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April 4, 2006

OVER 9,700 STUDENTS COMBINE SPORTS AND TECHNOLOGY AT THE FIRST CHAMPIONSHIP

Inventor Dean Kamen recognizes best of young robotics competitors In “Super Bowl of Smarts”

 

ATLANTA ­ April 30, 2006 ­ Three teams from New York City, Michigan, and Montreal emerged victorious at the FIRST (For Inspiration and Recognition of Science and Technology) Championship at the Georgia Dome in Atlanta this weekend. It was the climax to weeks of competition involving over 1,130 teams from the United States and six other nations, including Brazil, Canada, Ecuador, Israel, Mexico, and the United Kingdom.

FIRST was founded by Dean Kamen, the inventor of the Segway® Human Transporter (HT), to inspire young people’s interest and participation in science and technology. Teams earned their invitations to the Championship by excelling in competitive play, sportsmanship, and the development of partnerships between schools, businesses, and communities.

Team 111 “Wild Stang” of Rolling Meadows High School and Wheeling High School from Schaumburg, Illinois won the prestigious FIRST Robotics Competition Championship Chairman’s Award, recognized as the team that best represents a model for other teams to emulate and best embodies the purpose and goals of FIRST.

The Winning Alliance of the FIRST Robotics Competition Championship was: Team 217 “The ThunderChickens” of Utica Community Schools from Sterling Heights, Michigan; Team 296 “Northern Knights” of Loyola HighSchool in Montreal, Quebec, Canada; and Team 522 “RoboWizards” of McKee Vocational High School in Staten Island, New York.

Student teams built their robots from a kit of hundreds of parts. This year’s game, called “Aim High,” tested the students’ and robots’ ability to fire foam balls through hoops, plow them into floor goals, and program a vision system allowing the robot to navigate.

“Our society is in the middle of a crisis in science and technology, and FIRST is trying to change how our culture views these fields,” said renowned inventor of the Segway? Human Transporter and FIRST founder, Dean Kamen. “We’re helping young people see scientists and engineers in the same light as their traditional heroes in sports and entertainment.”

FIRST also announced the recipients of numerous educational scholarships worth approximately $8 million from some of the most prestigious science and engineering schools in the country.



Also gathering at the FIRST Championship, 81 teams from around the world participated in the FIRST LEGO League (FLL) World Festival. This year’s “Ocean Odyssey” real-life challenge tasked students, ages 9 to 14, to design, build, and program robots to undertake aquatic challenges. Top honors went to Director’s Award 1st Place winner, Team 266 “Central SpaceLab One” from Indiana; and Director’s Award 2nd Place winner, Team 280 “MindStorm Troopers” from Ohio. The Director’s Award measures how children, ages 9 to 14, inspire and motivate others about the excitement and wonders of science and technology, whiledemonstrating gracious professionalism.

In the FIRST Vex Challenge (FVC), over 500 students participated in this pilot competition. Using the innovative Vex Robotics Design System, teams completed the challenge using a more accessible and affordable robotics kit. The FIRST Vex Challenge Award, a peer and formal judged award recognizing excellence in robot design and teamwork, went to Team 160 “The Impulse” from Waterbury, Connecticut. The FIRST Vex Challenge Winning Alliance was Team 46 “Singapore Smart” from Ambler, Pennsylvania; Team 268 “Simbotics” from St. Catharines, Ontario, Canada; and Team 1148 “Robowranglers” from Greenville, Texas.

The other major honors that were awarded at the FIRST Championship included:

FIRST Robotics Competition Championship: