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Robotics club mentors young people in science and engineering. What goes around comes around. Every year, mechanically minded high school students all over the United States and Canada compete in the FIRST (For the Inspiration of Science and Technology) Robotics competition, building and programming robots and entering them in regional and national game-playing competitions. And middle-school students have the FIRST Lego League, a competition to program off-the- shelf Lego robots.
The group saw its work pay off this year as Ithaca High's team, known as Code Red 639, won the Canadian super regional competition in Mississauga, Ontario, April 1 –3, and the Sciencenter's Lego team took the second-place programming award in their competition at Pace University in Pleasantville, NY, February 8. The high school team currently includes 25 students, with Ithaca High School technology teacher Michael Peters as their adviser. The Sciencenter Lego team started this year with six students. "Most of us have been involved in our own high schools or have been friends of people who did it," explained Vicki Niebrzydowski ’04, president of Cornell's FIRST Robotics Club. The club started four years ago, she said, with Patrick Dingle ’04, who helped to organize the first Ithaca High School team and eventually brought in other Cornell students. In the fall of 2001, the Cornell club was formally registered as a student organization, and it now has "about 10 members," Niebrzydowski said. Daisy Fan, assistant professor of computer science, is the faculty adviser. More than 800 teams participate nationwide and internationally in 23 regional events and a championship event. The competitions are sponsored by FIRST, an organization dedicated to motivating young people to pursue opportunities in science, technology, and engineering. —Bill Steele, Cornell News Service |