Botetourt 4-H Phoenix Robotics team sets sights on success – Roanoke Times

Posted: February 10, 2017 at 3:16 am

Botetourt 4-H Phoenix Robotics is a FIRST Robotics Competition team based in Botetourt County. Each year student team members assemble a robot to complete various tasks and compete in tournaments across the state and even more. 4-H through the Phoenix Robotics focuses on teaching STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering, and Math) to youth, promoting youth leadership, positive youth development and youth cooperation and providing learning opportunities for students. Their team consists of students from sixth to twelfth grade and mentors with experience in technology, teaching, money management and organization. The opportunities to give service to the community, build unforgettable experiences and learn skills for modern industry for their members are all because of FIRST's mission and commitment to STEM and 4-Hs commitment to positive youth development.

Botetourt 4-H Phoenix Robotics, previously James River Robotics, formed in 2012 with nine members and two mentors. Their first year proved difficult as FIRST makes every game fun and challenging while James River Robotics was inexperienced. Last year their head coach left the Botetourt County School System and when another faculty coach could not be found, the team found themselves searching for a supporting organization. After many meetings and discussions through the summer, the team was welcomed as a new Botetourt County 4-H community club and Botetourt County 4-H now supports the team and acts as the main sponsor of the team activities and events. Since its beginning, the team has diversified, gained experience and grown to over thirty members. This year there are students representing Central Academy Middle School, Read Mountain Middle School, James River High School and Lord Botetourt High School.

Phoenix Robotics Students have been meeting together as a team since Jan. 7 and must have their robot finished by Feb. 21. Success in early competitions qualifies the students to go to the FIRST Championship, the biggest robotics competition in FIRST, located in St. Louis, MO. If they win, the whole team will be eligible for $25 million in scholarships and will have the honor of being FIRST Steamworks Champion.

"FIRST Steamworks" has three main features: fuel, gears and rope. The robot collects fuel and scores it in one of the two goals of the boiler. A human player gives the robot a gear that it can deliver to a lift that scores the team even more points. At the end of the match a rope is lowered for the robot to climb. The team with the most points at the end wins.

FIRST, which stands for For Inspiration and Recognition of Science and Technology, is an organization devoted to promoting STEM through sportsmanlike competition known as "Gracious Professionalism." Founded in 1989 by Dean Kamen, inventor of the Segway, and Woodie Flowers, a Professor of Engineering at MIT, FIRST has grown from a small organization in New England with a few hundred teams to an international phenomenon with over thirty-eight thousand teams and almost half a million members. Each year FIRST designs new challenges from teams to solve, requiring them to rethink their approach each season. One of the most complex and interactive challenges is this years game, "FIRST Steamworks".

Submitted by Georgia Honts

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Botetourt 4-H Phoenix Robotics team sets sights on success - Roanoke Times

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