From an Alum
Michael Bojanski, an alum from North Carolina has created a Wiki, consolidating useful links to answer questions that you may have. We thank him for wanting to share this fantastic tool.
https://www.ncome.org/doku/doku.php
Coaching Tips from Maine
In the true spirit of Odyssey of the Mind, our friends from Main Adventures In Creativity have shared with us some additional coaching tips. We thank them for their generosity.
Parents
Parents often ask what they can do to help. They want to assist, but are afraid of going over the line. You can get a list of what parents can and cannot do at the “Parents” section of our web site. Print out the list and share it with parents at an upcoming meeting.
When practicing spontaneous problems, try focusing on a specific skill once in a while. For example, remove the time limit in verbals and just look for five great answers, no matter how long it takes. Or practice flipping cards in an efficient manner (you’d be surprised how much time can be lost by team members forgetting to flip a card in a verbal challenge). In a hands-on problem, weight the points so that “how well the team works together” becomes the most important component of their solution.
If you have set goals with your team at the beginning of the season, do periodic check-ins to see if you are on a path to achieving those goals.
Spontaneous Problems
The following is courtesy of the Odyssey World listserv:
- Expect the Unexpected. Don’t worry if you have not seen anything resembling this problem before. There’s a good chance that nobody else has either.
- Listen to the Rules. Formulate questions after the rules are read and not during. How can you listen if you are thinking of a question? Nine times out of ten the question will be answered.
- Often, the team can stand or sit. The presence of a table and chairs does not mean teams have to sit down for spontaneous. Some kids literally think better on their feet.
- Think of categories for answers to verbal spontaneous problems. The teams can think about lots of topics as “go to” lists: reptiles, emotions, bodies of water, geography, food, sports, music, current events, movies, books – kids can focus on coming up with an answer that fits their categories if they are stuck for an answer.
We hope these ideas will help you with spontaneous practice.
The Art of Asking Questions
Coaches need to be aware that the WAY a question is asked may limit the creativity of the answers. Here are some general, all-purpose questions you can use with your team(s):
- Do you think any other team would think of this?
- Can you think of a more creative way to do this?
- What other materials could be used to (create this effect, to make this move, to make it lighter in weight, to make it funnier, etc.)?
- What kinds of things do we need to find out in order to do this?
And now, for some ideas to use when you want to say something you’re not allowed to say!
- How else could you…?
- Why did this happen?
- Where could you find out?
- Is this your best…?
- Does this meet the standard?
- Is this job done?
- What do we mean by style?
- What should be done?
- When should it be done?
- Who should do it?
- Can this be tested?
- Can we combine ideas?
- Why is it necessary?
- How else could this be arranged?
- What should come next?
- What makes sense? What makes nonsense?
- What could be said? What could be left unsaid?
Good questioning can really help elevate your team’s solution and enjoyment of creative problem solving, without introducing outside assistance. We hope this helps you this year. If you have any tips you’ve picked up along the way, please pass them along and we’ll share them with other coaches.
Coach’s Responsibilities
Many coaches, particularly new ones, wonder about what their job actually is. Here’s a list of some of the major responsibility that an Odyssey of the Mind coach should assume:
- Organize and schedule meetings of the team
- Set rules and regulations for behavior at meetings
- Set up a timeline for task completion
- Guide activities
- Be sure the team has updated clarifications
- Secure materials requested by the team (but don’t select things for them)
- Secure experts to demonstrate/teach the team new skills, if necessary.
Remember that someone may teach basic wiring or how to work with a sewing machine, but the team members (and only the team members) must apply those skills to their solution themselves!
Meet with parents to explain rules, philosophy and your meeting schedule. Stress the importance of each member’s attendance. Oversee that all paperwork for the tournament is completed.
Distribute information on tournaments, directions and schedules to parents/relatives.
Instill the Odyssey of the Mind spirit in your team. Remember, if you emphasize the score as the only measure of their success, you could be setting up your team to feel like failures. Please emphasize that the learning process, the experience, and FUN are the worthwhile goals to achieve.
