2013 Season Overview. Introductions Katra Knoernschild Team Coordinator Karl Knoernschild Technical...

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2013 Season Overview

Transcript of 2013 Season Overview. Introductions Katra Knoernschild Team Coordinator Karl Knoernschild Technical...

Page 1: 2013 Season Overview. Introductions Katra Knoernschild Team Coordinator Karl Knoernschild Technical Lead Casey O’Connell Administration Representative.

2013 Season Overview

Page 2: 2013 Season Overview. Introductions Katra Knoernschild Team Coordinator Karl Knoernschild Technical Lead Casey O’Connell Administration Representative.

Introductions

Katra Knoernschild Team Coordinator

Karl Knoernschild Technical Lead

Casey O’Connell Administration Representative

Page 3: 2013 Season Overview. Introductions Katra Knoernschild Team Coordinator Karl Knoernschild Technical Lead Casey O’Connell Administration Representative.

FLL Coaches

Teacher Mentor Donna Bornemann

Binary Bots Chris Abele Dawn Krapez

Digistorm Christine Pietrowiak Michael Zeno

Page 4: 2013 Season Overview. Introductions Katra Knoernschild Team Coordinator Karl Knoernschild Technical Lead Casey O’Connell Administration Representative.

Jr.FLL Coaches

Teacher Mentor Jarod Struck

Churchill Champions (2nd-3rd Grade) Nathan Bramstadt Jamil Nichols

Mighty Mustangs (1st-2nd Grade) Karl Knoernschild Paul Peake

Page 5: 2013 Season Overview. Introductions Katra Knoernschild Team Coordinator Karl Knoernschild Technical Lead Casey O’Connell Administration Representative.

Child SafetyChild safety is paramount to all of us involved with young people. Due to the age of FLL team members, the coach and the other adults on the team are responsible for the safety of the children on the team while they are in their care. Coaches, parents, and guardians are essential to team and child safety. Adults need to educate the team members and one another on how to recognize situations that may put a child at risk, and take measures to ensure that adults who work with their teams are reliable.

In addition to FLL team meetings, team members will have contact with adult volunteers at events. For events, it is essential that teams be educated about basic safety practices. For example, they should stay with their team (or at least in pairs) at all times, and tell team leaders when they are leaving the group (e.g., bathroom breaks). Also, they should not leave the venue except with the permission of their coach or mentor and of the parent who is taking care of them.

Without question, coach and parental supervision and vigilance are essential safety practices for FLL team members.

Page 6: 2013 Season Overview. Introductions Katra Knoernschild Team Coordinator Karl Knoernschild Technical Lead Casey O’Connell Administration Representative.

What is FIRST?

Foundation for the Inspiration and Recognition of Science and Technology

Founded by Dean Kamen, inventor of the Segway

Started in 1989 to inspire young people’s interest and participation in science and technology

Page 7: 2013 Season Overview. Introductions Katra Knoernschild Team Coordinator Karl Knoernschild Technical Lead Casey O’Connell Administration Representative.

FIRST Programs

FIRST Robotics Competition 1992

High School14 - 18 yrs

FIRST Tech Challenge 2005

Middle and High School11 - 18 yrs

FIRST LEGO® League 1998

Elementary and Middle School

9 - 14 yrs

FIRST Junior LEGO® League 2006

Elementary School6 - 9 yrs

(K - 2nd grade)

Page 8: 2013 Season Overview. Introductions Katra Knoernschild Team Coordinator Karl Knoernschild Technical Lead Casey O’Connell Administration Representative.

Core Values We are a team. We do the work to find solutions with

guidance from our coaches and mentors. We know our coaches and mentors don't

have all the answers; we learn together. 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® and

Coopertition® in everything we do. We have FUN!

Page 9: 2013 Season Overview. Introductions Katra Knoernschild Team Coordinator Karl Knoernschild Technical Lead Casey O’Connell Administration Representative.

Gracious Professionalism Term coined by Dr. Woodie Flowers, FIRST

National Advisor and Pappalardo Professor Emeritus of Mechanical Engineering, Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Encourages high-quality work. Emphasizes the value of others. Respects individuals and the community. Avoid treating anyone like losers. No chest thumping tough talk, but no

sticky-sweet platitudes either. Knowledge, competition, and empathy are

comfortably blended.

Page 10: 2013 Season Overview. Introductions Katra Knoernschild Team Coordinator Karl Knoernschild Technical Lead Casey O’Connell Administration Representative.

Coopertition

Displaying unqualified kindness and respect in the face of fierce competition.

Founded on the concept and a philosophy that teams can and should help and cooperate with each other even as they compete.

Learning from teammates and mentors Teaching teammates Managing and being managed

Page 11: 2013 Season Overview. Introductions Katra Knoernschild Team Coordinator Karl Knoernschild Technical Lead Casey O’Connell Administration Representative.

