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2007 FIRST LEGO League Referee Training The 1-Day FLL Competition 25% Design –The students perform a 10-minute design review of their robot and its apparatus.

Dec 18, 2015

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Page 1: 2007 FIRST LEGO League Referee Training The 1-Day FLL Competition 25% Design –The students perform a 10-minute design review of their robot and its apparatus.
Page 2: 2007 FIRST LEGO League Referee Training The 1-Day FLL Competition 25% Design –The students perform a 10-minute design review of their robot and its apparatus.

2007 FIRST LEGO League Referee Training

Page 3: 2007 FIRST LEGO League Referee Training The 1-Day FLL Competition 25% Design –The students perform a 10-minute design review of their robot and its apparatus.

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)

Page 4: 2007 FIRST LEGO League Referee Training The 1-Day FLL Competition 25% Design –The students perform a 10-minute design review of their robot and its apparatus.

The FLL 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

Page 5: 2007 FIRST LEGO League Referee Training The 1-Day FLL Competition 25% Design –The students perform a 10-minute design review of their robot and its apparatus.

At the End of the Season…

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

• We had fun!• We did something we didn’t think we could do• We figured out how to manage time, 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

Page 6: 2007 FIRST LEGO League Referee Training The 1-Day FLL Competition 25% Design –The students perform a 10-minute design review of their robot and its apparatus.

The Complete FIRST Participant

• 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!

2005 Champion St. Dominic Sea Dragons

Page 7: 2007 FIRST LEGO League Referee Training The 1-Day FLL Competition 25% Design –The students perform a 10-minute design review of their robot and its apparatus.

K 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 Grade

FIRST LEGO League(1998)

FIRST Robotics Competition (1992)

JuniorFIRST LEGO

League(2004 Pilot)

FIRST Tech Challenge(2005 Pilot)

There’s a FIRST for Every Age

6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 Age

Page 8: 2007 FIRST LEGO League Referee Training The 1-Day FLL Competition 25% Design –The students perform a 10-minute design review of their robot and its apparatus.

2007 FLL Challenge

2007 Power Puzzle • Est. 105,000 kids worldwide• 10,500 teams (15% growth)

US and 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

0

1,000

2,000

3,000

4,000

5,000

6,000

7,000

8,000

9,000

10,000

'98 '99 '00 '01 '02 '03 '04 '05 '06

Page 9: 2007 FIRST LEGO League Referee Training The 1-Day FLL Competition 25% Design –The students perform a 10-minute design review of their robot and its apparatus.

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

LouisianaParticipation

Page 10: 2007 FIRST LEGO League Referee Training The 1-Day FLL Competition 25% Design –The students perform a 10-minute design review of their robot and its apparatus.

FLL Challenge History

2005 Ocean OdysseyTeams• 7,460 teams • 60,000 kids worldwide • 56 tournaments (US) • 12 tournaments

(outside US & Canada)

2004 NO LimitsTeams• 6,000 teams • 50,000 kids • 210 tournamentsJapan, South Africa, Turkey and Mexico joins FLL International with a Pilot tournaments.

2003 Mission Mars Teams• 5,000 teams • 42,000 kids • 200 tournamentsChina, Brazil and South Korea joins FLL International with a Pilot tournaments.

2002 City Sights Teams• 3,001 teams • 27,009 kids • 119 tournamentsFrance joins FLL International with a Pilot tournament in Paris. Singapore Science Center hosts first official FLL International tournament in Singapore.

2001 Artic Impact Teams• 18,500 kids • 59 tournamentsFLL International Pilot Tournaments in the UK hosted by Young Technologists and in Germany hosted by Hands-on-Technology.

2000 Volcanic Panic Teams• 15.000 kids • 50 tournaments

in the USAFLL International Pilot Tournament in Norway hosted by FIRST Scandinavia.

1999 FIRST Contact

Teams• 9.500 kids • 9 tournaments in the

USAOfficial launch of the FIRST LEGO League program in the USA.

1998 Pilot Teams• 1.600 kids • 2 Pilot tournamentsFIRST and LEGO Company pilots the FIRST LEGO League concept.

Page 11: 2007 FIRST LEGO League Referee Training The 1-Day FLL Competition 25% Design –The students perform a 10-minute design review of their robot and its apparatus.

2006 NanoQuest Awards• Director Award 1st Place: Louisiana Tech University• Director Runner-Up: St. James Science & Math Academy

• Robot Design Award 1st Place: St. Dominic’s School• Robot Design Award 2nd Place: Metairie Park Country Day School

• Robot Performance Award: Louisiana Tech University

• Research Presentation Award 1st Place: Grace Home Educators• Research Presentation Award 2nd Place: Dighton Prep

• Teamwork & FLL Values Award 1st Place: A. E. Phillips Middle School

• Teamwork & FLL Values Award 2nd Place: St. Dominic’s School

• Special Judges Award – Above All Odds: Baker Middle School; Pendergrass Family

• Rookie Team Award: Haynes Academy

Page 12: 2007 FIRST LEGO League Referee Training The 1-Day FLL Competition 25% Design –The students perform a 10-minute design review of their robot and its apparatus.

The NXT Generation

Page 13: 2007 FIRST LEGO League Referee Training The 1-Day FLL Competition 25% Design –The students perform a 10-minute design review of their robot and its apparatus.

FIRST Things FirstFor Inspiration and Recognition of Science and Technology

– Began 18 years ago (1989)– Expect to reach over 135,000 Students in 2008– A 501(c)(3) with a small staff at HQ in Manchester, NH– $20M annual operating budget– $8M 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

Page 14: 2007 FIRST LEGO League Referee Training The 1-Day FLL Competition 25% Design –The students perform a 10-minute design review of their robot and its apparatus.

FIRST in Louisiana

Building Louisiana Science and Technology – A 501(c)(3) All volunteer across Louisiana & Mississippi– A core of 35 that organizes 100+ volunteers to provide:

o FIRST LEGO Leagueo Bayou Regional FIRST Robotics Competitiono 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

Page 15: 2007 FIRST LEGO League Referee Training The 1-Day FLL Competition 25% Design –The students perform a 10-minute design review of their robot and its apparatus.

2007 Competition HostsDecember 1, 2007

J. D. Meisler Middle SchoolMetairie, LA

Page 16: 2007 FIRST LEGO League Referee Training The 1-Day FLL Competition 25% Design –The students perform a 10-minute design review of their robot and its apparatus.

• 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• FLL Team expenses are $700 per Rookie team, $350 for

returning teams

There’s a FIRST for Every Student: An Educator’s Perspective

Page 17: 2007 FIRST LEGO League Referee Training The 1-Day FLL Competition 25% Design –The students perform a 10-minute design review of their robot and its apparatus.

JFLL Challenge History

2006 Pilot • 3,500 kids ages 6-9• 702 teams• US and 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.

Page 18: 2007 FIRST LEGO League Referee Training The 1-Day FLL Competition 25% Design –The students perform a 10-minute design review of their robot and its apparatus.

Back-up Charts

Scot Marshall

Louisiana FLL Technical Coordinator

[email protected]

www.LaFLL.orgwww.YouTube.com/PRforLaFLL

Curtis Craig

Louisiana FRC Technical [email protected]

www.LaFRC.orgwww.YouTube.com/PRforLaFRC

Page 19: 2007 FIRST LEGO League Referee Training The 1-Day FLL Competition 25% Design –The students perform a 10-minute design review of their robot and its apparatus.