roboparents: parent involvement on frc teams

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ROBOPARENTS: PARENT INVOLVEMENT ON FRC TEAMS Jenny Beatty 2012 FIRST Championship Conferences April 27, 2012

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RoboParents: Parent Involvement on FRC teams. Jenny Beatty 2012 FIRST Championship Conferences April 27, 2012. Should I be taking notes?. Non-Engineering Mentor Organization (NEMO) www.firstnemo.org. Can parents also be mentors?. 2011 Brandeis FTC-FRC Cross Program Evaluation. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: RoboParents: Parent Involvement on FRC teams

ROBOPARENTS: PARENT

INVOLVEMENT ON FRC TEAMS

Jenny Beatty2012 FIRST Championship Conferences

April 27, 2012

Page 2: RoboParents: Parent Involvement on FRC teams

SHOULD I BE TAKING NOTES?Non-Engineering Mentor Organization

(NEMO)

www.firstnemo.org

Page 3: RoboParents: Parent Involvement on FRC teams

CAN PARENTS ALSO BE MENTORS?

Page 4: RoboParents: Parent Involvement on FRC teams

2011 BRANDEIS FTC-FRC CROSS PROGRAM EVALUATION Team Leaders who are parent/guardian: FTC: 15.9% FRC: 16.7%

Way to spend time with their own children.

FTC: 18% FRC: 15% FLL: 14.4% (from 2009 evaluation)

Page 5: RoboParents: Parent Involvement on FRC teams

WHAT DO MANY TEAMS LOOK LIKE?

Team

Mentors & Parents

Student

Sponsors, Other

Champions

Page 6: RoboParents: Parent Involvement on FRC teams

RECOGNIZE SOME OF THE BARRIERS

1. Communication

2. Schedules

3. Transportation

4. Family structure

5. Team structure

6. Finances

Page 7: RoboParents: Parent Involvement on FRC teams

ROLES FOR PARENTS Technical Mentor Non-Technical Mentor Advocate or Champion for team Member of Booster Club Event volunteers

Page 8: RoboParents: Parent Involvement on FRC teams

WHAT TEAM INFORMATION IS NEEDED BY PARENTS?

Be clear about requirements & expectations for student to be on team AND for parents.

What is FIRST & GP?

Calendar of season & time commitment & cost for students & mentor contact info

Scholarships!

How homework is handled

Paperwork required, permission slips

Page 9: RoboParents: Parent Involvement on FRC teams

STARTING A BOOSTER CLUB Goal is to “boost” the existing program.

Need to determine:parent support base, district policies,

constitution & bylaws, officers, meetings, opening bank account, keeping up with paperwork and finances.

Page 10: RoboParents: Parent Involvement on FRC teams

SOME TEAMS FORM BOOSTER CLUBS Soliciting sponsors Fundraising Feeding the team during the build

season Travel/Events Team shirts Team building Publicity Car pooling Celebrations Promotion with school board

Page 11: RoboParents: Parent Involvement on FRC teams

HANDBOOKS ADDRESSING PARENT INVOLVEMENTSome great examples:

Team 358 -NY– 10 pgs of great information

Team 1511-NY – list of expectations & parent sign up letter

Team 612-VA-Code of Conduct and Student Contract – also signed by parent

Team 180-FL-organizational chart

Page 12: RoboParents: Parent Involvement on FRC teams

PARENT MEETINGS Attendance for parents should be a

requirement for student to be on the team*

Great time to get paperwork signed-FIRST consent forms, parent contact form, medical form, driving permission form, school district-specific forms

Hand out schedule, sign-up for meals,

Page 13: RoboParents: Parent Involvement on FRC teams

FOOD Most teams have a requirement that

parents provide a meal during the build season.

Feeding the team during travel.

Page 14: RoboParents: Parent Involvement on FRC teams

USEFUL RESOURCE www.chiefdelphi.com

Page 15: RoboParents: Parent Involvement on FRC teams

Support group & information exchange for all adult mentors in FIRST.

Offers facilitated meetings at events to share information

Private forum offered through www.chiefdelphi.com No cost to join.

NEMO Website: www.firstnemo.org Resources page on NEMO website

Page 16: RoboParents: Parent Involvement on FRC teams

BREAK TASKS DOWN

Examples of Roles where Parents can help your FIRST team

Page 17: RoboParents: Parent Involvement on FRC teams

SOME OF THE 101 WAYS…. Administrative Mentoring Travel Social Communications Food Sponsorship Outreach Spirit & Image Construction

Page 18: RoboParents: Parent Involvement on FRC teams

LOTS OF STORIES “In most cases, it just took someone to ask for help to get them

involved”.

“Lead Robot Inspector at CMP started out as a parent volunteer. He and his wife “stuck around” after his son graduated”.

“All in all, she has basically taken everything she normally does for me and my brother, and extends it to every kid on the team”.

“A weird extension of parents on the team: most students bring their parents to the competition. But one of our young teacher sponsors, fresh out of college, keeps bringing her parents to the competitions. Yes, an adult is so excited by FIRST that she brought her parents along”.

“I used to take our parental involvement for granted. At a team social at one of last year's regionals a parent from a local team remarked how they had to make a couple of trips to get all the kids to the regional. We had at least one parent for 25 of our 30 kids at the out-of-town regional, along with grandparents, aunts, and uncles”.

Page 19: RoboParents: Parent Involvement on FRC teams

MORE STORIES“The importance of parent involvement in a

successful sustainable team cannot be over emphasized”.

“I know there can be a lot of competing demands for a parents time…And yet, I think parents should and often do see this not so much as a burden, but as a incredible once in a lifetime opportunity. No matter how challenging being a parent volunteer can be they should jump at the chance. Such an opportunity will probably never come again”.

Page 20: RoboParents: Parent Involvement on FRC teams

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 2012IT'S 10PM, DO YOU KNOW WHERE YOUR CHILDREN ARE?

If it's a Saturday night four weeks into build season and you're a Robot Parent, you do.  

My husband and I stopped by the shop last night to see what the kids were working on and to see if we could help with anything.  Many of the kids were at the basketball game since it was a "band night" so we were able to help a couple of the kids get parts ready for the rest of the team to work on after the game.

After the game 10 or 15 kids came back the shop and started working.  A little bit later, another half dozen other kids who weren't on the team stopped by to see what their friends were doing.  Next thing, a few more parents show up and a college-aged sibling who has been helping out walked through the door.

So at 10pm on a Saturday night six parents and mentors, 15 team members and some friends were hanging out machining parts, talking strategy, and chilling.  What a great way to spend the evening.

Then, a parent who doesn't have kids on the team saw the cars in the parking lot and stopped in to say hi, another set of parents stopped by with a fresh pan of peanut butter-chocolate rice krispy treats, and another mentor showed up with his night vision goggles to check out the robot's camera and lights.  Did I mention it was 10pm on a Saturday night?

And that's what build season is all about.

Page 21: RoboParents: Parent Involvement on FRC teams

Questions?