What is FIRST LEGO League?

A robotics program for 9 to 14 year olds

Get children excited about science and technology

Teach valuable employment and life skills.

Projects are based on the LEGO MINDSTORMS EV3 Robot “brain”

Page 12: 2013 Season Overview. Introductions Katra Knoernschild Team Coordinator Karl Knoernschild Technical Lead Casey O’Connell Administration Representative.

FIRST LEGO League Activities

Design, build, test and program robots using LEGO MINDSTORMS technology

Apply real-world math and science concepts

Research challenges facing today’s scientists

Learn critical thinking, team-building and presentation skills

Participate in tournaments and celebrations

Complete the Yearly Challenge

Page 13: 2013 Season Overview. Introductions Katra Knoernschild Team Coordinator Karl Knoernschild Technical Lead Casey O’Connell Administration Representative.

FLL Yearly Challenge Each year a new challenge is presented

2013: “Nature’s Fury” 2012: “Senior Solutions” 2011: “Food Factor”

Children do the work of the Yearly Challenge. Coaches are only there for guidance.

The challenge consists of two parts: The Robot Game: Program an autonomous robot

to score points on a thematic playing surface The Project: Research a real-world problem and

create an innovative solution

Page 14: 2013 Season Overview. Introductions Katra Knoernschild Team Coordinator Karl Knoernschild Technical Lead Casey O’Connell Administration Representative.

2013 FLL Challenge

Challenge details released August 27 Explore the awe-inspiring storms, quakes,

waves and more that we call natural disasters.

Teams will discover what can be done when intense natural events meet the places people live, work, and play.

Coaches’ Handbook outlines 8 week session Not necessary to complete all missions –

new teams should pick one mission close to base to start with

Page 15: 2013 Season Overview. Introductions Katra Knoernschild Team Coordinator Karl Knoernschild Technical Lead Casey O’Connell Administration Representative.

Green City Challenge

Side activity similar to Yearly Challenge, but not part of tournament

45+ hours of activities Includes valuable training activities Should be used as a primer for first

few FLL team meetings before attempting the Yearly Challenge

Not necessary to complete

Page 16: 2013 Season Overview. Introductions Katra Knoernschild Team Coordinator Karl Knoernschild Technical Lead Casey O’Connell Administration Representative.

Other FLL activities

Fundraising Creating a team identity

Logo T-Shirts Posters

Field trips Qualifying Tournaments (December) State Championship Tournaments National Competition and World Festival

(April)

Page 17: 2013 Season Overview. Introductions Katra Knoernschild Team Coordinator Karl Knoernschild Technical Lead Casey O’Connell Administration Representative.

FLL Supplies

LEGO EV3 Core Set LEGO EV3 Expansion Set FIRST Green Challenge Kit FIRST 2013 Yearly Challenge Kit Game Table

For use at team meetings only - tables are provided at tournaments

Page 18: 2013 Season Overview. Introductions Katra Knoernschild Team Coordinator Karl Knoernschild Technical Lead Casey O’Connell Administration Representative.

FLL Team Meeting Ideas Play a game to learn team member names Code of Conduct

Written by kids Weekly Teambuilding Exercises

Judges look at how team members interact and work together

Assign team members to tasks Robot design Coding Challenge rules Graphic design

Schedule goals with measurable outcomes

Page 19: 2013 Season Overview. Introductions Katra Knoernschild Team Coordinator Karl Knoernschild Technical Lead Casey O’Connell Administration Representative.

2013 FLL Goals

Train all team members in the use and programming of the EV3

Complete at least one mission for the 2013 Nature’s Fury Challenge

Compete in one Illinois Qualifying Tournament Mount Prospect (December 7) Rockford (December 14) Batavia (December 21)

Page 20: 2013 Season Overview. Introductions Katra Knoernschild Team Coordinator Karl Knoernschild Technical Lead Casey O’Connell Administration Representative.

What is Jr. FIRST LEGO League?

A program for 6 to 9 year olds Designed to capture young children’s

inherent curiosity and direct it toward discovering the possibilities of improving the world around them

Projects are electronic & mechanical but do not use the EV3 robot “brain”

Older kids (Churchill Champions) will use the WeDo set, which is computer controlled

Page 21: 2013 Season Overview. Introductions Katra Knoernschild Team Coordinator Karl Knoernschild Technical Lead Casey O’Connell Administration Representative.

Jr. FIRST LEGO League Activities

Design and build challenge solutions using LEGO elements

Apply real-world math and science concepts

Research challenges facing today’s scientists

Learn team building and presentation skills

Develop Show Me poster

Page 22: 2013 Season Overview. Introductions Katra Knoernschild Team Coordinator Karl Knoernschild Technical Lead Casey O’Connell Administration Representative.

