In a town where Friday night lights once defined school pride, a new kind of roar began to rise from the engineering labs. Prosper, Texas—known for its football and fast growth—was about to become famous for something far more technical: robots.
It started in 2015, when a small group of high school students and a handful of mentors built their first competitive machine under the banner FRC Team 5411, the RoboTalons. The shop was small, the tools were borrowed, and the team logo was printed on copy paper and taped to the wall. What they lacked in resources, they made up for in relentless curiosity and caffeine.
Their rookie robot barely held itself together through the regional season—but by the end of it, they had built something bigger than a machine. They’d built a culture. A culture where mistakes were trophies, and failures were simply proof of progress.
By 2023, the program had exploded. Prosper’s schools were multiplying, and so were the engineers. Instead of capping enrollment, the mentors made a radical choice: expand. Thus, FRC Team 9105, the TechnoTalons, was born at Rock Hill High School. They entered their rookie season like a storm—young, hungry, and equipped with the hard lessons 5411 had learned the hard way. Against all odds, they earned a trip to the FIRST World Championship in their debut year, turning heads across Texas.
Then came FRC Team 9492, the LadyTalons—Prosper’s boldest move yet. An all-girls team founded at Walnut Grove High School in 2024, they weren’t formed as a novelty. They were built to compete. And compete they did—winning both the Rookie All-Star and Rookie Inspiration awards in their first season. Their pit became a hub of laughter, precision, and glittered safety glasses.
Together, these three teams form what the community calls The Prosper Engineering Team. 70+ students, several mentors, and one mission: build better humans by building better robots.
Their shared facility at Walnut Grove hums with the sound of drills, code compiles, and occasional Nerf gun ambushes. A mentor might be explaining PID control while a student 3D-prints a bracket, and across the room, another is presenting a sponsorship pitch to a Lockheed engineer.
They aren’t just competing—they’re collaborating across schools, genders, and experience levels. Their motto: “We are Prosper. We are one.”
Now, every season, when their three gleaming robots line up on the field under the bright lights of competition, they aren’t just representing their schools—they’re representing a living model of what’s possible when education, engineering, and community collide.
Because in Prosper, the lights still shine on Friday nights—but the real legends are built in the shop.In a town where Friday night lights once defined school pride, a new kind of roar began to rise from the engineering labs. Prosper, Texas—known for its football and fast growth—was about to become famous for something far more technical: robots.
It started in 2015, when a small group of high school students and a handful of mentors built their first competitive machine under the banner FRC Team 5411, the RoboTalons. The shop was small, the tools were borrowed, and the team logo was printed on copy paper and taped to the wall. What they lacked in resources, they made up for in relentless curiosity and caffeine.
Their rookie robot barely held itself together through the regional season—but by the end of it, they had built something bigger than a machine. They’d built a culture. A culture where mistakes were trophies, and failures were simply proof of progress.
By 2023, the program had exploded. Prosper’s schools were multiplying, and so were the engineers. Instead of capping enrollment, the mentors made a radical choice: expand. Thus, FRC Team 9105, the TechnoTalons, was born at Rock Hill High School. They entered their rookie season like a storm—young, hungry, and equipped with the hard lessons 5411 had learned the hard way. Against all odds, they earned a trip to the FIRST World Championship in their debut year, turning heads across Texas.
Then came FRC Team 9492, the LadyTalons—Prosper’s boldest move yet. An all-girls team founded at Walnut Grove High School in 2024, they weren’t formed as a novelty. They were built to compete. And compete they did—winning both the Rookie All-Star and Rookie Inspiration awards in their first season. Their pit became a hub of laughter, precision, and glittered safety glasses.
Together, these three teams form what the community calls The Prosper Engineering Team. 70+ students, several mentors, and one mission: build better humans by building better robots.
Their shared facility at Walnut Grove hums with the sound of drills, code compiles, and occasional Nerf gun ambushes. A mentor might be explaining PID control while a student 3D-prints a bracket, and across the room, another is presenting a sponsorship pitch to a Lockheed engineer.
They aren’t just competing—they’re collaborating across schools, genders, and experience levels. Their motto: “We are Prosper. We are one.”
Now, every season, when their three gleaming robots line up on the field under the bright lights of competition, they aren’t just representing their schools—they’re representing a living model of what’s possible when education, engineering, and community collide.
Because in Prosper, the lights still shine on Friday nights—but the real legends are built in the shop.In a town where Friday night lights once defined school pride, a new kind of roar began to rise from the engineering labs. Prosper, Texas—known for its football and fast growth—was about to become famous for something far more technical: robots.
It started in 2015, when a small group of high school students and a handful of mentors built their first competitive machine under the banner FRC Team 5411, the RoboTalons. The shop was small, the tools were borrowed, and the team logo was printed on copy paper and taped to the wall. What they lacked in resources, they made up for in relentless curiosity and caffeine.
Their rookie robot barely held itself together through the regional season—but by the end of it, they had built something bigger than a machine. They’d built a culture. A culture where mistakes were trophies, and failures were simply proof of progress.
By 2023, the program had exploded. Prosper’s schools were multiplying, and so were the engineers. Instead of capping enrollment, the mentors made a radical choice: expand. Thus, FRC Team 9105, the TechnoTalons, was born at Rock Hill High School. They entered their rookie season like a storm—young, hungry, and equipped with the hard lessons 5411 had learned the hard way. Against all odds, they earned a trip to the FIRST World Championship in their debut year, turning heads across Texas.
Then came FRC Team 9492, the LadyTalons—Prosper’s boldest move yet. An all-girls team founded at Walnut Grove High School in 2024, they weren’t formed as a novelty. They were built to compete. And compete they did—winning both the Rookie All-Star and Rookie Inspiration awards in their first season. Their pit became a hub of laughter, precision, and glittered safety glasses.
Together, these three teams form what the community calls The Prosper Engineering Team. 70+ students, several mentors, and one mission: build better humans by building better robots.
Their shared facility at Walnut Grove hums with the sound of drills, code compiles, and occasional Nerf gun ambushes. A mentor might be explaining PID control while a student 3D-prints a bracket, and across the room, another is presenting a sponsorship pitch to a Lockheed engineer.
They aren’t just competing—they’re collaborating across schools, genders, and experience levels. Their motto: “We are Prosper. We are one.”
Now, every season, when their three gleaming robots line up on the field under the bright lights of competition, they aren’t just representing their schools—they’re representing a living model of what’s possible when education, engineering, and community collide.
Because in Prosper, the lights still shine on Friday nights—but the real legends are built in the shop.In a town where Friday night lights once defined school pride, a new kind of roar began to rise from the engineering labs. Prosper, Texas—known for its football and fast growth—was about to become famous for something far more technical: robots.