(Adapted from the VOMBO coaches guide) Remember that we are here to help you. If you have any questions, please get in touch so we can be of assistance.
Team Building
Here are a couple of team building activities:
Lighthouse
Pick a team member to become a lighthouse and one to be a ship. The rest of the team members are rocks. Blindfold the ship. In the boundary area (ocean), have the rocks set in a spot and freeze. Sand the lighthouse at one end of the ocean and the ship at the other end. Have the lighthouse guide the ship, by giving verbal directions through the rock hazards to safety. Make sure the rocks spot the ship in case of it sinking on the rocks.
Standing Twister or Knots
Put the group in a huddle. Each person extends his or her right hand and grabs the hand of another person in the huddle. Each person then extends his or her left hand and grabs a different person’s hand. No two people should be holding the same hand. The object is to have the group untangle themselves slowly without ever letting go of hands. Some people will have to step over other people; some will go under people; some will get twisted and have to untwist and turn to unravel themselves. — It is important for your team to both work together and to laugh together. We hope your group is working well and that they – and you -are having fun.
Facilitating Teams
A friend of ours who does facilitation professionally was kind enough to put together some of his “wisdom” about facilitating teams. We hope this will help you in your work with your own teams.
Toward Effective Facilitation by George D’Iorio
Facilitating a team can be quite a challenge, but it can also be very rewarding. In approaching this challenge it is important to remember that the facilitator provides the process through which the team develops the content. So, the facilitator cannot offer answers or solutions, but by guiding them through an effective process they can help the team make progress toward their goals.
Effective Team Process
An effective team process is one that leverages the strengths of the individual members into a results the individuals would not have achieved individually. This is sometimes referred to as synergy, where the results of the whole (the team) is greater than the sum of its parts (individual members). The key is to get participation from every member, keep them focused on the goal, and guide them by way of a formula or process, but not by providing actual content. We can accomplish this by using various techniques that are easily learned and can be readily applied.
3 Basic Process Techniques
There are many process techniques to facilitate teams, but the following 3 basic techniques are recommended for those who are building facilitation skills. These techniques can be used in the phases a team goes through in its normal progress toward reaching solutions or determining actions. In the use of these techniques it is recommended that ‘public recording’ be used so that the team can see their ideas and progress toward their goal. Most commonly, this is achieved through the use of a whiteboard or ‘flipcharts’ and colored markers.
Brainstorming
The most straightforward technique for gathering ideas is brainstorming. The idea is to collect as many ideas as possible in a short period of time. You can go around the group in ’round robin’ fashion to make sure everyone participates evenly. Capturing the ideas and posting them on flip charts on the wall helps the group see the progress they are making. There is one rule in brainstorming: every idea is a good idea. Simply write them all down without discussion and in a few minutes you can have 20 or 30 good ideas. Stop when the group runs out of steam or you sense that the quality of the ideas is waning.
Facilitated Discussion
After gathering these ideas, it is a good idea to try to eliminate duplicate ideas, combine ideas that are related, and trim off ideas that might not move the team toward its goal. You can do this by explaining this objective to the team and then simply guide them through a discussion of the ideas. This discussion might even lead to adding a few new ideas to the list. Ask questions about the ideas to stimulate the group. For example:
Does everyone understand this idea the way it is written?
How does this idea help us solve our problem?
Is this idea one that we can combine with something else on our list?
Can we expand on this idea to make it better?
Multi-voting
This technique is most effective when you have a large list of ideas that you need to boil down to 5 or 10. With your ideas posted on the walls, you simply give everyone a certain number of ‘votes’. Each team member gets 10 post-it notes which they can use to ‘vote’ for the ideas they like best. After everyone has voted, the votes are tabulated and the ideas with the highest number of votes are the ones the team will consider as its final solution. If one solution is clearly the ‘favorite’ you can stop right there, or you can do another round of voting to ‘pick’ the final answer. You may want to have an in-depth discussion about the ideas prior to the ‘final’ round. Sometimes the top 2 votegetters can be combined to make an even better solution.
