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2008/09
During the year, we reached
out to several local elementary and middle schools
to help them experience FIRST and robotics.
Our team sent out student members to aid and encourage
the development of these young students. We helped
Evergreen High School with their new FRC team and
were proud to see them win an award at the Seattle
Regional. Our team housed members of Team 2904
from Monroe after kickoff, helped them become familiar
with the game and rules, and shared a group dinner.
We also helped assist other teams in creating their
kit bots for the start of the season. Our mentors
have continued to act as advisors in mechanical
and programming issues within our own team and
others. We hosted the FLL regionals, held a pre-ship
party for our supporters, and hosted last year's
FTC championship.
The freshman and sophomore
members on our team competed in FTC in 2008. With
a team of ten students we took part in one scrimmage
and one competition. We were selected to compete
in the elimination rounds of the competition. We
also recieved the Motivate Award for our spirit
while competing.

Our FRC competition season
was rewarding. We headed to the Portland regional
with our robot "the Stench" to play the
game "Lunacy." We were thrilled to be
picked for the finals and eventually the Red Alliance
won it all. In Oregon we also received the Delphi "Driving
Tomorrow's Technology" Award. We had a
strong showing at the Microsoft Seattle Regional
Competition coming away with the Motorola Quality
Award. We had a large group go to Atlanta where
we all had a great time and our robot performed
very well. Our team also received a 2009 Web Site
Excellence Award which made our web team very happy.
2007/08
With new organization, we began the build season
with an attempt to expand our engineering capabilities
with the construction of an Omni directional drive
base. This was a new thing for the team and very
challenging for the programmers. Unfortunately
this task seemed to be too challenging for the
team, and part way through the build season the
drive had to be altered to a tank drive.
Due to the new organization of the teams, we were
able to win the Kleiner Perkins Caufeild, Byers
Entrepreneurship award and the Underwriters Laboratories
Industrial Safety Award in Portland. At the Seattle
Regional, we received the Delphi "Driving
Tomorrows Technology" award and the Engineering
Inspiration award. This is a very significant
achievement due to the fact that we were only
a second year team. We then proceeded to win
the Seattle Regional, which with the win and
the Engineering Inspiration Award, we double
qualified to go to Atlanta.

We then went to Atlanta for the National competition.
We did not succeed in winning any awards, or
winning the game itself, but in the end we placed
in the top 25% of the teams at the competition.
As a second year team, we had expanded very quickly
from an understaffed team with little equipment
to a well organized team that was a serious competitor
in the game.
2006/07
Our team began with 18 students. While our coach
had previous experience with FRC, none of us (students
and parents) had been exposed to FIRST.
We looked to our coach for guidance. As one of
the students said, "I entered the world of FIRST expecting
it to be the same as a math team, or Science Olympiad,
but I was in for a big surprise." Late nights,
few tools, fewer mentors, learning from each other
and making new friends, we soon found ourselves
packing the robot into a crate and sending it on
its way to the Portland regional. We came away
not only with the Imagery Award, but we were introduced
to the FIRST ideals in action; gracious
professionalism became relevant to the whole team.
This was truly different than any other sporting
event any of us had participated in before.
From there we traveled to Las Vegas, where we were
caught up in the spirit and fun of the competition.
We sprayed our hair black and added white skunk
stripes, helped other teams in the pits, cheered,
and made friends with teams from other parts
of the country. Success followed us to Las Vegas
as we won the Rookie All Star award and were
part of the winning alliance. Now we were qualified
for Atlanta, something we had never dreamed about!
Our friends from Team 488 demonstrated gracious
professionalism when they greeted us at midnight
at the airport to congratulate our win! In 3
days, our parent group organized to get all of
the team members and 12 parents and mentors to
Atlanta.
The Championship was vastly different than the
regionals. While we didn't win any awards, in
the words of one student, "we had become
a team, and I think that even a national title
wouldn't be an even trade for what we have accomplished." When
we returned, no one wanted the season to end.
As a parent, stated, "The FIRST organization
is a leader in excellence, encouraging our kids
to take their knowledge and spirit, and made
a difference in the lives of their teammates,
communities, and futures."

We began to look for ways to keep our team together
and the spirit of FIRST alive as the
summer neared. We took our robot to "Challenge
Air" at Paine Field where physically challenged
children and youth had the opportunity to fly
with a pilot. The smiles and laughs from the
children and us told us we were in the right
place doing the right thing.
We began our second year with the benefit of more
students, more tools, and more mentors on the team.
Due to the new resources we had acquired we were
able to make several organizational changes within
the team. We were able to make organized sub systems
within the team that worked selectively on individual
jobs as to do these jobs with better quality. With
the new organization of teams we were able to create
Systems Integration, a team specifically designed
for the management of the teams. This team also
focused on award entries and scouting, easing the
processes and creating a higher level of quality.
The Few, The Proud, The
Skunks!
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