity • Demonstrate Gracious Professionalism • Focus on the experience, not the awards • Remember that the children do the work • Encourage others to adopt these values FLL succeeds most fully when team members bring the FLL values they learn back to their community

  44. Building a Team • Guidance, Structure, Encouragement, Fun • Mentors • Parent, Engineer, High School FRC participant, Science Professional, Graphic Artist, Volunteer, Programmer, Marketing Expert, Instructor • Team Dynamics & Work Groups • Size, Age, Team/Individual Psyche • Hardware Design, Program, Strategy, Research, Operators, Project Management, Test, Marketing, Documentation, Fundraising, Team Spirit • Rubrics (Improve, Fair, Good, Excellent) • Robot Design, Project, Teamwork & FLL Values A student once said he didn't much care for rubrics: "if you get something wrong, your teacher can prove you knew what you were supposed to do."

  45. FLL Challenge History • 2006 NanoQuest • 88,000 kids Worldwide • 8,847 teams • USand Canada • 56,010 kids; 5,601 teams • 250 Qualifying events • 63 Championship tournaments • Worldwide • 32,460 kids; 3,246 teams from 35 countries • 112 Qualifying events • 25 Championship tournaments • Demographics • 70% Boys; 30% Girls

  46. 30 Teams Competed in 2006 • A. E. Phillips Middle School: NanoDawgs • Adams Middle School: Adams Robots • Baker Middle School: Roboraiders; Roboracers • Dighton Prep: Battle Droids • Episcopal High School: Leggo my LEGO • Grace Home Educators: LEGO Maniacs; LEGO Lunatics • Haynes Academy: Team Tech; NeXT Generation • Keithville Middle School: Swamp Eagles • Lake Castle Madisonville: RoboJets Blue; RoboJets Gold • Linwood Middle School: Robocats 1; Robocats 2; Robocats 3 • Louisiana Tech University: NanoDawgs2

  47. 30 Teams Competed in 2006 • McMain Secondary High School: McMain Tech Rays • Meisler Middle School: Meisler Chiefs • Metairie Park Country Day School: Robo Cajuns • Nelson – UNO Charter School: The Rooks • Patrick F. Taylor Science & Tech. Academy: Taylor Robots • Pendergrass Family: GloryBots • Ridgewood Middle School: RoboRaiders • Roosevelt Middle School: Rough Riders • St. Dominic’s School: Molecule Masters; Atoms Family • St. George's Episcopal School: St. George’s #1 • St. James Science & Math Academy: S.M.A.L.L. Synergy

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