Quick tips for facilitating:
Explain the process/technique before diving in Maintain impartiality toward ideas Keep the process moving Make sure everyone is involved, especially quieter members Ask probing questions if an idea is not clearly stated Paraphrase if needed to clarify an idea Encourage divergent views Summarize before moving on to the next step/technique Remember that facilitation is an art and it takes time and practice to perfect techniques. With new teams the challenge is even greater because the members are still trying to learn how to relate to each other. If the group is struggling with this you may want use the first 5 minutes of every session to ‘break the ice’. This can be a simple guessing game or practicing brainstorming something totally unrelated to your actual goals. (Example: lets make a list of all the ‘cats’ you can think of. Remember ALL IDEAS are good and encourage crazy ideas).
There are entire books devoted to ‘Icebreaking’ activities that can help get your team working together through games. Just ask at your local bookstore for books like ‘Games Trainers Play’. There are also many books on facilitation skills. One book that is especially recommended for new facilitators is ‘The Art of Facilitation’, by Dale Hunter. It currently sells for $14.36 at Amazon.com and is 256 pages in length. Books such as these offer great advice and insight into how to get teams working together more effectively.
Above all, keep your team focused and positive and make sure you guide their progress toward their goals. By doing that, and by encouraging their participation, you will have an excellent chance to facilitate their success.
Frequently Asked Questions
During the course of the creative problem season, many coaches have questions about rules, what to expect at the Tournament, etc.
We’d like to help answer some that we have heard recently:
Q: How many team members compete in Spontaneous? A: 5 members compete in Spontaneous.
Q: Is it the same 5 team members who compete, regardless of the type of problem? A: The team decides which 5 members will compete. For some teams, it is the same five, regardless of the type of problem. Other teams have a specific 5 who compete if it is a verbal problem, a different 5 who compete if it is a hands-on problem, and perhaps still a different 5 if it is a verbal/hands-on problem. It is suggested that the team make this decision before Tournament Day.
Q: The team has gotten some materials at a recycling center. What type of cost should we associate with them? A: Yard sale prices should be assigned. What would you pay for a yard of fabric at a yard sale? Probably not more than 50 cents or a dollar. If you purchase new material, however, you must assign the full price paid. Likewise with other objects that are “experienced”. Assign a value as if you were to purchase this at a yard sale.
Q: Can the team have help bringing materials to pre-staging? Can they bring things in containers without counting the cost of the containers? A: Anyone can help the team bring materials to pre-staging. You can bring things in whatever you would like, without being required to assign a cost. The team must bring all their props, backgrounds, etc. out to the performance area.
Q: Can parents and coaches help the teams clean up afterwards? A: Yes; encourage them to do so!
Q: What kinds of souvenirs will be for sale at the Tournament? Can we get lunch at Bates? Where? When will we find out what time we’re performing? What is there to do at Bates? How do I get there? A: You will be receiving the answers to these questions, and more, in your Pre Tournament packet, which will be mailed to you approximately two weeks before Tournament Day.
Q: Will there be a place to hang things when we perform? A: Plan to have all of your backgrounds, membership signs, etc., be free standing.
Q: Can the teams talk about their Spontaneous problems? A: We are working on having a place where the team can talk to each other about the Spontaneous problem immediately afterward; we will let you know if there was space available for this at Registration. Other than this possible time to talk to teach other, TEAMS MAY NOT TALK ABOUT THEIR PROBLEM. Please remind parents and other friends that they may not divulge the problem to their coaches or anyone else. The same problems are used at many State Tournaments; you would be surprised at the amount of times that discussions of problems have gravitated to other states (really).
Outside Assistance
These are the answers to questions posed to Carole Micklus re Outside Assistance a few years ago.
SCENARIO: For a Division I team, a parent plugs in a power tool for one of the students as it is a rule in their house that no children are allowed to plug in any appliance.