It started in 2015, when a small group of high school students and a handful of mentors built their first competitive machine under the banner FRC Team 5411, the RoboTalons. The shop was small, the tools were borrowed, and the team logo was printed on copy paper and taped to the wall. What they lacked in resources, they made up for in relentless curiosity and caffeine.
Their rookie robot barely held itself together through the regional season—but by the end of it, they had built something bigger than a machine. They’d built a culture. A culture where mistakes were trophies, and failures were simply proof of progress.
By 2023, the program had exploded. Prosper’s schools were multiplying, and so were the engineers. Instead of capping enrollment, the mentors made a radical choice: expand. Thus, FRC Team 9105, the TechnoTalons, was born at Rock Hill High School. They entered their rookie season like a storm—young, hungry, and equipped with the hard lessons 5411 had learned the hard way. Against all odds, they earned a trip to the FIRST World Championship in their debut year, turning heads across Texas.
Then came FRC Team 9492, the LadyTalons—Prosper’s boldest move yet. An all-girls team founded at Walnut Grove High School in 2024, they weren’t formed as a novelty. They were built to compete. And compete they did—winning both the Rookie All-Star and Rookie Inspiration awards in their first season. Their pit became a hub of laughter, precision, and glittered safety glasses.
Together, these three teams form what the community calls The Prosper Engineering Team. 70+ students, several mentors, and one mission: build better humans by building better robots.
Their shared facility at Walnut Grove hums with the sound of drills, code compiles, and occasional Nerf gun ambushes. A mentor might be explaining PID control while a student 3D-prints a bracket, and across the room, another is presenting a sponsorship pitch to a Lockheed engineer.
They aren’t just competing—they’re collaborating across schools, genders, and experience levels. Their motto: “We are Prosper. We are one.”
Now, every season, when their three gleaming robots line up on the field under the bright lights of competition, they aren’t just representing their schools—they’re representing a living model of what’s possible when education, engineering, and community collide.
Because in Prosper, the lights still shine on Friday nights—but the real legends are built in the shop.In a town where Friday night lights once defined school pride, a new kind of roar began to rise from the engineering labs. Prosper, Texas—known for its football and fast growth—was about to become famous for something far more technical: robots.
It started in 2015, when a small group of high school students and a handful of mentors built their first competitive machine under the banner FRC Team 5411, the RoboTalons. The shop was small, the tools were borrowed, and the team logo was printed on copy paper and taped to the wall. What they lacked in resources, they made up for in relentless curiosity and caffeine.
Their rookie robot barely held itself together through the regional season—but by the end of it, they had built something bigger than a machine. They’d built a culture. A culture where mistakes were trophies, and failures were simply proof of progress.
By 2023, the program had exploded. Prosper’s schools were multiplying, and so were the engineers. Instead of capping enrollment, the mentors made a radical choice: expand. Thus, FRC Team 9105, the TechnoTalons, was born at Rock Hill High School. They entered their rookie season like a storm—young, hungry, and equipped with the hard lessons 5411 had learned the hard way. Against all odds, they earned a trip to the FIRST World Championship in their debut year, turning heads across Texas.
Then came FRC Team 9492, the LadyTalons—Prosper’s boldest move yet. An all-girls team founded at Walnut Grove High School in 2024, they weren’t formed as a novelty. They were built to compete. And compete they did—winning both the Rookie All-Star and Rookie Inspiration awards in their first season. Their pit became a hub of laughter, precision, and glittered safety glasses.
Together, these three teams form what the community calls The Prosper Engineering Team. 70+ students, several mentors, and one mission: build better humans by building better robots.
Their shared facility at Walnut Grove hums with the sound of drills, code compiles, and occasional Nerf gun ambushes. A mentor might be explaining PID control while a student 3D-prints a bracket, and across the room, another is presenting a sponsorship pitch to a Lockheed engineer.
They aren’t just competing—they’re collaborating across schools, genders, and experience levels. Their motto: “We are Prosper. We are one.”
Now, every season, when their three gleaming robots line up on the field under the bright lights of competition, they aren’t just representing their schools—they’re representing a living model of what’s possible when education, engineering, and community collide.
Because in Prosper, the lights still shine on Friday nights—but the real legends are built in the shop.In a town where Friday night lights once defined school pride, a new kind of roar began to rise from the engineering labs. Prosper, Texas—known for its football and fast growth—was about to become famous for something far more technical: robots.
It started in 2015, when a small group of high school students and a handful of mentors built their first competitive machine under the banner FRC Team 5411, the RoboTalons. The shop was small, the tools were borrowed, and the team logo was printed on copy paper and taped to the wall. What they lacked in resources, they made up for in relentless curiosity and caffeine.
Their rookie robot barely held itself together through the regional season—but by the end of it, they had built something bigger than a machine. They’d built a culture. A culture where mistakes were trophies, and failures were simply proof of progress.
By 2023, the program had exploded. Prosper’s schools were multiplying, and so were the engineers. Instead of capping enrollment, the mentors made a radical choice: expand. Thus, FRC Team 9105, the TechnoTalons, was born at Rock Hill High School. They entered their rookie season like a storm—young, hungry, and equipped with the hard lessons 5411 had learned the hard way. Against all odds, they earned a trip to the FIRST World Championship in their debut year, turning heads across Texas.
Then came FRC Team 9492, the LadyTalons—Prosper’s boldest move yet. An all-girls team founded at Walnut Grove High School in 2024, they weren’t formed as a novelty. They were built to compete. And compete they did—winning both the Rookie All-Star and Rookie Inspiration awards in their first season. Their pit became a hub of laughter, precision, and glittered safety glasses.
Together, these three teams form what the community calls The Prosper Engineering Team. 70+ students, several mentors, and one mission: build better humans by building better robots.
Their shared facility at Walnut Grove hums with the sound of drills, code compiles, and occasional Nerf gun ambushes. A mentor might be explaining PID control while a student 3D-prints a bracket, and across the room, another is presenting a sponsorship pitch to a Lockheed engineer.
They aren’t just competing—they’re collaborating across schools, genders, and experience levels. Their motto: “We are Prosper. We are one.”
Now, every season, when their three gleaming robots line up on the field under the bright lights of competition, they aren’t just representing their schools—they’re representing a living model of what’s possible when education, engineering, and community collide.
Because in Prosper, the lights still shine on Friday nights—but the real legends are built in the shop.In a town where Friday night lights once defined school pride, a new kind of roar began to rise from the engineering labs. Prosper, Texas—known for its football and fast growth—was about to become famous for something far more technical: robots.
It started in 2015, when a small group of high school students and a handful of mentors built their first competitive machine under the banner FRC Team 5411, the RoboTalons. The shop was small, the tools were borrowed, and the team logo was printed on copy paper and taped to the wall. What they lacked in resources, they made up for in relentless curiosity and caffeine.
