FIRST and ColoradoFIRST. Overview

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Transcription:

FIRST and ColoradoFIRST Overview

What is FIRST?

What s FIRST? It s a competitive sport. It s More Than Robots SM. It s a life experience. It s opportunity. It s community. It s amazing.

FIRST Is Inspiring youth to become science & technology leaders & innovators, by engaging them in exciting, experiential, mentor and project-based programs that teach science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM) skills, inspire innovation, and foster well-rounded life capabilities.

FIRST Impact: More Than Robots SM STEM Awareness, Skills and Intent Increase the number of students who pursue post-secondary education and careers in STEM-related fields and industries Innovation and Entrepreneurship Inspire youth to become leaders and innovators in their field and society 21 st Century Work-Life Skills Enable young people to develop valuable, transferrable, real-world skills, including: teamwork, leadership, creative problem solving, critical thinking, time & project management, and communication/presentation skills

FIRST At-a-Glance (2016-2017 FIRST Season) 445K Students on 50K teams in 86 countries 225K Mentor, Coach, Judge & Volunteer roles 16M Volunteer hours $50M+ scholarship opportunities from nearly 200 providers 2,700 + official events in 70 countries 60K+ participants at annual FIRST Championship

FIRST Progression of Programs FIRST learning never stops building upon itself, starting at age 6 and continuing through middle and high-school levels up to age 18. Young people can join the international, K-12, after-school, STEM programs at any level. FIRST inspires innovation excellence, teaching 21 st century skills, and immersing participants in project-based learning and robotics competitions.

Teams of up to 6 kids build interest in science with a real-world scientific challenge solved by guided research and imagination. 2016/2017 Season

Introduction to science and technology Design and build Challenge-related model using LEGO elements Create a Show Me poster and practice presentation skills Explore challenges facing today s scientists Discover real-world math and science Engage in team activities guided by FIRST LEGO League Jr. Core Values

8,000 7,000 6,000 5,000 4,000 3,000 2,000 1,000 0 Team Growth 6,675 5,653 4,000 3,347 2,985 2,147 1,448 1,004 1,203 702 327 125 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 11,400+ teams (projected) 68,800+ children, ages 6-10 (Grades K-4) Up to 6 students per team 400+ local Expos, World Festival Expo 41 countries 2016/2017 Season

Teams of up to 10 kids build LEGO based robots and develop research projects based on realworld scientific challenges. *Ages vary by country 2016/2017 Season

Create innovative solutions to challenges facing today s scientists Strategize, design, build, program and test an autonomous robot using Challenge-related model using LEGO MINDSTORMS technology Apply real-world math and science concepts Develop career and life skills Become involved in their local and global community

Team Growth 2016/2017 Season 35,000 30,000 25,000 20,000 16,762 29,034 26,044 23,748 20,430 32,000 teams (projected) 255,000+ students, ages 9-16* (Grades 4-8) 15,000 13,705 Average 8 students per team 10,000 5,000 0 200 1,540 3,001 5,859 U.S. & Canada Outside U.S. & Canada 8,847 1,297 Qualifying Tournaments, 166 Championship Tournaments, World Festival Approx. 85 countries *Ages vary by country

Teams of 10 (avg.) or more students develop strategy, design and build sophisticated robots using a modular kit-of-parts, then compete head to head. 2016/2017 Season

Head-to-head competition using a sports model Teams design, build, and program robots based on sound engineering principles Reusable platform, powered by Android technology, programmed using Java Develop strategic problem-solving, organization, team-building skills Awards for competition, community outreach, design Qualify for >$50 million in scholarships

5,000 4,500 Team Growth 4,711 4,445 2016/2017 Season 4,000 3,500 3,000 2,500 2,000 1,500 1,000 500 0 53 130 2005 Demo 554 799 986 1,111 1,606 2,093 2,779 3,800 2006 Pilot 2008 2010 2012 2014 5,500+ teams (projected) 55,000+ students, ages 12-18 (Grades 7-12) Average 10 students per team ~310 League and Meet events, 255 Qualifying Tournaments, 83 Championship Tournaments; 4 Super-Regional Championship Tournaments; World Championship 25 countries

Teams of 25 (average) or more students compete with 120-pound robots in this Varsity Sport for the Mind Ț M combining the excitement of sports with the rigors of science and technology. 2017 Season

Strict rules, limited resources, time limits Students mentored by professional engineers Learn and use sophisticated hardware and software Build and compete with robots of their own design Develop design, project management, programming, teamwork, strategic thinking, and Coopertition skills Qualify for >$50 million in scholarships

