Current:Home > InvestMeet the high school sport that builds robots — and the next generation of engineers -PureWealth Academy
Meet the high school sport that builds robots — and the next generation of engineers
View
Date:2025-04-25 11:00:54
On a Thursday night inside a NASA hangar in Mountain View, Calif., a group of teenage girls cluster around two large tables strewn with wires, hex wrenches and laptops. As they work, a machine rises in their midst — a black aluminum frame loaded with advanced tech like high-powered brushless motors and 3D vision systems. Say hello to the Space Cookies, aka FIRST Robotics Competition Team 1868, a Girl Scout troop that builds tournament robots.
Right now, over 3,300 high school and community teams like the Space Cookies are assembling around the world in anticipation of the upcoming season of the FIRST (For Inspiration and Recognition of Science and Technology) Robotics Competition. This giant non-profit/sport league started in 1989 as a local program to inspire New Hampshire teens in engineering and technology fields. It has grown to encompass more than 83,000 high schoolers in 31 countries.
Through the fall, students meet outside the school day to develop skills in areas like component milling, gear ratios and Java coding as tools for problem-solving, gamesmanship and intelligence — both human and artificial. Local engineering and IT professionals volunteer as mentors, but older students also teach their younger teammates.
Some teams take over corridors of classrooms, while others meet in neighborhood garages. Some teams are like student-led companies, with separate departments for public outreach and merch. Depending on their goals and expectations, students may participate from a few hours to a few dozen hours a week.
They are ramping up for January, when FIRST will reveal the season's game rules, kicking off a feverish eight weeks of designing, fabricating and programming fresh machines. Then it's onto the three-day regional tournaments that serve as qualifiers for April's world FIRST Championship in Houston.
The tournaments are a whirring, banging combination of science fair, Pac-Man and March Madness played by demon-possessed lawnmowers. Robots compete in alliances of 3-vs-3 on a volleyball-sized playing area in two-and-half minute matches. 2023's season-specific tasks involved gathering up yellow traffic cones and inflatable purple cubes to deposit on poles or in slots at either end. Each match starts with fifteen seconds of autonomous action, when robots are programmed to score points on their own. Then, behind a plexi shield, the humans step up to control their mechanical avatars, and it's on – speed, power, grace, defense, teamwork, showboating and the occasional collision with bits of plastic and metal flying around. Yes, those safety glasses are necessary.
Robotics competitions are nothing new, but over the last few years, the FIRST Robotics Competition has evolved from a fascinating after-school activity to having a real impact on the tech and engineering world, and colleges are catching on.
"We like to see evidence of project-based learning, working in teams, hands-on experience and that sense of discovery," says Jennifer Cluett, dean of admissions at Worcester Polytechnic Institute. In 2022, WPI added a custom question to the Common App, asking about students' experience in competitive robotics. Cluett says 218 of 1365 enrollees in WPI's freshman class this year have participated in FIRST.
"I was just blown away by these students and their robots, with team logos and t-shirts and buttons, sponsors and cheering sections. It was like Texas high school football," says Jonathan Hoster, associate admissions director at the Syracuse College of Engineering. Two years after he first saw a tournament in 2014, Syracuse earmarked ten scholarships for FIRST alumni.
A who's-who list of FIRST sponsors — including Boeing, Dow, Coca Cola, Amazon, FedEx, Johnson & Johnson, Apple, Ford, and Disney — shows how eager big businesses are to prime the pipeline. Demand for workers in fields like automation and connectivity, against recent declines in engineering college graduates, makes a resume showing multiple years of hands-on high school robotics increasingly desirable in corporate America.
"Traditionally we would look very heavily at a college GPA. But increasingly companies are looking for more well-rounded employees," says Jody Howard, vice president of innovation and emerging technology at Caterpillar Inc. "What's so interesting about FIRST is that, while they may be coming out with robotic or programming skills, it's really the teaming and problem-solving that make them stand out."
Howard compares a FIRST team scrambling to put a damaged robot back into the fray with a Caterpillar on-site service engineer cooperating with a client to rush one of their autonomous mining trucks back on line. "They already have experience going through the process under pressure," she says.
Lara Fernando is a senior leader on Team 971 Spartan Robotics at Mountain View High School, in Mountain View, Calif. — a few miles from the Space Cookies. Two years ago, she was hired as a paid intern at agricultural technology startup FarmX. "I was the youngest person in the building, 15 years old, and the first woman there. From robotics I already had the skills to be there with the college engineering majors — soldering circuit boards, assembling sensors, running 3D printers."