Their rookie robot barely held itself together through the regional season—but by the end of it, they had built something bigger than a machine. They’d built a culture. A culture where mistakes were trophies, and failures were simply proof of progress.
By 2023, the program had exploded. Prosper’s schools were multiplying, and so were the engineers. Instead of capping enrollment, the mentors made a radical choice: expand. Thus, FRC Team 9105, the TechnoTalons, was born at Rock Hill High School. They entered their rookie season like a storm—young, hungry, and equipped with the hard lessons 5411 had learned the hard way. Against all odds, they earned a trip to the FIRST World Championship in their debut year, turning heads across Texas.
Then came FRC Team 9492, the LadyTalons—Prosper’s boldest move yet. An all-girls team founded at Walnut Grove High School in 2024, they weren’t formed as a novelty. They were built to compete. And compete they did—winning both the Rookie All-Star and Rookie Inspiration awards in their first season. Their pit became a hub of laughter, precision, and glittered safety glasses.
Together, these three teams form what the community calls The Prosper Engineering Team. 70+ students, several mentors, and one mission: build better humans by building better robots.
Their shared facility at Walnut Grove hums with the sound of drills, code compiles, and occasional Nerf gun ambushes. A mentor might be explaining PID control while a student 3D-prints a bracket, and across the room, another is presenting a sponsorship pitch to a Lockheed engineer.
They aren’t just competing—they’re collaborating across schools, genders, and experience levels. Their motto: “We are Prosper. We are one.”
Now, every season, when their three gleaming robots line up on the field under the bright lights of competition, they aren’t just representing their schools—they’re representing a living model of what’s possible when education, engineering, and community collide.
Because in Prosper, the lights still shine on Friday nights—but the real legends are built in the shop.In a town where Friday night lights once defined school pride, a new kind of roar began to rise from the engineering labs. Prosper, Texas—known for its football and fast growth—was about to become famous for something far more technical: robots.
It started in 2015, when a small group of high school students and a handful of mentors built their first competitive machine under the banner FRC Team 5411, the RoboTalons. The shop was small, the tools were borrowed, and the team logo was printed on copy paper and taped to the wall. What they lacked in resources, they made up for in relentless curiosity and caffeine.
Their rookie robot barely held itself together through the regional season—but by the end of it, they had built something bigger than a machine. They’d built a culture. A culture where mistakes were trophies, and failures were simply proof of progress.
By 2023, the program had exploded. Prosper’s schools were multiplying, and so were the engineers. Instead of capping enrollment, the mentors made a radical choice: expand. Thus, FRC Team 9105, the TechnoTalons, was born at Rock Hill High School. They entered their rookie season like a storm—young, hungry, and equipped with the hard lessons 5411 had learned the hard way. Against all odds, they earned a trip to the FIRST World Championship in their debut year, turning heads across Texas.
Then came FRC Team 9492, the LadyTalons—Prosper’s boldest move yet. An all-girls team founded at Walnut Grove High School in 2024, they weren’t formed as a novelty. They were built to compete. And compete they did—winning both the Rookie All-Star and Rookie Inspiration awards in their first season. Their pit became a hub of laughter, precision, and glittered safety glasses.
Together, these three teams form what the community calls The Prosper Engineering Team. 70+ students, several mentors, and one mission: build better humans by building better robots.
Their shared facility at Walnut Grove hums with the sound of drills, code compiles, and occasional Nerf gun ambushes. A mentor might be explaining PID control while a student 3D-prints a bracket, and across the room, another is presenting a sponsorship pitch to a Lockheed engineer.
They aren’t just competing—they’re collaborating across schools, genders, and experience levels. Their motto: “We are Prosper. We are one.”
Now, every season, when their three gleaming robots line up on the field under the bright lights of competition, they aren’t just representing their schools—they’re representing a living model of what’s possible when education, engineering, and community collide.
Because in Prosper, the lights still shine on Friday nights—but the real legends are built in the shop.In a town where Friday night lights once defined school pride, a new kind of roar began to rise from the engineering labs. Prosper, Texas—known for its football and fast growth—was about to become famous for something far more technical: robots.
It started in 2015, when a small group of high school students and a handful of mentors built their first competitive machine under the banner FRC Team 5411, the RoboTalons. The shop was small, the tools were borrowed, and the team logo was printed on copy paper and taped to the wall. What they lacked in resources, they made up for in relentless curiosity and caffeine.
Their rookie robot barely held itself together through the regional season—but by the end of it, they had built something bigger than a machine. They’d built a culture. A culture where mistakes were trophies, and failures were simply proof of progress.
By 2023, the program had exploded. Prosper’s schools were multiplying, and so were the engineers. Instead of capping enrollment, the mentors made a radical choice: expand. Thus, FRC Team 9105, the TechnoTalons, was born at Rock Hill High School. They entered their rookie season like a storm—young, hungry, and equipped with the hard lessons 5411 had learned the hard way. Against all odds, they earned a trip to the FIRST World Championship in their debut year, turning heads across Texas.
Then came FRC Team 9492, the LadyTalons—Prosper’s boldest move yet. An all-girls team founded at Walnut Grove High School in 2024, they weren’t formed as a novelty. They were built to compete. And compete they did—winning both the Rookie All-Star and Rookie Inspiration awards in their first season. Their pit became a hub of laughter, precision, and glittered safety glasses.
Together, these three teams form what the community calls The Prosper Engineering Team. 70+ students, several mentors, and one mission: build better humans by building better robots.
Their shared facility at Walnut Grove hums with the sound of drills, code compiles, and occasional Nerf gun ambushes. A mentor might be explaining PID control while a student 3D-prints a bracket, and across the room, another is presenting a sponsorship pitch to a Lockheed engineer.
They aren’t just competing—they’re collaborating across schools, genders, and experience levels. Their motto: “We are Prosper. We are one.”
Now, every season, when their three gleaming robots line up on the field under the bright lights of competition, they aren’t just representing their schools—they’re representing a living model of what’s possible when education, engineering, and community collide.
Because in Prosper, the lights still shine on Friday nights—but the real legends are built in the shop.In a town where Friday night lights once defined school pride, a new kind of roar began to rise from the engineering labs. Prosper, Texas—known for its football and fast growth—was about to become famous for something far more technical: robots.
It started in 2015, when a small group of high school students and a handful of mentors built their first competitive machine under the banner FRC Team 5411, the RoboTalons. The shop was small, the tools were borrowed, and the team logo was printed on copy paper and taped to the wall. What they lacked in resources, they made up for in relentless curiosity and caffeine.
Their rookie robot barely held itself together through the regional season—but by the end of it, they had built something bigger than a machine. They’d built a culture. A culture where mistakes were trophies, and failures were simply proof of progress.