QUESTION: Is it outside assistance for any non-team member to plug in a power tool that the team uses to complete their solution to the problem?
ANSWER: No, the only prohibition against this would be if it were done during the timed competition period. The parent may not use the power tool to work on the problem solution.
SCENARIO: A team decided they will revolve their skit around a CELL theme. The coach gives them a homework assignment to come up with all of the words they could with CELL in them like CELLophane, CELLular Phone, etc.
QUESTION: Is it OA for a coach to give a homework assignment that gets the kids to think more creatively about an initial idea that they came up with?
ANSWER: Although the coach should not give any examples, the assignment is one of the types of things the coach should do.
SCENARIO: Judge stops team’s performance in long term because the vehicle used is marking the floor. Children are allowed to push. At end of performance parents standing outside the taped area lift the car to spare the floor.
QUESTION: Is it OA for any non-team member to help with props after the performance has ended?
ANSWER: No, the only time the team may not have help with prop movement is during the timed competition period. (You asked me to cite the pertaining rules — I would ask where a rule exists that prohibits this.)
SCENARIO: Coach and two team members (non-participants) watching their teams performance of long term solution.
QUESTION: Is it outside assistance for one of the nonparticipating team members to point out to the coach that the team forgot to use a prop?
ANSWER: No, so long as none of the performers hear the remark.
SCENARIO: Four of seven team members on a team in one OM year build some backdrops for use in their presentation. These same four are on a team the following year with three new members.
QUESTION: Is it OA for the new team to use the backdrops built in the prior year? May a team use props from a prior year in any situation without incurring an OA penalty?
ANSWER: Props may be used from year to year as is ONLY if the team is of entirely the same composition. — That is, no new team members and none that are no longer on the team. The work must be that of all the current team members regardless of when it was done.
SCENARIO: Kids put 2 boards together perpendicularly (4th graders) with screws and nails, but it keeps falling.
QUESTION: Is it OA to ask an adult who is familiar with carpentry what kinds of things in carpentry can be done to brace the boards? (Going on the principle that if it can be found with research, an adult can tell them.)
ANSWER: An adult can tell and show the team members various ways to brace the boards as long as s/he does not show them specifically what to do for their problem solution.
SCENARIO: Kids decide to narrate a good deal of the problem.
QUESTION: Is it OA for the coach ask them if they can think of other ways to tell a story, rather than reading a piece of paper?
ANSWER: This is part of coaching. The coach is not telling them the solution. S/he is only trying to stimulate their thinking.
SCENARIO: During check-in the coach hands the paperwork to the pre-staging judge.
QUESTION: Is it OA for the coach to hand the paperwork to the pre-staging judge?
ANSWER: Although it is always good to have the team members hand in the paperwork, their is no prohibition against having the coach hand it to the judge.
SCENARIO: As the team deliberates on what their solution will be, the coach asks questions to make sure that their solution is well thought out.
QUESTION: Is it OA for the coach to ask questions as the team is developing their solutions?
ANSWER: NO– that’s what a coach is for!!
SCENARIO A Division I team is spray painting a prop.
QUESTION: Is it OA for the coach to hold a team member’s for about 2 seconds (Out of a 30 minute job) to help show the proper way to spray paint?
ANSWER: Only if s/he is not spraying the item that will be used as part of the problem solution. S/he must use another item (perhaps a scrap piece of paper or wood) to give this lesson.
SCENARIO: A Division I balsa wood team has a sheet of paper describing the order to put weights on (smaller diameter first then larger, so as to allow hand grip space). Kids composed the form (came up with the idea) but coach actually wrote it.
QUESTION: Is it OA for a non-team member to write down the instructions used by team members during their presentation? Is this any different than the coach completing the style form for Division I?
ANSWER: As long as the team members provided the information, it is okay for the coach to write it out. — It is NOT different from the rules for the style form.
SCENARIO: A Division I team is brainstorming their solution.
