Robotics Club Hosts Season Premier Event

Avery Slaughter || Online Editor

The Andover Robotics Club (ARC) hosted Kickoff, the season-opening event for First Tech Challenge (FTC), on September 6. Dozens of teams from across Massachusetts travelled to AHS to attend.

ARC has not been able to host any events on such a large scale in several years due to a series of consecutive advisors retiring, so many members were excited by the opportunity to reintroduce the club to the greater robotics community following its success during the 2024-2025 season. Kickoff is one of the few times in which every team in the region is invited to attend and share one venue, making it an especially important outreach event for hosting teams.

“It’s a great opportunity… [and] a great way for us to reach out to the community and all these other teams,” ARC President Raahil Parikh said.

Junior Connor McGovern, co-leader of ARC Thunder, shared Parikh’s enthusiasm. Prior to Kickoff, he had not experienced any ARC-hosted events since his freshman year, when the club held two qualifiers called Robostorm.

“I’m excited,” McGovern said. “We do a pretty good job, I think.”

The FTC community places a heavy emphasis on cooperation and relationship-building between teams. Networking is an important part of having a strong, competitive club, and there are few better ways to develop camaraderie within the region than hosting events such as Kickoff. Tech Tigers’ Amulya Ponnapolly, who attended from Shrewsbury, expressed satisfaction with Andover’s setup. Similar to McGovern, she had not been to an ARC event since Robostorm prior to Kickoff.

“I love it,” Ponnapolly said. “I always love coming here. It’s definitely a bit of a drive, but I always have a good time [at Andover].”

In addition to workshops and community building, Kickoff is when the game objectives for the robotics season are announced. As one of the event organizers, Parikh was one of the few people to know the game details prior to September 6.

“I’m super excited for the game,” Parikh said. “I think it’s really cool. I think it’s one of the most unique games I’ve seen, and it’s definitely the most challenging one in the last couple years.”

This year’s game, which is called Decode but has been dubbed  “shooter game” by the community, is fairly complex. The objective is to pick up purple and green balls (called “artifacts”) in a specific, random order of colors and to shoot them from a specific position on the game field. Points are only earned if artifacts are in the correct spot based on their color. Following FTC tradition, Decode matches begin with a 30 second autonomous period followed by a two-minute user-controlled segment.

In addition to Kickoff, ARC also has a few more events planned throughout the year. Robostorm is set to occur in January for the first time in several robotics seasons.

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    • May 7, 2026

    ANYA GOROVITS || OPINIONS EDITOR

    In the 365 days of 2025, the U.S. saw 407 mass shootings.These shootings were part of a broader gun violence crisis that caused tens of thousands of deaths across the country, including 226 children and 1,038 teens killed in mass shootings alone, according to the Gun Violence Archive’s official 2025 report.

    Most Americans are aware of this stark reality: they’ve watched these numbers rise each year for decades. They watch countless shootings shown hurriedly on the news before returning to their daily lives. In school, students briefly discuss the latest tragedy in their history class before returning to the standard curriculum. Legislators put out quick statements before quickly moving on.

    “[Mass shootings] have become a symbol of American culture and American freedom,” said sophomore Ari Friedman. Indeed, they’ve become almost synonymous with America’s identity, present in our history since the 1966 University of Texas Tower Shooting. On the World Population Review’s mass shooting map, most countries report 0–10 mass shootings from 2000–2022. The U.S. reports 109.

    A pivotal moment for modern school shooting conversation was the Columbine shooting of 1999, during which two students killed 12 classmates and a teacher. The event fundamentally reshaped how schools, law enforcement, and the public regarded gun violence.

    “When Columbine occurred, that was a time that really changed the national consciousness,” said AHS Principal Jimmy D’Andrea. Then came Sandy Hook in 2012, a shooting at a Connecticut elementary school that killed 20 first graders and 6 staff members. Rather than a turning point toward action, this shooting marked a new stage: acceptance. News of recent shootings no longer came as a surprise, and such stories quickly stopped making headlines.

    Today, school-age students all around America have become used to yearly ALICE drills. 

    “The fact we even have to do these drills is dystopian, but I’ve usually just gone with it. It’s a fact of life,” said sophomore Ari Friedman.