By 2023, the program had exploded. Prosper’s schools were multiplying, and so were the engineers. Instead of capping enrollment, the mentors made a radical choice: expand. Thus, FRC Team 9105, the TechnoTalons, was born at Rock Hill High School. They entered their rookie season like a storm—young, hungry, and equipped with the hard lessons 5411 had learned the hard way. Against all odds, they earned a trip to the FIRST World Championship in their debut year, turning heads across Texas.
Then came FRC Team 9492, the LadyTalons—Prosper’s boldest move yet. An all-girls team founded at Walnut Grove High School in 2024, they weren’t formed as a novelty. They were built to compete. And compete they did—winning both the Rookie All-Star and Rookie Inspiration awards in their first season. Their pit became a hub of laughter, precision, and glittered safety glasses.
Together, these three teams form what the community calls The Prosper Engineering Team. 70+ students, several mentors, and one mission: build better humans by building better robots.
Their shared facility at Walnut Grove hums with the sound of drills, code compiles, and occasional Nerf gun ambushes. A mentor might be explaining PID control while a student 3D-prints a bracket, and across the room, another is presenting a sponsorship pitch to a Lockheed engineer.
They aren’t just competing—they’re collaborating across schools, genders, and experience levels. Their motto: “We are Prosper. We are one.”
Now, every season, when their three gleaming robots line up on the field under the bright lights of competition, they aren’t just representing their schools—they’re representing a living model of what’s possible when education, engineering, and community collide.
Because in Prosper, the lights still shine on Friday nights—but the real legends are built in the shop.In a town where Friday night lights once defined school pride, a new kind of roar began to rise from the engineering labs. Prosper, Texas—known for its football and fast growth—was about to become famous for something far more technical: robots.
It started in 2015, when a small group of high school students and a handful of mentors built their first competitive machine under the banner FRC Team 5411, the RoboTalons. The shop was small, the tools were borrowed, and the team logo was printed on copy paper and taped to the wall. What they lacked in resources, they made up for in relentless curiosity and caffeine.
Their rookie robot barely held itself together through the regional season—but by the end of it, they had built something bigger than a machine. They’d built a culture. A culture where mistakes were trophies, and failures were simply proof of progress.
By 2023, the program had exploded. Prosper’s schools were multiplying, and so were the engineers. Instead of capping enrollment, the mentors made a radical choice: expand. Thus, FRC Team 9105, the TechnoTalons, was born at Rock Hill High School. They entered their rookie season like a storm—young, hungry, and equipped with the hard lessons 5411 had learned the hard way. Against all odds, they earned a trip to the FIRST World Championship in their debut year, turning heads across Texas.
Then came FRC Team 9492, the LadyTalons—Prosper’s boldest move yet. An all-girls team founded at Walnut Grove High School in 2024, they weren’t formed as a novelty. They were built to compete. And compete they did—winning both the Rookie All-Star and Rookie Inspiration awards in their first season. Their pit became a hub of laughter, precision, and glittered safety glasses.
Together, these three teams form what the community calls The Prosper Engineering Team. 70+ students, several mentors, and one mission: build better humans by building better robots.
Their shared facility at Walnut Grove hums with the sound of drills, code compiles, and occasional Nerf gun ambushes. A mentor might be explaining PID control while a student 3D-prints a bracket, and across the room, another is presenting a sponsorship pitch to a Lockheed engineer.
They aren’t just competing—they’re collaborating across schools, genders, and experience levels. Their motto: “We are Prosper. We are one.”
Now, every season, when their three gleaming robots line up on the field under the bright lights of competition, they aren’t just representing their schools—they’re representing a living model of what’s possible when education, engineering, and community collide.
Because in Prosper, the lights still shine on Friday nights—but the real legends are built in the shop.In a town where Friday night lights once defined school pride, a new kind of roar began to rise from the engineering labs. Prosper, Texas—known for its football and fast growth—was about to become famous for something far more technical: robots.
It started in 2015, when a small group of high school students and a handful of mentors built their first competitive machine under the banner FRC Team 5411, the RoboTalons. The shop was small, the tools were borrowed, and the team logo was printed on copy paper and taped to the wall. What they lacked in resources, they made up for in relentless curiosity and caffeine.
Their rookie robot barely held itself together through the regional season—but by the end of it, they had built something bigger than a machine. They’d built a culture. A culture where mistakes were trophies, and failures were simply proof of progress.
By 2023, the program had exploded. Prosper’s schools were multiplying, and so were the engineers. Instead of capping enrollment, the mentors made a radical choice: expand. Thus, FRC Team 9105, the TechnoTalons, was born at Rock Hill High School. They entered their rookie season like a storm—young, hungry, and equipped with the hard lessons 5411 had learned the hard way. Against all odds, they earned a trip to the FIRST World Championship in their debut year, turning heads across Texas.
Then came FRC Team 9492, the LadyTalons—Prosper’s boldest move yet. An all-girls team founded at Walnut Grove High School in 2024, they weren’t formed as a novelty. They were built to compete. And compete they did—winning both the Rookie All-Star and Rookie Inspiration awards in their first season. Their pit became a hub of laughter, precision, and glittered safety glasses.
Together, these three teams form what the community calls The Prosper Engineering Team. 70+ students, several mentors, and one mission: build better humans by building better robots.
Their shared facility at Walnut Grove hums with the sound of drills, code compiles, and occasional Nerf gun ambushes. A mentor might be explaining PID control while a student 3D-prints a bracket, and across the room, another is presenting a sponsorship pitch to a Lockheed engineer.
They aren’t just competing—they’re collaborating across schools, genders, and experience levels. Their motto: “We are Prosper. We are one.”
Now, every season, when their three gleaming robots line up on the field under the bright lights of competition, they aren’t just representing their schools—they’re representing a living model of what’s possible when education, engineering, and community collide.
Because in Prosper, the lights still shine on Friday nights—but the real legends are built in the shop.In a town where Friday night lights once defined school pride, a new kind of roar began to rise from the engineering labs. Prosper, Texas—known for its football and fast growth—was about to become famous for something far more technical: robots.
It started in 2015, when a small group of high school students and a handful of mentors built their first competitive machine under the banner FRC Team 5411, the RoboTalons. The shop was small, the tools were borrowed, and the team logo was printed on copy paper and taped to the wall. What they lacked in resources, they made up for in relentless curiosity and caffeine.
Their rookie robot barely held itself together through the regional season—but by the end of it, they had built something bigger than a machine. They’d built a culture. A culture where mistakes were trophies, and failures were simply proof of progress.
By 2023, the program had exploded. Prosper’s schools were multiplying, and so were the engineers. Instead of capping enrollment, the mentors made a radical choice: expand. Thus, FRC Team 9105, the TechnoTalons, was born at Rock Hill High School. They entered their rookie season like a storm—young, hungry, and equipped with the hard lessons 5411 had learned the hard way. Against all odds, they earned a trip to the FIRST World Championship in their debut year, turning heads across Texas.
