Welcome to Inspire, a blog from FIRST.
After years of inspiring young people, as well as the adults who work with them, we decided it was time to share some of the things that inspire us.
Learn more about Inspire.
The Best Device in the Classroom
Mar 29, 2016 by Krissy Venosdale, Innovation Coordinator, The Kinkaid School
Our world is filled with technology and our students are growing up with access to information on a 24 hour a day, seven day a week basis. They can find an app to identify a leaf, listen to a podcast, or even watch a live video of history happening. They can text, take selfies, and find sports scores in split seconds.
One Principal’s view: Education at its best
Mar 22, 2016 By Bjorn Paige, Principal, San Dieguito High School Academy
Attending a robotics competition is like stepping into another world. Last weekend, I had the opportunity to watch San Dieguito High School Academy’s Robotics team, “Team Paradox,” participate in the FIRST® Robotics Competition Tournament at the Del Mar Fairgrounds. It was astounding.
STEM, Jurassic Park, and an artistic genius
Mar 10, 2016 by Drew McConnell, Manager of Digital Learning, FIRST
It is often thought that STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering, and Math) subjects are the backbone of innovation — I disagree. Now before you click the 'x' to close this tab and move on to something else, hear me out:
Podcast junkies, kidney transplants, and two innovative educators
Mar 02, 2016 by Mark Greenlaw
I’m a huge fan of podcasts – in fact my official FIRST bio mentions me as a “podcast junkie”. It’s actually to FIRST in which I owe my love of Podcasts. When I started this job 2 years ago, I began listening to Podcasts to maximize the value of my drive time on my 60 mile commute.
You are now entering an Innovation Zone!
Feb 23, 2016This week, we discovered an amazing educator named Krissy Venosdale who is the Innovation Coordinator at The Kinkaid School in Houston, Texas.
Confidence, adaptability, and self-directed learning
Feb 16, 2016 by Drew McConnell, Manager of Digital Learning, FIRST
Prior to working at FIRST, I spent some time working as a technology trainer and instructional designer. A company hired me to create a course on iOS programming (iPhone/iPad). After spending several months developing this course, Apple did what Apple does: it released something new. Typically a new release from Apple includes an upgraded phone or laptop with new hardware and software features, but this time it released a brand new programming language for iOS, called Swift.
Passion for STEM lands two young people White House invite
Feb 10, 2016It’s not every day you’re invited to the State of the Union Address, much less as a personal guest of First Lady Michelle Obama. So there was no playbook to follow for FIRST Alums Lydia Doza and Oscar Vazquez, as they traveled from their homes in rural Oregon and Fort Worth, Texas, to the White House last month.
Hedgehogs, Flow, and 10,000 hours: Helping young people find their path
Feb 02, 2016 by Mark Greenlaw
As parents and educators, we often have the opportunity to speak with the young people in our lives about their future. We may start with the question “so what do you want to do when you grow up?” which typically elicits responses ranging from a blank stare to a confident pronouncement “play shortstop for the Boston Red Sox.”
Mentors: changing lives, increasing opportunity
Jan 27, 2016 by Mark Greenlaw
January is National Mentoring Month, which provides us with the perfect opportunity to hit the pause button and take a few minutes to reflect on the tremendous impact that adult mentors can have on young people. As with many other youth-serving organizations, volunteer mentors are critically important to our ability to achieve our mission and transform the lives of young people across the world.
The importance of being earnest (about failure)
Jan 20, 2016 by Rachel Holladay, student and research roboticist, Carnegie Mellon University
Adorned on a landscape background, sitting in posters across classrooms, a Thomas Edison quote reads "I have not failed. I've just found 10,000 ways that won't work."1 It is an inspiring thought that is very easy to say in hindsight. But what if you are on trial #1,912 or #3,504 and all you have faced thus far is failure?