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FIRST Championship

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FIRST Championship Event
File:FIRST CMP st louis logo.PNG
VenueEdward Jones Dome
LocationSt. Louis, Missouri, United States
Start date(for 2011) April 27
End dateApril 30
Nations~60 nations
Large presence by the United States, Canada, Mexico, Israel and Brazil

FIRST Championship is a two-and-a-half-day robotics championship held annually in April. For several years, the event was held at the Georgia Dome in Atlanta, Georgia, but beginning in 2011, and at least through 2013, it will be held at the Edward Jones Dome, in St Louis, Missouri. The event comprises three competitions, FIRST Robotics Competition (FRC) Championship, FIRST Tech Challenge (FTC) World Championship, and FIRST LEGO League (FLL) World Festival.[1] FIRST Championship is normally held in conjunction with FIRST Robotics Conference which covers a wide variety of topics in science, technology, engineering, and robotics fields.[2]

FRC is a six-week competition program for high-school students to build 100 to 120 pound robots that can complete a task that changes every year using standard set of parts. FTC is a mid-level competition program for high-school aged students with a more accessible and affordable robotics kit. FLL is a competition program for elementary and middle school students. Teams for each program complete in tournaments at state and regional level. The winning teams from those tournaments join the global competition at FIRST Championship.

FRC Championship

FRC Championship is the final and largest event of FRC. In 2009, there were 348 teams globally that joined the competition.[3] The theme for 2009 was Lunacy to test robots' ability to pick up 9" game balls and score them in trailers hitched to their opponents` robots on a low-friction floor.

There are many awards in the Championship including Championship Finalists, Engineering Inspiration Award, Division Champions, Autodesk Visualization Award, Autodesk Inventor Award, Chrysler Team Spirit Award, Delphi "Driving Tomorrow's Technology" Award, General Motors Industrial Design Award, Johnson & Johnson Gracious Professionalism Award, Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers Entrepreneurship Award, Motorola Quality Award, Rockwell Automation Innovation in Control Award, Underwriters Laboratories Industrial Safety Award, Xerox Creativity Award, Imagery Award, Rookie All-star Award, Rookie Inspiration Award, Website Award and Judges` Awards. The most notable awards are Championship Award, and Chairman's Award – the highest honor that recognizes the team that best represents a model for other teams to emulate.[4]

Past Winners

Year / Theme Award name Team name Team number City, State/Country
2011 / Logomotion Championship Winner #1 The Cheesy Poofs 254 San Jose, CA, USA
2011 / Logomotion Championship Winner #2 WildStang (Rolling Meadows High School & Wheeling High School) 111 Schaumburg, IL, USA
2011 / Logomotion Championship Winner #3 Greybots (Atascadero High School) 973 Atascadero, CA, USA
2011 / Logomotion Chairman's Award The Hawaiian Kids (Waialua High School) 359 Waialua, HI, USA
2010 / Breakaway Championship Winner #1 The HOT Team (Huron Valley Schools) 67 Milford, MI, USA
2010 / Breakaway Championship Winner #2 Beach Cities Robotics (Mira Costa High School & Redondo Union High School) 294 Redondo Beach, CA, USA
2010 / Breakaway Championship Winner #3 Bobcat Robotics 177 South Windsor, CT, USA
2010 / Breakaway Chairman's Award Miss Daisy (Wissahickon High School) 341 Ambler, PA, USA
2009 / Lunacy[4][5] Championship Winner #1 WildStang (Rolling Meadows High School & Wheeling High School) 111 Schaumburg, IL, USA
2009 / Lunacy Championship Winner #2 The HOT Team (Huron Valley Schools) 67 Milford, MI, USA
2009 / Lunacy Championship Winner #3 Spartan Robotics (Mountain View High School) 971 Mountain View, CA, USA
2009 / Lunacy Chairman's Award Techno Ticks (Lyme-Old Lyme High School) 236 Old Lyme, CT, USA

FTC World Championship

After all FTC teams have competed in state / regional championship tournaments, the winning teams move on to the FTC World Championship. The Inspire Award winning teams and the captain teams of the Winning Alliance in the regional tournaments are automatically eligible for the world championship. If there are still spots available, additional teams may be picked by a lottery system.