Then came FRC Team 9492, the LadyTalons—Prosper’s boldest move yet. An all-girls team founded at Walnut Grove High School in 2024, they weren’t formed as a novelty. They were built to compete. And compete they did—winning both the Rookie All-Star and Rookie Inspiration awards in their first season. Their pit became a hub of laughter, precision, and glittered safety glasses.
Together, these three teams form what the community calls The Prosper Engineering Team. 70+ students, several mentors, and one mission: build better humans by building better robots.
Their shared facility at Walnut Grove hums with the sound of drills, code compiles, and occasional Nerf gun ambushes. A mentor might be explaining PID control while a student 3D-prints a bracket, and across the room, another is presenting a sponsorship pitch to a Lockheed engineer.
They aren’t just competing—they’re collaborating across schools, genders, and experience levels. Their motto: “We are Prosper. We are one.”
Now, every season, when their three gleaming robots line up on the field under the bright lights of competition, they aren’t just representing their schools—they’re representing a living model of what’s possible when education, engineering, and community collide.
Because in Prosper, the lights still shine on Friday nights—but the real legends are built in the shop.In a town where Friday night lights once defined school pride, a new kind of roar began to rise from the engineering labs. Prosper, Texas—known for its football and fast growth—was about to become famous for something far more technical: robots.
It started in 2015, when a small group of high school students and a handful of mentors built their first competitive machine under the banner FRC Team 5411, the RoboTalons. The shop was small, the tools were borrowed, and the team logo was printed on copy paper and taped to the wall. What they lacked in resources, they made up for in relentless curiosity and caffeine.
Their rookie robot barely held itself together through the regional season—but by the end of it, they had built something bigger than a machine. They’d built a culture. A culture where mistakes were trophies, and failures were simply proof of progress.
By 2023, the program had exploded. Prosper’s schools were multiplying, and so were the engineers. Instead of capping enrollment, the mentors made a radical choice: expand. Thus, FRC Team 9105, the TechnoTalons, was born at Rock Hill High School. They entered their rookie season like a storm—young, hungry, and equipped with the hard lessons 5411 had learned the hard way. Against all odds, they earned a trip to the FIRST World Championship in their debut year, turning heads across Texas.
Then came FRC Team 9492, the LadyTalons—Prosper’s boldest move yet. An all-girls team founded at Walnut Grove High School in 2024, they weren’t formed as a novelty. They were built to compete. And compete they did—winning both the Rookie All-Star and Rookie Inspiration awards in their first season. Their pit became a hub of laughter, precision, and glittered safety glasses.
Together, these three teams form what the community calls The Prosper Engineering Team. 70+ students, several mentors, and one mission: build better humans by building better robots.
Their shared facility at Walnut Grove hums with the sound of drills, code compiles, and occasional Nerf gun ambushes. A mentor might be explaining PID control while a student 3D-prints a bracket, and across the room, another is presenting a sponsorship pitch to a Lockheed engineer.
They aren’t just competing—they’re collaborating across schools, genders, and experience levels. Their motto: “We are Prosper. We are one.”
Now, every season, when their three gleaming robots line up on the field under the bright lights of competition, they aren’t just representing their schools—they’re representing a living model of what’s possible when education, engineering, and community collide.
Because in Prosper, the lights still shine on Friday nights—but the real legends are built in the shop.In a town where Friday night lights once defined school pride, a new kind of roar began to rise from the engineering labs. Prosper, Texas—known for its football and fast growth—was about to become famous for something far more technical: robots.
It started in 2015, when a small group of high school students and a handful of mentors built their first competitive machine under the banner FRC Team 5411, the RoboTalons. The shop was small, the tools were borrowed, and the team logo was printed on copy paper and taped to the wall. What they lacked in resources, they made up for in relentless curiosity and caffeine.
Their rookie robot barely held itself together through the regional season—but by the end of it, they had built something bigger than a machine. They’d built a culture. A culture where mistakes were trophies, and failures were simply proof of progress.
By 2023, the program had exploded. Prosper’s schools were multiplying, and so were the engineers. Instead of capping enrollment, the mentors made a radical choice: expand. Thus, FRC Team 9105, the TechnoTalons, was born at Rock Hill High School. They entered their rookie season like a storm—young, hungry, and equipped with the hard lessons 5411 had learned the hard way. Against all odds, they earned a trip to the FIRST World Championship in their debut year, turning heads across Texas.
Then came FRC Team 9492, the LadyTalons—Prosper’s boldest move yet. An all-girls team founded at Walnut Grove High School in 2024, they weren’t formed as a novelty. They were built to compete. And compete they did—winning both the Rookie All-Star and Rookie Inspiration awards in their first season. Their pit became a hub of laughter, precision, and glittered safety glasses.
Together, these three teams form what the community calls The Prosper Engineering Team. 70+ students, several mentors, and one mission: build better humans by building better robots.
Their shared facility at Walnut Grove hums with the sound of drills, code compiles, and occasional Nerf gun ambushes. A mentor might be explaining PID control while a student 3D-prints a bracket, and across the room, another is presenting a sponsorship pitch to a Lockheed engineer.
They aren’t just competing—they’re collaborating across schools, genders, and experience levels. Their motto: “We are Prosper. We are one.”
Now, every season, when their three gleaming robots line up on the field under the bright lights of competition, they aren’t just representing their schools—they’re representing a living model of what’s possible when education, engineering, and community collide.
Because in Prosper, the lights still shine on Friday nights—but the real legends are built in the shop.In a town where Friday night lights once defined school pride, a new kind of roar began to rise from the engineering labs. Prosper, Texas—known for its football and fast growth—was about to become famous for something far more technical: robots.
It started in 2015, when a small group of high school students and a handful of mentors built their first competitive machine under the banner FRC Team 5411, the RoboTalons. The shop was small, the tools were borrowed, and the team logo was printed on copy paper and taped to the wall. What they lacked in resources, they made up for in relentless curiosity and caffeine.
Their rookie robot barely held itself together through the regional season—but by the end of it, they had built something bigger than a machine. They’d built a culture. A culture where mistakes were trophies, and failures were simply proof of progress.
By 2023, the program had exploded. Prosper’s schools were multiplying, and so were the engineers. Instead of capping enrollment, the mentors made a radical choice: expand. Thus, FRC Team 9105, the TechnoTalons, was born at Rock Hill High School. They entered their rookie season like a storm—young, hungry, and equipped with the hard lessons 5411 had learned the hard way. Against all odds, they earned a trip to the FIRST World Championship in their debut year, turning heads across Texas.
