The MacDolphins finished the TSA summer swim season this week. We have dealt with a lot of weather issues this year. TSA holds their swim meets on Tuesday evenings (most leagues I am familiar with hold them on Saturday morning). Dealing with thunderstorms is one of things we deal with here in North Carolina almost every afternoon in the summer time and this season was particularly bad. We had two meets end early and three meets rescheduled to another day.
Dealing with all of the changes really played havoc with our meet preparation. Even though I’ve made it really easy for parents to scratch their swimmers (e-mail, web site, and text message), we still have a fair number of no-shows. It was bad enough the last couple weeks that I’ve decided I want to track it.
I plan to add an option to the Opt-In/Opt-Out system which will allow a user with the proper permissions to go back and mark swimmers as No-Shows. This will show up on the Opt-In/Opt-Out reports as a new section. I’ll probably put it right at the top. I am hoping this will help us track our repeat offenders and they will make a better effort to let us know when they are not swimming.
I just uploaded a minor update to wp-SwimTeam. This release adds enhancements to the reporting for jobs and the opt-in/opt-out system. A new field called “Notes” was added to the Jobs definition. This field is reported when viewing the Job Assignments for a swim meet.
The time stamp for opt-in/opt-out is now included when generating a swim meet report. The time stamp can also be displayed via the short code by adding “timestamp=’y'” to the short code. Reporting the time stamp will allow you to easily see exactly when users submitted their request.
There was a bug in the scratch process where if you started on the Meets tab when the Scratch action was selected, there was not a list of swimmers presented for the user to scratch. When starting on the Roster page and selecting a swimmer to scratch did work properly. The bug has been fixed and v0.2.488 is now available for download and both paths, starting with a meet or starting with a swimmer, now work correctly. The same bug would have affected Opt-In meets as well.
A couple of new features have been added to wp-SwimTeam.
- It is now possible to export a single swimmer’s record to CSV of SDIF. When a single swimmer is selected, the exported file will contain the information for just that swimmer. When no swimmers are selected, the entire roster will be exported. Single swimmer SDIF export is useful for importing late additions into WinSwim which is something I’ve had to do a few times this week.
- The LSC Registration Pyramid (SDIF) can now be generated using the Age Group Age (computed base on cut off date) instead of the swimmer’s true age. By default the real age is exported which is what wp-SwimTeam has done traditionally. If you want to use the computed Age Group Age, change the setting on the SDIF Profile tab from the Options menu.
A new version, v0.2.486, of wp-SwimTeam is available for download from the Download page.
A new version of wp-SwimTeam has been posted. This releases fixes a couple minor bugs which prevented display of swim meet information in certain situations when scratching or registering from a swim meet. This version also introduces two new features:
- Open or Close the registration system. When the registration system is open, users can register their swimmers for the current season. When the registration system is closed, only an Admin or Editor can register swimmers. This setting appears on the Registration tab from the Options sub-menu.
- Enable or disable user sign ups for jobs. When the job system is set for user sign ups, a user can sign up for any open job. When the job system is set for admin sign up, users with either Admin or Editor roles can sign users up for jobs. This second mode is good for teams where a paper or Excel list is used for job sign ups. This setting appears on the Swim Team tab from the Options sub-menu.
This afternoon I uploaded v0.2.482 of wp-SwimTeam. This release introduces the new Jobs module (aka Volunteers). Please back up your database before upgrading as this version changes the structure of one of the tables and introduces two others.
Please let me know if you have any problems with this version. I’ve done a fair amount of testing and I have it up and running on the MacDolphins web site.
The jobs module introduces two new short codes:
- wpst_job_descriptions
- wpst_meet_job_assignments
Example usage of these two new short codes can be found on the wp-SwimTeam demo site here and here.
There is also a new release of the phpHtmlLib plugin which wp-SwimTeam requires available. This build addresses a minor issue exposed in WordPress 3.0 beta testing.
Hopefully the new Jobs module will be helpful for your team, I know it will be helpful for mine!