In 2009, the theme for the championship was Face Off!. It combined many real-world challenges, such as navigating uneven surfaces, manipulating odd-shaped objects, using sensors to determine the environment, and withstanding physical stress. The awards include World Championship Finalists, FTC Design Award, FTC Connect Award, FTC Innovate Award, FTC Motivate Award, FTC Think Award and Judges' Awards. The most notable awards are FTC Winning Alliance and FTC World Championship Inspire Award.[4]

Past Winners

Year / Theme Award name Team name Team number City, State/Country
2009 / Face Off![6] Winning Alliance Team Jr. Bomb Squad 92 Mountain Home, AR, USA
2009 / Face Off! Winning Alliance Team RoboRaiders 679 Sandy Springs, GA, USA
2009 / Face Off! Winning Alliance Team Alberta Longhorns 2820 Calgary, Alberta
2009 / Face Off![4] FTC World Championship Inspire Award Einstein's Daughters 32 San Diego, CA, USA
2008 / Quad Quandary[5] Winning Alliance Team Mr. T 30 Montville, NJ, USA
2008 / Quad Quandary Winning Alliance Team Team Overdrive 74 Bridgewater, NJ, USA
2008 / Quad Quandary Winning Alliance Team Beach Cities Robotics 23 Redondo Beach, CA, USA
2008 / Quad Quandary FTC World Championship Inspire Award Panteras 801 Mexico City, Mexico

FLL World Festival

The top competitions in FLL program are FLL Open Championships and FLL World Festival. The Open Championships are managed by FLL Partners with a goal to bring teams from different regions to complete and showcase their achievements. Currently, there are two Open Championships, FLL Open European Championship and FLL US Open Championship. FLL Open Asian Championship was held for 2008 season in Tokyo, Japan. However, it was not active for 2009.[7]

FLL World Festival is hosted and managed by FIRST. The teams are often the Champion’s Award team at the regional level with some other criteria including special nomination from FLL Operational Partners globally. In 2009, there were 84 teams from 27 countries that joined the festival with the theme Climate Connections. The award categories include Innovative Design Award, Quality Design Award, Quality Design Award, Programming Award, Research Quality Award, Innovative Solution Award, Creative Presentation Award, Teamwork Award, Team Spirit Awards, Against All Odds Awards, Outstanding Volunteer Awards, Adult Coach/Mentor Awards, Young Adult Mentor Awards, and Judges' Awards. The most notable awards are Champion's Award and Robot Performance Award.[4]

Past Winners

Year / Theme Award name Team name Team number City, State/Country
2009 / Climate Connections[8] Championship Winner - 1st Place Da Peeps 55 Swartz Creek, MI, USA
2009 / Climate Connections Championship Winner - 2nd Place STEELE 1232 Illinois, USA
2009 / Climate Connections Championship Winner - 3rd Place NXT Generation 9201 Nordborg, Denmark
2009 / Climate Connections Robot Performance Award - 1st Place Emerotecos 8004 Brazil
2009 / Climate Connections Robot Performance Award - 2nd Place Team Singapore 8254 Singapore
2009 / Climate Connections Robot Performance Award - 3rd Place Giant Panda 8060 China
2008 / Power Puzzle[9] Championship Winner - 1st Place External Fusion 8095 Singapore
2008 / Power Puzzle Championship Winner - 2nd Place Pixelation 2560 North Branch, MN, USA
2008 / Power Puzzle Championship Winner - 3rd Place Power Peeps 334 Swartz Creek, MI, USA
2008 / Power Puzzle Robot Performance Award - 1st Place BLACK OCEAN CURRENT 8110 Kaohsiung, Taiwan
2008 / Power Puzzle Robot Performance Award - 1st Place Green Man Group 1 Windham, NH, USA
2008 / Power Puzzle Robot Performance Award - 3rd Place Landroids 2254 Livingston, NJ, USA
2003 / Mission Mars Robot Performance Award - 1st Place Martian Exchange Students 25 Oak Creek, WI, USA

References

  1. ^ FIRST Championship, FIRST - accessed May 23, 2009
  2. ^ 2009 FIRST Robotics Conference, FIRST - accessed May 23, 2009
  3. ^ FIRST Robotics Competition Teams Attending FIRST Championship, FIRST - accessed May 23, 2009
  4. ^ a b c d e 20,000 Cheer FIRST Students at the Ultimate Celebration of Science and Technology, Reuters (from Business Wire), Apr 19, 2009 - accessed May 23, 2009
  5. ^ a b 2009 FIRST Championship, FIRST - accessed May 23, 2009
  6. ^ 2009 FIRST Tech Challenge World Championship Awards, FIRST - accessed May 23, 2009
  7. ^ Open Asian Championship, FIRST Japan - accessed May 23, 2009
  8. ^ FIRST LEGO League World Festival Awards - Climate Connections Season, FIRST - accessed May 23, 2009
  9. ^ FLL Awards - 2008 Championship - Power Puzzle, FIRST - accessed May 23, 2009