Then came FRC Team 9492, the LadyTalons—Prosper’s boldest move yet. An all-girls team founded at Walnut Grove High School in 2024, they weren’t formed as a novelty. They were built to compete. And compete they did—winning both the Rookie All-Star and Rookie Inspiration awards in their first season. Their pit became a hub of laughter, precision, and glittered safety glasses.
Together, these three teams form what the community calls The Prosper Engineering Team. 70+ students, several mentors, and one mission: build better humans by building better robots.
Their shared facility at Walnut Grove hums with the sound of drills, code compiles, and occasional Nerf gun ambushes. A mentor might be explaining PID control while a student 3D-prints a bracket, and across the room, another is presenting a sponsorship pitch to a Lockheed engineer.
They aren’t just competing—they’re collaborating across schools, genders, and experience levels. Their motto: “We are Prosper. We are one.”
Now, every season, when their three gleaming robots line up on the field under the bright lights of competition, they aren’t just representing their schools—they’re representing a living model of what’s possible when education, engineering, and community collide.
Because in Prosper, the lights still shine on Friday nights—but the real legends are built in the shop.In a town where Friday night lights once defined school pride, a new kind of roar began to rise from the engineering labs. Prosper, Texas—known for its football and fast growth—was about to become famous for something far more technical: robots.
It started in 2015, when a small group of high school students and a handful of mentors built their first competitive machine under the banner FRC Team 5411, the RoboTalons. The shop was small, the tools were borrowed, and the team logo was printed on copy paper and taped to the wall. What they lacked in resources, they made up for in relentless curiosity and caffeine.
Their rookie robot barely held itself together through the regional season—but by the end of it, they had built something bigger than a machine. They’d built a culture. A culture where mistakes were trophies, and failures were simply proof of progress.
By 2023, the program had exploded. Prosper’s schools were multiplying, and so were the engineers. Instead of capping enrollment, the mentors made a radical choice: expand. Thus, FRC Team 9105, the TechnoTalons, was born at Rock Hill High School. They entered their rookie season like a storm—young, hungry, and equipped with the hard lessons 5411 had learned the hard way. Against all odds, they earned a trip to the FIRST World Championship in their debut year, turning heads across Texas.
Then came FRC Team 9492, the LadyTalons—Prosper’s boldest move yet. An all-girls team founded at Walnut Grove High School in 2024, they weren’t formed as a novelty. They were built to compete. And compete they did—winning both the Rookie All-Star and Rookie Inspiration awards in their first season. Their pit became a hub of laughter, precision, and glittered safety glasses.
Together, these three teams form what the community calls The Prosper Engineering Team. 70+ students, several mentors, and one mission: build better humans by building better robots.
Their shared facility at Walnut Grove hums with the sound of drills, code compiles, and occasional Nerf gun ambushes. A mentor might be explaining PID control while a student 3D-prints a bracket, and across the room, another is presenting a sponsorship pitch to a Lockheed engineer.
They aren’t just competing—they’re collaborating across schools, genders, and experience levels. Their motto: “We are Prosper. We are one.”
Now, every season, when their three gleaming robots line up on the field under the bright lights of competition, they aren’t just representing their schools—they’re representing a living model of what’s possible when education, engineering, and community collide.
Because in Prosper, the lights still shine on Friday nights—but the real legends are built in the shop.In a town where Friday night lights once defined school pride, a new kind of roar began to rise from the engineering labs. Prosper, Texas—known for its football and fast growth—was about to become famous for something far more technical: robots.
It started in 2015, when a small group of high school students and a handful of mentors built their first competitive machine under the banner FRC Team 5411, the RoboTalons. The shop was small, the tools were borrowed, and the team logo was printed on copy paper and taped to the wall. What they lacked in resources, they made up for in relentless curiosity and caffeine.
Their rookie robot barely held itself together through the regional season—but by the end of it, they had built something bigger than a machine. They’d built a culture. A culture where mistakes were trophies, and failures were simply proof of progress.
By 2023, the program had exploded. Prosper’s schools were multiplying, and so were the engineers. Instead of capping enrollment, the mentors made a radical choice: expand. Thus, FRC Team 9105, the TechnoTalons, was born at Rock Hill High School. They entered their rookie season like a storm—young, hungry, and equipped with the hard lessons 5411 had learned the hard way. Against all odds, they earned a trip to the FIRST World Championship in their debut year, turning heads across Texas.
Then came FRC Team 9492, the LadyTalons—Prosper’s boldest move yet. An all-girls team founded at Walnut Grove High School in 2024, they weren’t formed as a novelty. They were built to compete. And compete they did—winning both the Rookie All-Star and Rookie Inspiration awards in their first season. Their pit became a hub of laughter, precision, and glittered safety glasses.
Together, these three teams form what the community calls The Prosper Engineering Team. 70+ students, several mentors, and one mission: build better humans by building better robots.
Their shared facility at Walnut Grove hums with the sound of drills, code compiles, and occasional Nerf gun ambushes. A mentor might be explaining PID control while a student 3D-prints a bracket, and across the room, another is presenting a sponsorship pitch to a Lockheed engineer.
They aren’t just competing—they’re collaborating across schools, genders, and experience levels. Their motto: “We are Prosper. We are one.”
Now, every season, when their three gleaming robots line up on the field under the bright lights of competition, they aren’t just representing their schools—they’re representing a living model of what’s possible when education, engineering, and community collide.
Because in Prosper, the lights still shine on Friday nights—but the real legends are built in the shop.In a town where Friday night lights once defined school pride, a new kind of roar began to rise from the engineering labs. Prosper, Texas—known for its football and fast growth—was about to become famous for something far more technical: robots.
It started in 2015, when a small group of high school students and a handful of mentors built their first competitive machine under the banner FRC Team 5411, the RoboTalons. The shop was small, the tools were borrowed, and the team logo was printed on copy paper and taped to the wall. What they lacked in resources, they made up for in relentless curiosity and caffeine.
Their rookie robot barely held itself together through the regional season—but by the end of it, they had built something bigger than a machine. They’d built a culture. A culture where mistakes were trophies, and failures were simply proof of progress.
By 2023, the program had exploded. Prosper’s schools were multiplying, and so were the engineers. Instead of capping enrollment, the mentors made a radical choice: expand. Thus, FRC Team 9105, the TechnoTalons, was born at Rock Hill High School. They entered their rookie season like a storm—young, hungry, and equipped with the hard lessons 5411 had learned the hard way. Against all odds, they earned a trip to the FIRST World Championship in their debut year, turning heads across Texas.
Then came FRC Team 9492, the LadyTalons—Prosper’s boldest move yet. An all-girls team founded at Walnut Grove High School in 2024, they weren’t formed as a novelty. They were built to compete. And compete they did—winning both the Rookie All-Star and Rookie Inspiration awards in their first season. Their pit became a hub of laughter, precision, and glittered safety glasses.