QUESTION: Is it OA for the coach to write down their ideas for later review?
ANSWER: This is a good idea. The only rule surrounding this is that the coach may only write down what the team members say.
SCENARIO: A division I team needs to move a 4′x8′ sheet of plywood from the garage to a workshop area.
QUESTION: Is it OA for a non-team member to move the plywood for them?
ANSWER: No, this is OK
SCENARIO: A team is working on a structure problem that can be reasonably broken into sub-components. The coach devises and builds a testing apparatus that allows each of these components to be tested.
QUESTION: Is it OA for the coach to devise and build these testers?
ANSWER: Yes, the team may use any types of devices to TEST their solutions.
[Editor Note. The above answer appears confusing saying that “Yes” it is OA, but follows saying it is OK to use any types. There is a similar question later on that would imply this answer was meant to say it is not OA and “Yes” the team may use these testers.]
SCENARIO: A coach prepares a simple, generic demonstration of an engineering concept and that concept is immediately applied by the kids into their structural design (i.e. a simple demonstration of how a truss withstands lateral loads better than a frame).
QUESTION: Does the presentation of an engineering concept represent OA in this circumstance?
ANSWER: As stated, yes. The coach would have to present several options of construction. S/he could demonstrate how each fails, but the team members must draw their own conclusions.
SCENARIO: If an “engineering practice” is interpreted by a coach to make it applicable to the current problem (i.e. the engineering practice of material quality assurance could be translated into inspecting and sorting balsa prior to it’s use in a structure).
QUESTION: Does the interpretation of HOW to apply general engineering practice to a problem represent OA?
ANSWER: No, not as described.
SCENARIO: With proper training, it is possible to examine a structure and determine which element failed first and why.
QUESTION: Is it OA for someone other than a team member to examine a failed structure and provide this information for the team?
ANSWER: This person may tell the team members what part failed; however, s/he cannot tell the team why it failed or what to do to keep it from failing in the future.
SCENARIO: A team member tells the adult who is helping to stack weights that he is going to go help resolve a problem with a prop. The adult verbally acknowledges that statement with the affirmation “sure, go ahead”.
QUESTION: Does this represent OA?
ANSWER: No. The team member has made the decision to do this. It would be outside assistance if the adult said something like, “Weight placement is more important, just stay here and continue with this” or if the adult initiated the conversation by telling the team member to go help with the prop.
SCENARIO: A younger sibling has been following with interest the experiments, designs and “tricks of the trade” of an older siblings team.
QUESTION: Can the younger sibling adopt the many “lessons learned” from following an older siblings team around for several years without incurring OA?
ANSWER” This is OK to do as long as the younger sibling does not produce exact thematic copies.
SCENARIO: A team is getting ready for spontaneous competition. The coach picks problems for them to work that s/he thinks will be representative of the type they will get. The coach tells them whether they made a good response or a bad one. The team is given constant, direct feedback on the quality or lack of quality of their spontaneous solutions.
QUESTION: Is it OA for the coach to prepare their team for spontaneous competition in this manner?
ANSWER: No, a good coach would always do this.
SCENARIO: A team wants to paint some props. There is some paint that was left over from last year, but the colors were mixed by last year’s team.
QUESTION: Would it be outside assistance for a team to use something that was made by someone else even though essentially the same thing could easily be bought by any team?
ANSWER: This is not outside assistance as it is not the prop itself.
SCENARIO: Kids get to WF and are uncrating their scenery and props (unscrewing the crates).
QUESTION: Is it OA for the coach to tell the team what order to do everything in (I know they can help do it but does a team member have to tell the adult to do it?). Can the coach point out things that broke and ask if the team is going to repair them? I don’t know if it makes a difference, but this is a Div 1 team.
ANSWER: It is okay for the coach to tell the team what order to uncrate things. It is also okay for the coach to point out things that broke and ask if the team wishes to try and repair them. However, from that point on it is up to the team members to decide whether and how to make repairs. (This is true for any division.)