Besides providing capable personnel, high school FIRST teams may also contribute tech back to the industry, from debugging open source code to coming up with innovative rapid prototyping approaches. At a higher level, engineers who mentor Spartan Robotics say John Deere's weed-killing agribots now use an AI framework originally created for the team's 2017 robot to climb ropes and fire Wiffle Balls.
As impressive as these contributions may be, gritty problem-solving is a far more central element of the FIRST ethos. Anika Zhou, 16, quit basketball to make more time for design and mechanical work with the Space Cookies. She thinks what sets the robotics team apart from school is, "They let us make mistakes."
Celien Bill, 17, technical manager for Team 5419 Berkelium of Berkeley High School in Berkeley, Calif., estimates he spent over 200 hours last season tuning their cone launching system. "Getting it to work the first time was super exhilarating. That feeling lasts about 10 minutes ... and then you go back to improving."
"In the long term, winning and losing have about the same benefit — all the benefit is in the process," says Dirk Wright, lead mentor for Berkelium. "You can't understate the importance of self-confidence. It opens up a huge amount of opportunities."
Plus, it's a lot of fun.
At competitions, there are team flags, zebra-striped referees, huge video screens, people dressed as vikings and penguins, facepaint, singalongs to "Sweet Caroline" and parents in funny hats cheering in the stands. There also are hundreds and thousands of other high schoolers in their team t-shirts, roaming between the pit area and playing field, checking out everybody and every machine.
Besides on-field triumph, teams vie for more than 20 other awards, in categories from Rookie All Star to Gracious Professionalism. Only one, the Engineering Inspiration Award, for which sponsor NASA will cover registration fees for the FIRST Championship in Houston, has any real material value. The prestige prizes are the blue gym banners that tournament victors and major community award winners can hang in their workshops.
But anybody can take home that warm glow of satisfaction when, in the midst of a big competition, one of their peers walks by, nods and says, "Cool robot."
Photos and Reporting by Mark Leong/Redux Pictures
Visual design by LA Johnson
Edited by LA Johnson and Steve Drummond
veryGood! (42736)
Related
- 'Squid Game' without subtitles? Duolingo, Netflix encourage fans to learn Korean
- Canada’s government calls on House speaker to resign over inviting a man who fought for a Nazi unit
- The UK’s hardline immigration chief says international rules make it too easy to seek asylum
- Searchers find body believed to be that of a woman swept into ocean from popular Washington beach
- Intel's stock did something it hasn't done since 2022
- Trump's lawyers accuse special counsel of seeking to muzzle him with request for gag order in election case
- Man blamed his wife after loaded gun found in carry-on bag at Reagan airport, TSA says
- A company is seeking permission to house refugees in a closed south Georgia factory
- Paula Abdul settles lawsuit with former 'So You Think You Can Dance' co
- Derek Hough on 'DWTS,' his dream wedding to Hayley Erbert and keeping the love on tour
Ranking
- This was the average Social Security benefit in 2004, and here's what it is now
- New California law bars schoolbook bans based on racial and LGBTQ topics
- Taylor Swift is a fan and suddenly, so is everyone else. Travis Kelce jersey sales jump nearly 400%
- Hunter Biden sues Rudy Giuliani in latest 'laptop' salvo
- Paris Hilton, Nicole Richie return for an 'Encore,' reminisce about 'The Simple Life'
- Blac Chyna Debuts Romance With Songwriter Derrick Milano
- Australian prime minister says he’s confident Indigenous people back having their Parliament ‘Voice’
- Black people's distrust of media not likely to change any time soon, survey found.
Recommendation
IRS recovers $4.7 billion in back taxes and braces for cuts with Trump and GOP in power
Pakistan’s Imran Khan remains behind bars as cases pile up. Another court orders he stay in jail
Alexandra Grant says boyfriend Keanu Reeves has made her art 'happier': 'Such an inspiration'
Winning numbers for fourth-largest Powerball jackpot in history
Why members of two of EPA's influential science advisory committees were let go
Brazil’s Amazon rainforest faces a severe drought that may affect around 500,000 people
New data shows drop in chronically absent students at Mississippi schools
University of Wisconsin regents select Mankato official to serve as new Parkside chancellor