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Students and Robots Take to the Courts in Competition

Jet Propulsion Laboratory https://www.jpl.nasa.gov/ March 19, 2012
Student-controlled robots compete at the FIRST Robotics Competition by shooting foam basketballs into hoops. › Image gallery
Students inspect and prepare their robot for competition.
Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech
A team sporting orange, fuzzy hats is seen here controlling their robot in the midst of a match.
Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech

Student teams from California, Nevada, Brazil and Chile competed in the 21st annual Los Angeles regional FIRST competition this past weekend.

If you had chosen Cimarron Memorial High School, Orcutt Academy High School and Dos Pueblos High School Engineering Academy as your top picks in this past weekend's "Robotics March Madness Bracket," you would have been right.

The 21st season of the Los Angeles regional FIRST (For Inspiration and Recognition of Science and Technology) Robotics Competition, held at the Long Beach Convention Center on March 16 and 17, proved to be a true battle of the minds. Sixty-six high school teams from California, Nevada, Brazil and Chile battled on the courts with their student-designed robots for the title of Regional Champions.

The students from Cimarron Memorial High School, Las Vegas, Nev.; Orcutt Academy High School, Orcutt, Calif.; and Dos Pueblos High School Engineering Academy, Goleta, Calif., won the overall regional competition. Foshay Learning Center, Los Angeles, won the coveted Regional Chairman's award, and Centinela Valley Union High School District, Hawthorne, Calif., took home the Engineering Inspiration award.

The winners from this competition will represent the Southern California region at the FIRST championships April 25 to 29 in St. Louis, against 51,000 other students on more than 2,400 teams. 

The FIRST program was founded two decades ago in an effort to encourage students to pursue careers in science and technology through robotics competitions and with the help of engineers from NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif.; aerospace and other companies and institutions of higher education. FIRST continues to grow and continues to inspire.

For more information, visit: http://www.usfirst.org/ .

News Media Contact

Priscilla Vega

818-354-1357

priscilla.r.vega@jpl.nasa.gov

2012-081

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