NASA Announces Robotics Student Competition 2012 Grant Awards

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Dec. 8, 2011

Dwayne Brown
Headquarters, Washington 
202-358-1726
dwayne.c.brown@xxxxxxxx 

Ruth Dasso Marlaire 
Ames Research Center, Moffett Field, Calif. 
650-604-4709
ruth.marlaire@xxxxxxxx 

RELEASE: 11-411

NASA ANNOUNCES ROBOTICS STUDENT COMPETITION 2012 GRANT AWARDS

WASHINGTON -- NASA is continuing its strong support for the annual 
FIRST Robotics Competition, which inspires student interest in 
science, technology, and mathematics through a challenge to design 
and build a robot. The agency is awarding grants totaling $1,386,500 
for student teams in 37 states to participate in FIRST, or For 
Inspiration and Recognition of Science and Technology. 

"NASA participation in FIRST puts us on the cutting edge with the 
leaders of tomorrow," NASA Administrator Charles Bolden said. "NASA's 
FIRST volunteers have given tens of thousands of students a crucial 
mentoring experience and helped them understand what engineers and 
researchers really do to mount challenging missions of robotic and 
human exploration. FIRST inspires students to pursue the technical 
careers of the future - careers that will help America send humans to 
Mars and reveal the unknown."

Each FIRST team receives an identical kit of parts and has six weeks 
to design and build a robot. Other than dimension and weight 
limitations and other technical restrictions, the look and function 
of the robot is up to each team. NASA volunteers support many teams 
throughout the process. 

The competition is structured like a professional athletic event and 
teams compete in an arena the size of a small basketball court. 
Robots must have offensive and defensive capabilities. Teams 
collaborate to complete tasks, while simultaneously preventing 
opposing teams from completing the same activity. 

This year, 45 regional competitions will take place in the U.S., along 
with four additional international competitions in March and April. 
The FIRST Championship competition will be held in St. Louis in 
April.

"We were pleased to see the growing interest in these engineering 
programs, as indicated by the increase in applications this year," 
said Dave Lavery, program manager for the NASA Robotics Alliance 
Project (RAP). "After a rigorous review process, we were able to 
select 241 teams for receipt of a grant award." 

NASA plays a significant role in FIRST and other robotics competition 
programs by increasing access and encouraging young people to 
investigate careers in the sciences and engineering. The 
competitively selected cooperative agreement for the grants is funded 
by RAP and sponsored by the Science Mission Directorate at NASA 
Headquarters in Washington. It is managed by the RAP Project Office 
at NASA's Ames Research Center in Moffett Field, Calif. 

NASA founded RAP in 1995 to supply engineering expertise for robotics 
and engineering competition programs such as FIRST. During the past 
16 years, RAP has awarded about $45 million to academic and 
non-profit organizations across the nation to stimulate America's 
intellectual capability in fields tied to robotics engineering. Each 
NASA center participates in RAP and also contributes its respective 
expertise, funding and other resources.

NASA has participated in the FIRST program since 1995, and is the 
largest single participant. Other participants have included 
Motorola, General Motors, Ford, Boeing, and Johnson & Johnson. 

The FIRST program was founded in 1989 by Dean Kamen to inspire an 
appreciation of science and technology in young people, their schools 
and communities. Based in Manchester, N.H., FIRST is a non-profit 
organization that designs accessible, innovative programs to build 
self-confidence, knowledge and life skills, while motivating young 
people to pursue academic opportunities.

For more information about RAP, visit: 

http://robotics.nasa.gov 

For a list of the selected FRC teams, visit: 

http://robotics.arc.nasa.gov/events/2012_sponsorship.php

	
-end-



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