I have update the wp-SwimTeam demo site with a preliminary version which includes the new jobs module. I expect I will release it over the weekend at some point. You can see what a sample page or post would look like for a swim meet. From the Administrative perspective, a similar report is available but includes more details (e.g. phone numbers).
I had a chance to show this to the woman who coordinates volunteers for the MacDolphins and she was pretty excited about it. It should make her job much easier and it will also make it much easier for parents to know when they have signed up to volunteer.
I want to do a little more testing on it before I release it but I am pretty confident it is working pretty well.
This past week I have made quite a bit of progress on the jobs module. Everything seems to be working, I just have some polish and testing to finish up before I will release it. The basic job work flow works like this:
- Define a job – title, description, duration, etc.
- Allocate a job to a season or to one or more swim meets. This action connects a job to a specific season or meet and defines the number of positions required.
- Assign job ownership. This can be done by either the administrator or by end users themselves. End users cannot assign themselves jobs which are already assigned to another user. An administrator can change the assignment of a job from one person to another. Job assignment can be performed in couple different ways:
- Full or Partial Season long jobs can be assigned from the Seasons tab.
- Full or Partial Meet long jobs can be assigned from the Swim Meets tab.
- A specific job can be assigned from the Jobs tab.
The Swim Meet Report has been enhanced to include a Job Assignment section and a new short code has been defined to allow a meet specific job report to be added to a page or post easily. The wp-SwimTeam demo site will be updated shortly to show some of the new features.
If you have followed my posts on this blog you know that I have been frustrated by Hy-Tek Team Manager and Meet Manager along with Hy-Tek customer support.
While I may not care for Hy-Tek or their products, the fact is they have a dominant market share and a lot of teams use Team Manager, Meet Manager, or both. I was contacted this week by a high school coach who was looking for some SDIF assistance in getting his roster into Meet Manager. Now I don’t have access to Meet Manager but I do have pretty good understanding of the SDIF specification so I was able to help him out with some example SDIF files.
In the process of helping him out I came across an old e-mail regarding importing a roster into Meet Manager. At the time I was interested in Team Manager so didn’t give it a lot of thought. Looking at the old e-mail I realized that if it worked, I could export the file format very easily from wp-SwimTeam. I went ahead an implemented it, now I am looking for someone to try it out.
Sample Reports
The zip file above contains three versions of the same roster – CSV, SDIF (.sd3), and Meet Manager Registration (.re1). Extract the Meet Manager Registration file from the zip file. It is an ASCII file that contains swimmers records, one per line with the following fields delimited by semicolons:
- Registration number
- Last name
- First name
- Middle initial
- Sex
- Birthdate
- Club abbreviation
- Club name
- Preferred first name
- ?? – unknown what this last field is; it’s always “N” in the examples provided
To import the file into Meet Manager, follow these steps:
- Set up a new meet database. You only need to go through the first setup screen, the one where you put in the meet name, date, and length of course. To make my particular file work, select “USA Swimming” for the ID format. If you have something other than USA Swimming numbers for swimmer labels, select “Other”. Normally, for a kids’ meet, you’d select “USA Swimming” for the ID format or “Other” if you are not using USA Swimmer numbers for simmer labels.
- From the main Meet Manager menu, select “FILE”
- Select “IMPORT”
- Select “REGISTRATION FILE”
- Locate and choose the .RE1 file that contains the roster.
After completing these steps, go to the “Athletes” screen in Meet Manager. The swimmers contained int he RE1 file should bYou should see all of the athletes’ names that you saw in the RE1 file.
If this works for you, please leave a comment!
Over the last couple of days I have finally made some visible progress on the Jobs module. I am still not wild about the term “allocate” but it is the best I have come up so I am proceeding with it.
At this point I am able to define jobs, allocate a job and quantity required against a swim meet and make some refinements of the allocation. I also have the beginning of the assignment to a specific user GUI done but not the backend functionality. I am optimistic that I may finish a first pass this weekend.