So here we are all dressed up and ready to go!
We had a great day at our
FLL tournament. It is so hard to put into words what the experience was like. It was exciting and terrifying and amazing to be a part of. I think this was especially so as it seemed unlikely we would get there at all. The odds were against us from the start as the whole competition is set up for schools and existing clubs who have both financial and practical support to call on. But we did get there and we did it in style.
Following long months of fund raising and team building, learning to work together and how to make up again when we didn't manage it, we finally unveiled Marvin to the world. Marvin is our robot by the way and we will introduce him in a separate post later on. There is so much to tell about the process now it is over and we are no longer competing I am going to tackle it in a few sections over the next week or so.
It turns out that the robot game is a nightmare for everyone. It wasn't just that we were new or inexperienced, the whole thing just has so many variables that a lot can go wrong even for the most experienced teams. If Marvin had done all the things we had programmed him to we would have made the semi-finals but it seems that is not the way it goes at these things. In fact Marvin did very little that was asked of him and yet we came 5th over all in the robot game, just outside the semi-finals. Watching the final was heartbreaking, there was so much at stake as only one team goes through to the next round, some of the parents were quite glad we didn't have to endure it, it was hard enough to watch in the early rounds.
As well as the robot game the team are also interviewed about the design of the robot and the programmes on it, asked to complete a team building task, they have to present all their research, in this case into ageism and plug socket design (more interesting than it sounds). In addition there is a roving interview team who catch team members on the hop during the day. Laurence did us proud despite having the flu as all the others were on rides somewhere in the
Lego centre.
We know we came third in the robot design category which is extraordinary for a rookie team but we are waiting for the centre to locate our score sheets and send them to us before we know how we did on the rest of the criteria.
We must have done OK because we were awarded a judges commendation award which we think means they likes us a lot, we were good, but there were others better than us. It's also a means of encouraging us. It's worth having another go - a kind of you did really well and we want to give you something trophy. So here it is...
and here we are with it...
The purple monster in the photos was a last minute mascot addition. He was named by the team and one of the judges as Mad Dr. Squeekums and if we do try this again I'm sure he will be a fixture in the future.
After all the excitement was over we went back to Maria's house for a post match party, unfortunately most of us were tired and a few team members were quite poorly on the day so it turned into X-box and Pizza, which is what they have all been desperate to do anyway.
We are hoping to arrange an full X-Box and trampoline day at Maria's house, to make up for all those times they were dragged away to play with robots or go through presentation scripts yet again!!!
So now all that remains is the Oscar speech. Three huge thank yous are needed. Firstly to the lovely Maria who lent us her house for the duration of the competition. One of the biggest headaches I had as team coach was finding somewhere to meet and in the end it was just too expensive or inconvenient. Maria stepping into the gap made it possible for us to carry on in the competition and the last week was especially busy in her house!! Secondly Jeremy who mentored the programmers in using the
NXT software. Jeremy and his family kindly donated their house and their time to making this possible. He taught them complex programming, printed t-shirts and leaflets, and generally spent plenty of time reading up on
NXT software and what we needed to learn. And finally to Sophie who mentored the team through the design process for the project side of things, helping them clarify their thoughts around what they wanted from their design and how they would make it appealing, who would but it etc., etc.,
And then there are the parents who ferried children around, Paul who helped with the table, former team members who were all a part of getting to this point, Sean at
Techniquest who first introduced us to
NXT programming, Dave who designed and maintained a wiki for them to practice some basic programming and Tara who helped with the session. I'm sure there are many more but all will have been acknowledged in this blog somewhere.
So Thanks. A great team effort.