Transcript Document

Florida FLL
Coach's Training
Our Objectives:
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What is FLL?
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What is a Team?
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Know the lingo
The core: Gracious Professionalism
Price
Timeline
Where to start?
The Game
Events and Tournaments
Questions
What is FLL?
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FIRST
LEGO
League
FLL teams learn to make positive contributions
to society.
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
Know The Lingo!
 FLL
– FIRST LEGO League
 FIRST – For Inspiration and Recognition of
Science and Technology
 Gracious Professionalism 
"Competition for the sake not of destroying
one another, but for the sake of bettering
and improving both competitors as a result
of the competition.“ – Woodie Flowers
The Core:
Gracious Professionalism
GP is:
 Respect for the
feelings, opinions,
culture of others
 Respect for
equipment
 Good sportsmanship
 Being friendly and
polite at all times to
all persons
The good:
 Fun physical pushing,
shoving, or other kid
behaviors
 Tossing LEGO to each other
 Running when appropriate
The Bad
 Laughing at others mistakes
 Making negative comments
about other teams, robots,
shirts, mascots, etc.
What is a Team?
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3 to 10 Kids ages 9 through 14
1 or 2 coach’s
Holding meetings an average of 2 days a
week for 2 hours per meeting
Build and program a robot
Do a research project
Attend an open practice
Attend 2 weekend qualifier tournaments
If qualified attend a regional and state
tournaments.
Price
Item
Rookie year
Onwards
Registration
$225
$225
Challenge set
$75
$75
Robot set
$420
Practice table
$50
Divider boxes
$20
T-shirts
$120
$120
Tournament
registration
$100
$100
Presentation
supplies
$50
$50
Total
$1060
$570
Timeline
Aug
Sep
Oct
Nov
Dec
Jan
Feb
Mar
Apr
Registration
Build
Research
Open practices
Qualifiers
Regionals
State
World festival and
Other invitationals*
*FIRST World Festival by invitation only
Where do I start?
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The coach/mentor
Prep work
The team
Team member selection
1. The Coach/Mentor
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There can only be one coach
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Must be the leader of the team
Does not need technical skills
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Kids will pick up the robot without much help
Consistency matters – establish a routine early
Teach through questions – brainstorm
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Although it is wise to have a backup/assistant
Don’t be afraid to ask parents for help
“what would happen if … ?”
“And then … ?”
“How will that affect … ?”
Keep presentations to less than 20 minutes
Be part of the team, if they are out playing go play
with them
2. Prep work
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2 hours per week
Reading the FLL Forum
Coordination help
Maintaining equipment
 Storage
 Charging
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batteries
Interfacing with sponsors
Purchasing supplies
Registering for competitions
3. The Team
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Commitment:
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Has the same commitment as Soccer or
Baseball and should be treated with equal
importance
Meetings 2 days a week for 2 hours per meeting
2 weekend tournaments between nov.1 and
feb.1
3 to 10 students (optimum 6 or 7) ages 9
through 14
Has the Coach at every meeting
Has planed location
4. Team Member Selection
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3 to 10 members aged 9 through 14
Important commitment with Saturday or
Sunday tournaments
Sign contract/agreements for participation
Charge for participation?
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No I in Team
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County Soccer = $90-$210 per season
Baseball = $75-$250
Do not let members work alone
Avoid sending the robot home with anyone
Assign homework and report outs.
Dealing with problem
parents or team members
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Its not uncommon to have difficulty with team
members or parents, these problems can be
dealt with easily by setting clear rules
Use the Contract and make sure parents and
kids understand what is expected
Problems:
• Not listening
• Not working together
• Theft
• Overly negative
attitudes
• Disrespect to anyone
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Not turning in homework
Not attending meetings
Not attending
tournaments
Not being picked up on
time
Ideas for dealing with …
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Deal with problems directly and quickly
Make discussions private, out of earshot of the
team
If problems with members persist, have the
child taken home.
Remove problem members, send them to the
corner, out of the group but within earshot
If the issue remains unresolved remove them
from the team. While this is hard to do it can
make the difference between a happy or
stressed team
The Game
The Robot
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Game rules are released each year on September 3
Only a small percentage of teams achieve a perfect
score
There is no “correct” solution – only creative solutions
Any LEGO element that is not excluded by the rules can
be used
You may not modify any part unless an exemption is in
the rules
Ask Questions
The rules are literal and are not up for interpretation
Don’t make up rules
Keep score at every meeting
The robot counts towards 33% of your score
The Research Project
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All parts of the research project must be completed
 Find a problem
 Find a solution
 Prepare a presentation
 Share your ideas with someone who cares
 Create a 5 minute presentation for judges showing
everything you did.
Let the kids be creative
There are no right answers – only creative solutions
The project can be as sophisticated as the team makes
it, but should reflect the teams interests and capabilities
READ THE RULES
The Research Project counts towards 33% of your score
Project Continued….
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saying “there is no wrong answer.” is
wrong!!!
 The rules must be followed or the project
will be wrong!!!
 As the coach, you must be the cop, good
or bad – its your job as the coach!!!
Core Values (Teamwork)
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Allow the team to choose a name, mascot,
design t-shirts, hats and buttons
Play teambuilding games
Design giveaways
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Teams actively trade trinkets at tournaments
Problem solve in small groups
Schedule demonstrations for parents
Core Values counts towards 33% of your score
Play soccer/launch soda rockets/watch a
movie/get ice cream HAVE FUN!
Tournaments and Events
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Kick-Off: Teams come to get a close-up look at the game after
it is announced, explanation of the research project and other
great information. September 10th
Open Practice: Teams spend the day with other teams working
informally on the robot research and teamwork
Local/Practice Tournament: Low key practice event, no
advancement.
Qualifying tournament: Teams compete and are judged using
FIRST rubrics and scoring – winners advance to Regionals.
Regional Tournaments: winning teams from each region
compete for advancement to the State Championship
State Championship: Competition and exhibition of the 48 best
teams in Florida
Teams my apply for as many qualifiers as they wish, and are
able to win awards at all tournaments. Qualifying teams will be
assigned to Regionals.
Basics of Tournaments
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This is a competitive sport
FITST LEGO League provides the structure and rules
of competition
Points are awarded based on the FIRST FLL Rubrics
The team with the highest robot score does not
always win the Champions Award
Teamwork and GP will shine more than a slick
robot
Any GP violations committed by anyone
associated with your team will reflect poorly on
your team, possibly removing you from award
contention.
Be prepared
FYI
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FIRST Teams and volunteers set up, organize
and run the events and competitions in a way
that is fun and fair, adhering strictly to the
FIRST FLL rules
Host FLL teams may not participate in their
own events
Teams may be asked to bring their playing
field to events to help support the hosting
team
Florida Robotics Education Inc. and anyone
associated in running Florida FLL events are
volunteers.
Questions?