Jr.FLL Yearly Challenge

A new Challenge every year relating to an important real world issue.

Two defined parts The Show Me Poster The Model.

Show Me Poster and Model are presented at an expo

Jr.FLL teams do not compete like FLL teams do.

Page 23: 2013 Season Overview. Introductions Katra Knoernschild Team Coordinator Karl Knoernschild Technical Lead Casey O’Connell Administration Representative.

The Show Me Poster

A flat poster board or tri-fold presentation board.

Use words, drawings, photos, and small objects to tell about what they have learned during their Challenge research.

Show where they hunted for answers and describe the people they spoke with on their journey.

Describe their Model and simple machine.

Tell about the team itself.

Page 24: 2013 Season Overview. Introductions Katra Knoernschild Team Coordinator Karl Knoernschild Technical Lead Casey O’Connell Administration Representative.

The Model

Create a Model made of LEGO parts that fits within a 15” x 15” footprint.

Typically, a team of six will use 400 to 1,000 LEGO parts during the season.

Must have at least one motorized moveable piece on the Model.

Design a simple machine using LEGO ramps, levers, pulleys, gears, wheels and axles, screws, or wedges and incorporates this into their model. 

Page 25: 2013 Season Overview. Introductions Katra Knoernschild Team Coordinator Karl Knoernschild Technical Lead Casey O’Connell Administration Representative.

2013 Jr.FLL Challenge

Explore the awe-inspiring storms, quakes, waves and more that we call natural disasters.

Teams will learn how science, technology, engineering, and math impact our everyday lives while they get excited about future innovations.

Page 26: 2013 Season Overview. Introductions Katra Knoernschild Team Coordinator Karl Knoernschild Technical Lead Casey O’Connell Administration Representative.

Churchill Champions Supplies

Jr.FLL Robotics Kit LEGO Education WeDo (9580) Software CD Instruction booklets for 12 models WeDo Teacher’s Guide (736508)

15” Square Building Plate LEGO bin (shared with Mighty Mustangs) BuildToExpress Kits (1 per child) Jr.FLL Guide to Building and More Team Binder Team Folder (1 per child) Art supply pencil case

Page 27: 2013 Season Overview. Introductions Katra Knoernschild Team Coordinator Karl Knoernschild Technical Lead Casey O’Connell Administration Representative.

Mighty Mustangs Supplies Jr.FLL Base Kit

(2) LEGO Education 9689 sets (2) sets of instruction booklets for 4 models

15” Square Building Plate LEGO bin (shared with Churchill

Champions) BuildToExpress Kits (1 per child) Jr.FLL Guide to Building and More Team Binder Team Folder (1 per child) Art supply pencil case

Page 28: 2013 Season Overview. Introductions Katra Knoernschild Team Coordinator Karl Knoernschild Technical Lead Casey O’Connell Administration Representative.

Jr.FLL Team Meeting Ideas

Play a game to learn team member names

Code of Conduct Written by kids

Weekly Teambuilding Exercises BuildToExpress outlines some exercises

– see back of Junior FIRST LEGO League Guide to Building and More

Schedule goals with measurable outcomes

Page 29: 2013 Season Overview. Introductions Katra Knoernschild Team Coordinator Karl Knoernschild Technical Lead Casey O’Connell Administration Representative.

churchillfirst.org Website A central repository of all information related

to the Churchill FIRST LEGO League Club Team Information Sponsors and Fundraisers Event Calendar Team photos and progress updates

Coaches may add blog posts including photos, team progress, competition results, etc.

Each parent and coach has a login ID Any identifiable information about children

(photos, names) may be restricted to logged in users only

Page 30: 2013 Season Overview. Introductions Katra Knoernschild Team Coordinator Karl Knoernschild Technical Lead Casey O’Connell Administration Representative.

Coach Advice Don’t build the robot, don’t program it, the

kids need to do this and they can Don’t finish the challenge for them, but

you can build examples, and teach them example programs.

If students ask for help, you can guide them and explain how they may get to a solution but they need to find the solution themselves

Take advantage of team parents wherever possible. Field trips, specialized knowledge, sponsorship, etc.

Page 31: 2013 Season Overview. Introductions Katra Knoernschild Team Coordinator Karl Knoernschild Technical Lead Casey O’Connell Administration Representative.

Coach Resources Coach Resources Page

churchillfirst.org/coach (must be logged in) Website Editing Instructions

churchillfirst.org/instructions (must be logged in) FLL Coaches’ Handbook (1 per team)

Also available online – see Coach Resources Page

FLL 2013 Compilation DVD (1 per team) FLL “The Project” DVD (1 per team) EV3 Instructions (LEGO 45544) (1 per team) Nature’s Fury Teacher’s Guide (shared) Information Packet (1 per coach)