Team Growth 2017 Season 3,500 3,140 3,000 2,500 2,343 2,546 2,727 2,900 3,357 teams 2,000 1,500 1,000 927 991 1,133 1,307 1,501 1,683 1,808 2,072 84,000 high-school-age students 10 or more students per team (average 25) 500 0 28 1992 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 65 Regionals & District Championships; 80 District Competitions; FIRST Robotics Competition Championship 26 countries

Who is FIRST For? For Students (grades K-12, ages 6-18): the hardest fun you ll ever have For Mentors, Coaches, Volunteers: the most rewarding adventure you ll ever undertake For Sponsors/Donors: the most enlightened investment you could ever make

FIRST Scholarships

FIRST Founding Sponsors

FIRST Strategic Partners

More Information On the web: www.firstinspires.org www.firstlegoleague.org www.firstlegoleaguejr.org Call: 1-800-871-8326 www.firstinspires.org 800-871-8326

ColoradoFIRST Overview

ColoradoFIRST Mission To promote FIRST robotics programs in Colorado by hosting tournaments and supporting coaches, mentors and teams with training, coordination and financial assistance. We strive to be a high quality, sustainable entity that can pursue long term initiatives and set an example for FIRST Regions across the US.

ColoradoFIRST Overview Founded in 2001 to represent and achieve the mission of FIRST Achieved 501(c)(3) status in 2008 100% volunteer organization Uniquely positioned with the programs of FIRST to identify, recruit and develop the technical leaders of tomorrow for Colorado Board of Directors is currently 8 current or former executives from industry and education Strong collaboration with industry and education partners Goals: Grow overall student participation by 5% every year To have teams in at least 75% of the 1800 high schools, middle, and grade schools in Colorado To make the study of STEM fields mainstream by including all students regardless of geographic location and socio-economic status

ColoradoFIRST Board of Directors Name COFIRST Title Occupation William Schneider President President, Teocali Energy, LLC Dawn Lutz Chief Operating Officer Retired President, Technetronic Solutions, Inc. Mark Valerio Director Retired VP, Lockheed Martin Space Systems Rodger Stewart Chief Growth Officer Retired CEO, UltraShape, Inc. Tribby Warfield Chief Marketing Officer SVP, Business Dev. & Strategy (EMEA) at Nitta Industries Denise Henry Director Outreach Manager, Ball Aerospace & Technologies Corp. Scott Springer Team Growth Officer Retired, Principal of CEC Early College, DPS Marsha Williams Development Director Retired CIO, E-470 Public Highway Authority

2016/17 Season Colorado Metrics FIRST 2017 Colorado Regional FIRST Robotics Competition (FRC) : 36 Colorado teams, 64 total >1500 high school students compete 11 FIRST Lego League (FLL) competitions and events held: 329 teams and >2600 students (ages 6-14) participated 13 Expos and local events held: 84 teams and >500 students (ages K- 3) participated 3 Colorado FRC and 1 FLL teams qualified to compete in the FIRST Championship in St. Louis, MO. Over 2000 coaches, mentors and event volunteers support all FIRST competitions in Colorado

Colorado FIRST Programs Student Participation

Colorado FIRST Total Student Participation Colorado FIRST 2016/17 Season Total Student Participation 120 Teams, 720 Students FLL Jr FRC 35 Teams, 875 Students FLL FTC 58 Teams, 580 Students 322 Teams, 2,576 Students 4,751 Total Students Participating

Colorado FIRST Programs Student Geographic Distribution >4700 Students >500 Teams >2000 Volunteers

Colorado FIRST Student Gender

Colorado FIRST Demographics

2017 ColoradoFIRST Fiscal (1) Year P&L Income: Cash donations $195,749 Other income $ 38,383 Total income $ 234,132 Expenses: FRC support $ 130,426 FLL support $ 79,851 FLLJr support $ 5,189 G&A (2) $ 7,476 Total Expenses $ 222,960 Net Income $ 11,172 (1) Audited results for July 2016 thru June 2017 (2) G&A is 3.4% of expenses and 3.2% of revenue

ColoradoFIRST Financial Trends

ColoradoFIRST Sponsors (past & present)

ColoradoFIRST In-Kind Partners

Get Involved! Opportunities Financial support Equipment/parts Scholarships Facilities for teams and events Mentors, volunteers, consultants Internships Benefits Strengthens reputation and community relations Builds technological literacy Pipeline for interns and future employees Motivating volunteer opportunities for employees Applied professional development for employees