    School shootings should never be a fact of life.

    “You can’t allow it to numb you, because that’s how things that aren’t normal become normal,” said junior Grace Arnold. Yet that is exactly what has happened. This country has watched children be killed in their classrooms, again and again, and decided that the right to own a gun matters more than the right of a child to survive the school day.

    Though communities advocate for “policy not prayers” after each major shooting, nothing ever seems to reach Congress. Around 90 percent of Americans support universal background checks, yet they haven’t been passed, killed by political opposition funded by gun industry lobbying. 

    “Profits matter more than people in America,” said AHS history teacher Fred Hopkins. He described how the Second Amendment’s true purpose has become severely distorted. Originally written to enable collective militia defense in a newfound country with limited defense capabilities, the amendment is now interpreted as the right of every American to own murderous weapons. 

    Beyond gun legislation, school shootings are driven by a crisis in mental health and an American culture that seems to value silence over support.

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    “If people are still angry, this anger and aggressiveness will come out one way or another,” said AHS French teacher Olga Kostousova, who believes that gun restriction laws are very necessary, but they work only if we also address the deeper cause of violence.

    Ending this crisis requires both stronger gun legislation and a cultural reckoning around mental health. It requires universal background checks, and real investment in mental health resources at the community level. It requires a culture that stops making shooters famous and starts recognizing people in crisis before it’s too late.

    Most of all, it requires refusing to be numb. Many people today feel that there is not much that can be done on a legislative level to achieve peace for American children. They feel that just taking this horror as “a fact of life” is better and simpler than fighting for change. They believe that ordinary people have no voice and no ability to change this cynical symbol of America. Yet it is this belief that limits our ability to stand up for the lives of American children.

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    In 2018, survivors of the shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida, organized a national walkout that drew hundreds of thousands of participants. The pressure was enough to push Florida to pass its first significant gun restriction legislation in decades. So ordinary people, students especially, do have power. When enough people speak up, change does occur. But when we remain numb, we refuse change, and we let our schools remain war zones.

    Four hundred seven mass shootings in one year. Two hundred twenty seven dead children. 

    These are not statistics to scroll past. They are a demand, one that has gone unanswered because too many people have decided to stop asking for change. America, and Americans, have the power to choose differently. The true question is whether we will, before another classroom becomes a tragedy we forget by next week.

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    Bubble, Bubble, Toil, Trouble: Failures of Scantron tests
    • May 7, 2026

    ADVIKA SINGH ll STAFF WRITER

    Are Scantrons a lifesaver or mistake? At Andover High School, the jury is still out. Many favor the quick results, while others say a few filled-in circles doesn’t show what a student really knows. As we keep bubbling in answers, one big question remains: Are we choosing easy grading over critical thinking?

    Let’s be realistic: teachers are human. They need sleep and aren’t trying to decipher every student’s chicken-scratch handwriting. For those managing classes the size of a small village, Scantrons aren’t just a tool but a life raft.

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    The subject a teacher instructs often determines the practicality of Scantrons. While many educators appreciate the efficiency they bring to subjects requiring memorization, like science or social studies, freshman Maria Barsegov believes some classes are a better fit for the technology than others. “It’s okay to use Scantrons for social studies because there isn’t solving or thinking, but that it’s unfair to use for math or English,” she observed. In her view, subjects that involve showing work should allow students to demonstrate their abilities.

    The student body at AHS is just as split as teachers. While teachers focus on “feedback” and “efficiency” students are more concerned about how the format affects their actual grades. The biggest complaint among students is the lack of partial credit. On a Scantron, you are either 100 percent right or 100 percent wrong.

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    Junior Adelelaide Buzay found Scantrons stressful. “Scantron tests are efficient but don’t allow room for mistakes. I find them confusing,” she stated. This sentiment is common among students who believe Scantrons to be unfair. An anonymous freshman shared a story about a teacher reliant on Scantron exams: “I have a teacher who gives no partial credit and only does multiple choice and … her tests only have a few questions which makes it harder.” When a test only has ten to twenty questions, each bubble carries a massive weight. Without room for partial credit, students are left distressed.

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