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Oak Ridge teams take top honors in FIRST Robotics World Festival

Posted at 5:44 pm April 28, 2017
By Holly Cross Leave a Comment

Secret City Wildbots FRC Houston 10 April 22 2017 Agle

The Secret City Wildbots, Team 4265, were underdogs in the quarterfinals, but they survived to the semifinals where they lost to the number one seed in the First Robotics World Championship in Houston on Saturday, April 22, 2017. (Photo by Angi Agle)

 

From Wednesday to Saturday last week, the Master Builders (Team 3132) from Jefferson Middle School and the Secret City Wildbots (Team 4265) from Oak Ridge High School competed in the FIRST (For Inspiration and Recognition of Science and Technology) Robotics World Festival in Houston, Texas.

“We are pleased to announce that both teams experienced success in the World Festival,” Oak Ridge Schools said in a press release.

The Jefferson Middle School FIRST LEGO League team, the Master Builders, received trophies for the top awards in the world for first place in robot performance and second place in programming during the FIRST Robotics World Festival in Houston, Texas from April 19-22, 2017. (Submitted photo)

The Jefferson Middle School FIRST LEGO League team, the Master Builders, received trophies for the top awards in the world for first place in robot performance and second place in programming during the FIRST Robotics World Festival in Houston, Texas from April 19-22, 2017. (Submitted photo)

 

The FIRST LEGO League team, The Master Builders from Jefferson Middle School, received trophies for the top awards in the world for first place in robot performance, and second place in programming. There were 108 teams present for FIRST LEGO League at the World Festival from all over the globe, the press release said.

Parent mentor/coach Jeff Thompson and teacher coach Lexie Scott lead the Master Builders. Their FIRST LEGO League teams research real-world problems such as food safety, recycling, or energy, and they are challenged to develop innovative solutions. The Master Builders’ innovative solution this year was to create biodegradable plastic rings for soda cans. Their inspiration came as a continuation of the recycling competition from last year.

A unique component of the competitions, Scott said, is that students can build on a knowledge base from prior competitive events. They also must design, build, program a robot, and compete on a tabletop playing field.

The world competition consists of four components:

  1. Table Game, which is robot performance;
  2. Core Values, in which students express that friendly competition and helping one another is the foundation of teamwork;
  3. Project Presentation, in which students present innovative solutions; and
  4. Engineering Interview, allowing students to elaborate on their robot building and programming processes.

All four components hold equal value in determining the overall Championship Award. The organization takes pride in the emphasis on the Core Values as the cornerstone of the program, the press release said. They are among the fundamental elements that distinguish FIRST LEGO League from other programs of its kind, the release said.

The Secret City Wildbots, Team 4265, competed in the Roebling Division of the World Festival with 66 teams from around the world. At the end of 110 rounds, the Secret City Wildbots were ranked fifth and became the fifth seated alliance captain, allowing them to invite Paly Robotics from Palo Alto, California; Hardin Valley Academy’s Rohawktics from Knoxville, and Farragut High School’s Flagship, also from Knoxville. Forming alliances with teams who are often our top competition is a unique feature of FIRST Robotics, coined “cooperatition.” The cooperatition of this alliance brought the local teams into the final rounds of play, the press release said.

They won two of three of the quarterfinal matches and advanced to the semifinals, where they lost to four teams who were the eventual Roebling Division and FIRST Robotics Houston—World Champions. The team finished qualification matches with a record of 9-1.

“This was a stellar showing by these teams, and we are very proud of them,” said Angi Agle, team assistant and Oak Ridge Board of Education member.

Coach Lisa Buckner said the team believes that “all the robot iterations they made throughout the official FIRST Robotics season helped them to compete competitively at the World Championships. It also demonstrates their commitment to live out their motto to ‘Passionately Pursue Perfection and Catch Excellence in the Process.’”

They plan to apply to compete at the 2017 Indiana Robotics Invitational in July to compete with the Best of the Best FRC Robots, and they believe their statistics and performance in Houston should help them earn the invitation, the press release said.

The team expressed its gratitude to all of the support they have received throughout the year and are already looking forward to the 2018 game reveal, the release said.

Jefferson Middle School Master Builders_Trophies

The Jefferson Middle School FIRST LEGO League team, the Master Builders, received trophies for the top awards in the world for first place in robot performance and second place in programming during the FIRST Robotics World Festival in Houston, Texas from April 19-22, 2017. (Submitted photo)

 

More information will be added as it becomes available.

This press release and photos were submitted by Holly Cross.


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Copyright 2017 Oak Ridge Today. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Filed Under: Education, Education, K-12, Slider, Top Stories Tagged With: Angi Agle, Farragut High School, FIRST LEGO League, FIRST Robotics World Festival, Flagship, For Inspiration and Recognition of Science and Technology, Hardin Valley Academy, Jeff Thomspon, Jefferson Middle School, Lexie Scott, Lisa Buckner, Master Builders, Oak Ridge High School, Oak Ridge Schools, RoHawkTics, Secret City Wildbots, Team 3132, Team 4265

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