SCENARIO: Coach asks each team member to read one of the elements of the problem and explain what it means.
QUESTION: Is it OA for the coach (Div 1) to write each element on a piece of paper and ask the team to group the elements so that they now have a bubble diagram which organizes the elements? Once the team organizes the elements, can the coach copy it down, make copies of it and distribute it to each team member?
ANSWER (Any division): It is okay for the coach to write down the elements, ask the team to group them and copy the grouping and distribute copies to the team members. The coach may not add or change anything however.
SCENARIO: Team is brainstorming about all the things that make you think of tropical islands.
QUESTION: Is it OA for the coach to put those ideas on a flip board for everyone to see.
ANSWER: This is okay provided the coach writes only the team members’ words.
SCENARIO: Team is creating the script (Div 1).
QUESTION: Is it OA for the coach to write down what they say so they can look at what they already have? (3rd and 4th graders simply can’t write, yet.)
ANSWER: This is okay in any division provided the coach writes only the team members’ words.
SCENARIO: Div 1 team is reading the rule book and cannot figure out what will happen if they have printed materials for the judges to read.
QUESTION: Is it OA for the coach to help them figure out what the rulebook is trying to tell them? Is it OA if the kids ask what the coach thinks it means? Is it OA if the team asks the coach what s/he would do if s/he were they?
ANSWER: The coach should help them interpret the rulebook. The coach may tell the team what s/he thinks it means. The coach cannot tell the team members what s/he would do unless the answer is “write for a problem clarification.” However, s/he should encourage the team to think about what it means first.
SCENARIO: Div 1 team has decided to use what they think is tasteful bathroom humor in their skit. The coach has made sure everyone is aware of the rule about vulgarity.
QUESTION: The team doesn’t think it’s vulgar but does not have a clue what adults think is vulgar (TV examples abound in the arguments as examples of what adults think is acceptable). Is it OA for them to tell other adults what their jokes are and ask if they think it’s vulgar?
ANSWER: No, this is okay to do.
SCENARIO: The performance has been taped. Four kids think they need to schedule an extra practice; 3 think they do not. (Performance cannot be done with just 4.)
QUESTION: Is it OA for the coach to make the decision? Is it OA for the coach to say ‘majority rules’? Is it OA for the coach to say they must come to a consensus (meaning every person but 1 must agree)?
ANSWER: It is up to the coach to make the decision or to decide on how the decision is to be made. Practice schedules are entirely within the coaches’ purview.
SCENARIO: Team is at competition. They have composed the paperwork (Div 1) but coach has prepared it.
QUESTION: Is it OA for the coach to carry the paperwork on competition day? Is it OA for the coach to hand the paperwork to the judge? Is it OA if the coach asks how the team intends to organize the paperwork so they can find it to give it to the judge?
ANSWER: Although it is always good to have the team members hand in the paperwork, their is no prohibition against having the coach carry it and hand it to the judge. The coach may ask the team how it will organize its paperwork.
SCENARIO: Div 1 team is having major problems figuring out how to keep track of information for their cost form.
QUESTION: Can the coach ask what information they are trying to track, how best to track it and then prepare some sheets for them to use to write down all the information as they go? (Somewhat like the advanced coaches workbook forms)
ANSWER: Yes, the coach may do this.
SCENARIO: A goal for a team was to learn to take a complex problem apart, test each component in a controlled manner and then reintegrate the resulting solution and validate that it performed as expected.
QUESTION: Is it OA for the coach to encourage the kids to approach the problem this way? Is it OA to build jigs or testers to facilitate testing the alternatives they come up with for their sub-components?
ANSWER: The coach may encourage the kids to approach the problem in this way and s/he may make any TESTERS needed. However, s/he may not make jigs as they are construction aids.
SCENARIO: It is summer time and the short version of next year’s problems have been published, but the full version has not been published.
QUESTION: Are there any limitations on what a Coach can or cannot do with regard to OA?
