When we decided to attend the FIRST Championship, I knew we would be engaging with the creative energy and unleashed innovation of young people and their coaches/mentors who had worked tirelessly to get the Championship. I did not know just how inspired and energized we would be as a team. Here are a few takeaways from the event.
FIRST sign in front of the George R. Brown Convention Center in Houston
The FIRST Community is Vibrant and Expansive
The Championship included teams from FIRST® Robotics, FIRST Tech Challenge, and FIRST LEGO® League; each of these three programs occupied its own unique space in the George R. Brown Convention Center in Houston. Based on the recap from FIRSTthere were about 18,000 students (nearly 1,000 teams!) from 59 countries competing in the competitions, with around 50,000 people attending in total. It is hard to imagine that this only represents a small percentage of total FIRST participants.
The sheer size of the FIRST Robotics competition was astounding (and this is only looking one direction)
FIRST Develops Challenges that Inspire Creative Problem-Solving
Every year, teams are presented with a new challenge – as soon as the challenge is revealed, the teams start designing their solution, which requires an interdisciplinary approach that includes programming, mechanical engineering, and electrical engineering (and much more). Once built, teams begin competing at the local and regional levels to make it the Championship.
FIRST Tech Challenge Arena
Beyond Robots
On the opening page of the 2022 FIRST Annual Impact Report, it states: “FIRST has always been about More Than Robots®. We are an inclusive community preparing young people for the future. We’re a global movement to get kids excited about leadership and innovation in STEM. We’re a foundational ethos of Gracious Professionalism® and Coopertition®. We’re a thrilling, inspiring sport where every kid can go pro.” It is one thing to see these words written, it is a totally different thing to see participants model every aspect of this statement.
These students are developing a broad and deep set of skills through teams developing local programs to teach younger kids in their community, figuring out how to earn funding from local businesses, establishing relationships with mentors and business leaders, and creating a brand and marketing their team. Moreover, the ethos of “Gracious Professionalism” can be felt everywhere – from teams helping one other (even though they are competing), cheering for one other, relying on one another’s strengths, and celebrating outcomes regardless of wins and losses. In addition, almost all the work done for these events and within FIRST Robotics is done by volunteers, from mentoring teams to event setup and judging.
FIRST Tech Challenge team getting interviewed by a judge
Are you already involved with FIRST? Tell us your experience in the comments.