Together, these three teams form what the community calls The Prosper Engineering Team. 70+ students, several mentors, and one mission: build better humans by building better robots.
Their shared facility at Walnut Grove hums with the sound of drills, code compiles, and occasional Nerf gun ambushes. A mentor might be explaining PID control while a student 3D-prints a bracket, and across the room, another is presenting a sponsorship pitch to a Lockheed engineer.
They aren’t just competing—they’re collaborating across schools, genders, and experience levels. Their motto: “We are Prosper. We are one.”
Now, every season, when their three gleaming robots line up on the field under the bright lights of competition, they aren’t just representing their schools—they’re representing a living model of what’s possible when education, engineering, and community collide.
Because in Prosper, the lights still shine on Friday nights—but the real legends are built in the shop.In a town where Friday night lights once defined school pride, a new kind of roar began to rise from the engineering labs. Prosper, Texas—known for its football and fast growth—was about to become famous for something far more technical: robots.
It started in 2015, when a small group of high school students and a handful of mentors built their first competitive machine under the banner FRC Team 5411, the RoboTalons. The shop was small, the tools were borrowed, and the team logo was printed on copy paper and taped to the wall. What they lacked in resources, they made up for in relentless curiosity and caffeine.
Their rookie robot barely held itself together through the regional season—but by the end of it, they had built something bigger than a machine. They’d built a culture. A culture where mistakes were trophies, and failures were simply proof of progress.
By 2023, the program had exploded. Prosper’s schools were multiplying, and so were the engineers. Instead of capping enrollment, the mentors made a radical choice: expand. Thus, FRC Team 9105, the TechnoTalons, was born at Rock Hill High School. They entered their rookie season like a storm—young, hungry, and equipped with the hard lessons 5411 had learned the hard way. Against all odds, they earned a trip to the FIRST World Championship in their debut year, turning heads across Texas.
Then came FRC Team 9492, the LadyTalons—Prosper’s boldest move yet. An all-girls team founded at Walnut Grove High School in 2024, they weren’t formed as a novelty. They were built to compete. And compete they did—winning both the Rookie All-Star and Rookie Inspiration awards in their first season. Their pit became a hub of laughter, precision, and glittered safety glasses.
Together, these three teams form what the community calls The Prosper Engineering Team. 70+ students, several mentors, and one mission: build better humans by building better robots.
Their shared facility at Walnut Grove hums with the sound of drills, code compiles, and occasional Nerf gun ambushes. A mentor might be explaining PID control while a student 3D-prints a bracket, and across the room, another is presenting a sponsorship pitch to a Lockheed engineer.
They aren’t just competing—they’re collaborating across schools, genders, and experience levels. Their motto: “We are Prosper. We are one.”
Now, every season, when their three gleaming robots line up on the field under the bright lights of competition, they aren’t just representing their schools—they’re representing a living model of what’s possible when education, engineering, and community collide.
Because in Prosper, the lights still shine on Friday nights—but the real legends are built in the shop.In a town where Friday night lights once defined school pride, a new kind of roar began to rise from the engineering labs. Prosper, Texas—known for its football and fast growth—was about to become famous for something far more technical: robots.
It started in 2015, when a small group of high school students and a handful of mentors built their first competitive machine under the banner FRC Team 5411, the RoboTalons. The shop was small, the tools were borrowed, and the team logo was printed on copy paper and taped to the wall. What they lacked in resources, they made up for in relentless curiosity and caffeine.
Their rookie robot barely held itself together through the regional season—but by the end of it, they had built something bigger than a machine. They’d built a culture. A culture where mistakes were trophies, and failures were simply proof of progress.
By 2023, the program had exploded. Prosper’s schools were multiplying, and so were the engineers. Instead of capping enrollment, the mentors made a radical choice: expand. Thus, FRC Team 9105, the TechnoTalons, was born at Rock Hill High School. They entered their rookie season like a storm—young, hungry, and equipped with the hard lessons 5411 had learned the hard way. Against all odds, they earned a trip to the FIRST World Championship in their debut year, turning heads across Texas.
Then came FRC Team 9492, the LadyTalons—Prosper’s boldest move yet. An all-girls team founded at Walnut Grove High School in 2024, they weren’t formed as a novelty. They were built to compete. And compete they did—winning both the Rookie All-Star and Rookie Inspiration awards in their first season. Their pit became a hub of laughter, precision, and glittered safety glasses.
Together, these three teams form what the community calls The Prosper Engineering Team. 70+ students, several mentors, and one mission: build better humans by building better robots.
Their shared facility at Walnut Grove hums with the sound of drills, code compiles, and occasional Nerf gun ambushes. A mentor might be explaining PID control while a student 3D-prints a bracket, and across the room, another is presenting a sponsorship pitch to a Lockheed engineer.
They aren’t just competing—they’re collaborating across schools, genders, and experience levels. Their motto: “We are Prosper. We are one.”
Now, every season, when their three gleaming robots line up on the field under the bright lights of competition, they aren’t just representing their schools—they’re representing a living model of what’s possible when education, engineering, and community collide.
Because in Prosper, the lights still shine on Friday nights—but the real legends are built in the shop.In a town where Friday night lights once defined school pride, a new kind of roar began to rise from the engineering labs. Prosper, Texas—known for its football and fast growth—was about to become famous for something far more technical: robots.
It started in 2015, when a small group of high school students and a handful of mentors built their first competitive machine under the banner FRC Team 5411, the RoboTalons. The shop was small, the tools were borrowed, and the team logo was printed on copy paper and taped to the wall. What they lacked in resources, they made up for in relentless curiosity and caffeine.
Their rookie robot barely held itself together through the regional season—but by the end of it, they had built something bigger than a machine. They’d built a culture. A culture where mistakes were trophies, and failures were simply proof of progress.
By 2023, the program had exploded. Prosper’s schools were multiplying, and so were the engineers. Instead of capping enrollment, the mentors made a radical choice: expand. Thus, FRC Team 9105, the TechnoTalons, was born at Rock Hill High School. They entered their rookie season like a storm—young, hungry, and equipped with the hard lessons 5411 had learned the hard way. Against all odds, they earned a trip to the FIRST World Championship in their debut year, turning heads across Texas.
Then came FRC Team 9492, the LadyTalons—Prosper’s boldest move yet. An all-girls team founded at Walnut Grove High School in 2024, they weren’t formed as a novelty. They were built to compete. And compete they did—winning both the Rookie All-Star and Rookie Inspiration awards in their first season. Their pit became a hub of laughter, precision, and glittered safety glasses.
Together, these three teams form what the community calls The Prosper Engineering Team. 70+ students, several mentors, and one mission: build better humans by building better robots.
