ULTIMATE ASCENTSM Game Revealed by Dean Kamen to Nearly 51,000 High-School Students Worldwide at the 2013 FIRST® Robotics Competition Season Kickoff
- Students urged to “Make the World a Better Place.”
- Newly Inaugurated New Hampshire Governor, Margaret “Maggie” Wood Hassan, noted, “We must prepare our young people and our workforce for the jobs of the 21st century, and events like this competition are crucial for those efforts.”
MANCHESTER, N.H. — (BUSINESS WIRE) — January 5, 2013 — Inventor Dean Kamen launched the FIRST® Robotics Competition (FRC®) season today with the Kickoff of a new robotics game called ULTIMATE ASCENTSM before a crowd of 600 people at Southern New Hampshire University in Manchester, N.H., hometown of FIRST Headquarters. Nearly 51,000 high-school students in 81 cities around the world joined the 2013 Kickoff via live NASA-TV broadcast and webcast.
(photo of FIRST Robotics Competition team member holding this season’s game element, a flying disc) FIRST flying discs filled the gym at Southern New Hampshire University on January 5, 2013 in Manchester, NH. Inventor Dean Kamen launched the FIRST Robotics Competition season with the kickoff of the new robotics game called ULTIMATE ASCENT. In the game, robotic alliances will compete on a 27-by-54-foot field. Teams will try to score as many discs into their goals during the two minute and 15-second matches. (Photo: Business Wire)
“FIRST isn’t about competing, it’s about cooperating, and recognizing that if you have the right tools, you’ll be able to make this world a better place for yourself and for the country,” said Dean Kamen, president of DEKA Research and Development and FIRST Founder, adding, “There is no stimulus package that will have as much return as stimulating a bunch of kids to become the workforce of the future, the problem solvers, the creators of the future.”
The 2013 game, ULTIMATE ASCENT, is played between two Alliances of three teams each. Each Alliance competes by trying to score as many flying discs into their goals as possible during the two-minute and 15-second match. Discs scored in higher goals score Alliances more points. Matches end with robots attempting to climb up pyramids located near the middle of the field.
“For our country to succeed, we must prepare our young people and our workforce for the jobs of the 21st century, and events like this competition are crucial for those efforts,” noted the new governor of New Hampshire, Maggie Hassan. “It is going to be incredibly important as we move forward in this state and in this country that more and more of our young people are prepared.”
Sponsored by NASA and Needham, Mass.-based PTC, the 2013 Kickoff event is an opportunity for teams from all over the world to come together as a community to share in the excitement of seeing the new game unveiled. Teams from 83 Kickoffs in 81 cities across the nation, and in Canada, Israel, and Mexico, among many other locations, watched the proceedings via NASA-TV and were offered workshops and a chance to meet other teams.
“One of the things I like most about FIRST is the transformation that each of you will experience this year. You'll create, innovate, build, and compete. You'll grow by strengthening your real-world engineering know-how. You'll transform yourself into someone colleges will want to enroll, and someone that our 27,000 customers will want to employ,” said Jim Heppelmann, President and CEO of PTC.
John Grunsfeld, Head of Science at NASA, said, “This competition will also be similar in many ways to how we designed, built, and tested the NASA Mars Curiosity Rover now exploring on the red planet,” adding, “NASA looks forward to seeing the innovative solutions you develop and seeing how your creativity might help inspire development of our future spacecraft systems.”
At today’s Kickoff, FRC teams were shown the ULTIMATE ASCENT playing field and received a Kit of Parts made up of motors, batteries, a control system, a PC, and a mix of automation components – with no instructions. Working with adult Mentors, students have six weeks to design, build, program, and test their robots to meet the season’s engineering challenge. Once these young inventors create a robot, their teams will participate in 77 Regional and District competitions that measure the effectiveness of each robot, the power of collaboration, and the determination of students.
Explaining a core value of FIRST called Gracious Professionalism®,
Dr.Woodie Flowers, FIRST National Advisor, said “Clearly,
Gracious Professionalism is contrary to what is promoted by many parts
of our culture today. It’s nothing like reality TV, or bullying. It’s
not about greed, or ruthless competition. It’s sort of like wise
kindness. The gracious part has to do with empathy, helping, sympathy.
The professionalism part has to do with knowledge, wisdom, and judgment.
The point is that our professional knowledge comes from the brilliance
of others. We’re all standing on the shoulders of giants, and we owe
others a lift. Society simply does not work unless people can trust
those who have special knowledge.”