ANSWER: No– The rules are the rules all year.
SCENARIO: A team observed another team dressed up in chicken costumes that did very well. The next year the team decided to dress up as chickens.
QUESTION: Is it OA (NOT creative) to observe successful performances in one year and copy facets of it in the next?
ANSWER: No, it is not Outside Assistance.
SCENARIO: A local group of several different Odyssey teams are convened for the purpose of practicing spontaneous problems. The coach of each team has prepared a different spontaneous problem to give to each of the teams.
QUESTION: Are the coaches in this instance providing OA? If not, and the coaches score the teams, is this OA? If not, and the scores are provided back to the teams, is this OA?
ANSWER: None of these circumstances is outside assistance.
SCENARIO: Same as above, but the purpose is to practice each team’s long-term solutions and present them to all of the other teams.
QUESTION: As described, is anyone in this instance providing OA? If not, and the teams are scored, is this OA? If not, and the scores are provided back to the teams, is this OA?
ANSWER: The teams may present their solutions to each other and may be scored. The may be given their numeric scores but may not be given verbal comments. (Verbal comment would tend to give the team more specific direction in not only what category should be improved (indicated by the score), but what specific items or changes should be made (e.g. “Costumes were colorful, but all were alike so little creativity was exhibited”)
For general information: The only outside assistance possible in spontaneous is if, during the competition, one of the non-participating team members joins in to help the team members who are doing spontaneous. (Or if someone obtained a copy of the problem(s) in advance and gave them to a competing team.)
Coaches have the responsibility to organize the team, to maintain order and discipline. they may serve as a “secretary” to a team (no matter what division) as long as they write only what the team members say. However, for official forms only in Div. I may coaches write them out. Coaches may build testing devices for the team, but no construction aids. They should always ask questions that get the team members to think about their solutions and how to improve them. However, these may not be asked in a leading way, e.g. “Don’t you think it would be better to narrate your play, rather than act it out?” The correct question is, “What are some other ways you could present your play?” By asking broad questions, the coach stimulates the team members to think. This is the whole point of the program!
You asked me to cite the rules that apply, but most of these instances are allowed and there are no rules that pertain (which is why they are allowed). Somewhere, somehow, someone has come up with what appears to be a very confining interpretation of outside assistance. A coach is supposed to help the team members to grow. This means providing a good environment, maintaining discipline, and stimulating thinking.
You also asked what the penalties would be. Here is how an outside assistance penalty should be considered: first, you must consider the amount of outside assistance given. For example, in your scenario where the coach holds a team member’s hand for 2 seconds out of 30 minutes to show how to spray pain, if this is done while painting the prop, then a very small outside assistance penalty should be given. — The question the judge should ask is, “If the coach did not help spray this part of the prop, would my score have changed? how much did it help the team?” — the assumption is made that if the coach did not spray that part, s/he would have taught the team member to spray paint using another item. The answer to the question is obviously that the score would not have changed or not have changed significantly. If the coach helped pain the entire prop, a larger penalty would be assessed. If the coach made the entire prop, a larger penalty. and, if the coach had the idea for the prop as well as made it, an even larger penalty. However, there is a second consideration. How much is the prop worth to the team? If the team did not have this prop, what difference would it have made? For example, assume the coach designs and makes an elaborate background set for the team. The team is in the structure problem and the set is one of the free choice style categories. The most points that the team can earn for this set is 10 plus whatever of the 10 overall effect points might add. — In no case more than 20 points total. Therefore the penalty should not be the maximum. However, suppose that the team is in the Classics problem. The set is paramount to the play. It sets is the focal point for the performance. The penalty should be much greater. In the first instance, the structure problem, the judge should say to him/herself, “If I give this amount of penalty for a style item, what penalty would I give if the coach designed and made the structure?” This obviously would be a maximum penalty since it is the whole long-term problem solution.
I hope that this helps.
Sincerely,
Carole Micklus
Source: Maine State Odyssey Of The Mind – www.meodyssy.org