Session 5
Before You Begin This Session
This session will guide your team through making iterative improvements to their first robot design. In the previous sessions, students followed a process to help them make data-based decisions about driving and scoring. In this session, they will practice collaborative, data-based decision making to make incremental improvements to their robot.
Throughout this session, your role as coach will be to help remind students about good documentation practices like recording ideas, sketches, reasoning, and data about robot design changes. You will also help facilitate the team's collaborative process around making changes to the robot.
Have your kit and materials ready for the session before you begin. You will need the following:
- A built Hero Bot.
- Charged controller and batteries.
- A built V5RC Push Back Competition Field.
- Spare VEX V5 Tools and Parts.
- An engineering notebook.
Review strategies for implementing this STEM Lab with your team.
- Use the Implementing a Competition 101 STEM Lab article to help you prepare and facilitate this session.
- Read the Making Competition 101 STEM Labs Work For All Students article for ways to adapt, or differentiate, session content to meet varying student needs.
- Review the considerations in the Cultivating a Positive Team Culture article to support your teams' growing collaboration skills.
As you prepare to improve your Hero Bot, think carefully about the changes you want to explore. In this session, we'll guide you through making a potential improvement to your robot. Keep in mind, this potential improvement may or may not actually enhance performance—and that's okay! After this session, you'll have the skills to analyze data about your changes, empowering your team to make informed decisions about your robot’s design.
Before you begin, make sure you have the following ready:
- A built Hero Bot.
- Charged controller and batteries.
- A built V5RC Push Back Competition Field.
- Spare VEX V5 Tools and Parts.
- An engineering notebook.
As you prepare to improve your Hero Bot, think carefully about the changes you want to explore. In this session, we'll guide you through making a potential improvement to your robot. Keep in mind, this potential improvement may or may not actually enhance performance—and that's okay! After this session, you'll have the skills to analyze data about your changes, empowering your team to make informed decisions about your robot’s design.
Before you begin, make sure you have the following ready:
- A built Hero Bot.
- Charged controller and batteries.
- A built V5RC Push Back Competition Field.
- Spare VEX V5 Tools and Parts.
- An engineering notebook.
In this session, students will make collaborative decisions about a change they want to make to their robot. They will need to document their ideas for changes, and the reasoning behind them in their engineering notebook, then use that documentation to come to consensus as a team. They will also use the notebook to collect data about how the changes they make affect the robot's performance, so they can make data-based decisions on their robot's design.
Your team may also need guidance on the following:
- Moving through a collaborative decision making process.
- Making small, incremental changes, rather than large, overwhelming ones.
- Choosing a task to test the effectiveness of changes.
The guiding questions below can help you to facilitate their process as they improve their robot without solving their problems for them directly.
- What is the idea that you want to improve, and why?
- Why do you think your improvement will be effective?
- How will you test your improvement to see if it is helpful?
- How does this improvement work with the strategy you created in session 4?
- What other improvements can you think of?
Watch the following video to learn more about how one V5RC Team, Eastwood Robotics, approached documenting design changes in their engineering notebook.
The V5 Section of the VEX Library has many articles that may be helpful with robot design and improvement.
Activity: Make an Incremental Improvement
Let's explore ways to improve your Hero Bot! Improvements can involve adding, removing, or modifying parts of your robot. You will collaborate with your team to decide on an improvement to make, and then test the robot's performance with the improvement. You will collect and record data so your team can decide if it's an improvement worth keeping.
Use this task card (Google doc / .pdf / .docx) to guide you through this activity.
- Document your ideas for changes in your engineering notebook, along with your reasoning.
- Record data about the effects of any changes as well, so you can make a data based decision.
Let's explore ways to improve your Hero Bot! Improvements can involve adding, removing, or modifying parts of your robot. You will collaborate with your team to decide on an improvement to make, and then test the robot's performance with the improvement. You will collect and record data so your team can decide if it's an improvement worth keeping.
Use this task card (Google doc / .pdf / .docx) to guide you through this activity.
- Document your ideas for changes in your engineering notebook, along with your reasoning.
- Record data about the effects of any changes as well, so you can make a data based decision.
Making improvements to the robot is an ongoing and iterative process. Students may find that their idea for improvement doesn't actually help the robot's performance, and that is okay!
Guide them to understand that each improvement, whether or not it works as anticipated, is an opportunity to learn something about the engineering of the robot that they can use to inform future improvements!
Remind students that they can use resources like the V5 Section of the VEX Library to help them as they work through their design ideas. You can also have students browse the VEX Store to see if any additional parts will help them to improve their robot.
You can also use the PD+ Community for support in facilitating robot design changes. Look for ideas that have been posted, or post your own question to the PD+ Community about ways to support students' build iterations.
Wrap Up
After your group has collaborated to make, test, and record data about an improvement, come together for a whole-team discussion.
- What does the data show about the performance of the robot with the improvement?
- Is this modification one the team wants to keep? Why or why not?
- What other improvements are needed to optimize how your robot's design helps you to implement your strategy?
- What did you learn about the robot, your team, or your strategy during this process?
After your group has collaborated to make, test, and record data about an improvement, come together for a whole-team discussion.
- What does the data show about the performance of the robot with the improvement?
- Is this modification one the team wants to keep? Why or why not?
- What other improvements are needed to optimize how your robot's design helps you to implement your strategy?
- What did you learn about the robot, your team, or your strategy during this process?
For additional guidance on facilitating productive, student-centered engineering conversations—including question ideas and discussion prompts—see this VEX Library Article.
Now that you've created an initial strategy and improved your robot, you are ready to prepare for your first competition!
Select Next Session > to move on to the next session.