Their shared facility at Walnut Grove hums with the sound of drills, code compiles, and occasional Nerf gun ambushes. A mentor might be explaining PID control while a student 3D-prints a bracket, and across the room, another is presenting a sponsorship pitch to a Lockheed engineer.
They aren’t just competing—they’re collaborating across schools, genders, and experience levels. Their motto: “We are Prosper. We are one.”
Now, every season, when their three gleaming robots line up on the field under the bright lights of competition, they aren’t just representing their schools—they’re representing a living model of what’s possible when education, engineering, and community collide.
Because in Prosper, the lights still shine on Friday nights—but the real legends are built in the shop.In a town where Friday night lights once defined school pride, a new kind of roar began to rise from the engineering labs. Prosper, Texas—known for its football and fast growth—was about to become famous for something far more technical: robots.
It started in 2015, when a small group of high school students and a handful of mentors built their first competitive machine under the banner FRC Team 5411, the RoboTalons. The shop was small, the tools were borrowed, and the team logo was printed on copy paper and taped to the wall. What they lacked in resources, they made up for in relentless curiosity and caffeine.
Their rookie robot barely held itself together through the regional season—but by the end of it, they had built something bigger than a machine. They’d built a culture. A culture where mistakes were trophies, and failures were simply proof of progress.
By 2023, the program had exploded. Prosper’s schools were multiplying, and so were the engineers. Instead of capping enrollment, the mentors made a radical choice: expand. Thus, FRC Team 9105, the TechnoTalons, was born at Rock Hill High School. They entered their rookie season like a storm—young, hungry, and equipped with the hard lessons 5411 had learned the hard way. Against all odds, they earned a trip to the FIRST World Championship in their debut year, turning heads across Texas.
Then came FRC Team 9492, the LadyTalons—Prosper’s boldest move yet. An all-girls team founded at Walnut Grove High School in 2024, they weren’t formed as a novelty. They were built to compete. And compete they did—winning both the Rookie All-Star and Rookie Inspiration awards in their first season. Their pit became a hub of laughter, precision, and glittered safety glasses.
Together, these three teams form what the community calls The Prosper Engineering Team. 70+ students, several mentors, and one mission: build better humans by building better robots.
Their shared facility at Walnut Grove hums with the sound of drills, code compiles, and occasional Nerf gun ambushes. A mentor might be explaining PID control while a student 3D-prints a bracket, and across the room, another is presenting a sponsorship pitch to a Lockheed engineer.
They aren’t just competing—they’re collaborating across schools, genders, and experience levels. Their motto: “We are Prosper. We are one.”
Now, every season, when their three gleaming robots line up on the field under the bright lights of competition, they aren’t just representing their schools—they’re representing a living model of what’s possible when education, engineering, and community collide.
Because in Prosper, the lights still shine on Friday nights—but the real legends are built in the shop.In a town where Friday night lights once defined school pride, a new kind of roar began to rise from the engineering labs. Prosper, Texas—known for its football and fast growth—was about to become famous for something far more technical: robots.
It started in 2015, when a small group of high school students and a handful of mentors built their first competitive machine under the banner FRC Team 5411, the RoboTalons. The shop was small, the tools were borrowed, and the team logo was printed on copy paper and taped to the wall. What they lacked in resources, they made up for in relentless curiosity and caffeine.
Their rookie robot barely held itself together through the regional season—but by the end of it, they had built something bigger than a machine. They’d built a culture. A culture where mistakes were trophies, and failures were simply proof of progress.
By 2023, the program had exploded. Prosper’s schools were multiplying, and so were the engineers. Instead of capping enrollment, the mentors made a radical choice: expand. Thus, FRC Team 9105, the TechnoTalons, was born at Rock Hill High School. They entered their rookie season like a storm—young, hungry, and equipped with the hard lessons 5411 had learned the hard way. Against all odds, they earned a trip to the FIRST World Championship in their debut year, turning heads across Texas.
Then came FRC Team 9492, the LadyTalons—Prosper’s boldest move yet. An all-girls team founded at Walnut Grove High School in 2024, they weren’t formed as a novelty. They were built to compete. And compete they did—winning both the Rookie All-Star and Rookie Inspiration awards in their first season. Their pit became a hub of laughter, precision, and glittered safety glasses.
Together, these three teams form what the community calls The Prosper Engineering Team. 70+ students, several mentors, and one mission: build better humans by building better robots.
Their shared facility at Walnut Grove hums with the sound of drills, code compiles, and occasional Nerf gun ambushes. A mentor might be explaining PID control while a student 3D-prints a bracket, and across the room, another is presenting a sponsorship pitch to a Lockheed engineer.
They aren’t just competing—they’re collaborating across schools, genders, and experience levels. Their motto: “We are Prosper. We are one.”
Now, every season, when their three gleaming robots line up on the field under the bright lights of competition, they aren’t just representing their schools—they’re representing a living model of what’s possible when education, engineering, and community collide.
Because in Prosper, the lights still shine on Friday nights—but the real legends are built in the shop.In a town where Friday night lights once defined school pride, a new kind of roar began to rise from the engineering labs. Prosper, Texas—known for its football and fast growth—was about to become famous for something far more technical: robots.
It started in 2015, when a small group of high school students and a handful of mentors built their first competitive machine under the banner FRC Team 5411, the RoboTalons. The shop was small, the tools were borrowed, and the team logo was printed on copy paper and taped to the wall. What they lacked in resources, they made up for in relentless curiosity and caffeine.
Their rookie robot barely held itself together through the regional season—but by the end of it, they had built something bigger than a machine. They’d built a culture. A culture where mistakes were trophies, and failures were simply proof of progress.
By 2023, the program had exploded. Prosper’s schools were multiplying, and so were the engineers. Instead of capping enrollment, the mentors made a radical choice: expand. Thus, FRC Team 9105, the TechnoTalons, was born at Rock Hill High School. They entered their rookie season like a storm—young, hungry, and equipped with the hard lessons 5411 had learned the hard way. Against all odds, they earned a trip to the FIRST World Championship in their debut year, turning heads across Texas.
Then came FRC Team 9492, the LadyTalons—Prosper’s boldest move yet. An all-girls team founded at Walnut Grove High School in 2024, they weren’t formed as a novelty. They were built to compete. And compete they did—winning both the Rookie All-Star and Rookie Inspiration awards in their first season. Their pit became a hub of laughter, precision, and glittered safety glasses.
Together, these three teams form what the community calls The Prosper Engineering Team. 70+ students, several mentors, and one mission: build better humans by building better robots.
Their shared facility at Walnut Grove hums with the sound of drills, code compiles, and occasional Nerf gun ambushes. A mentor might be explaining PID control while a student 3D-prints a bracket, and across the room, another is presenting a sponsorship pitch to a Lockheed engineer.
They aren’t just competing—they’re collaborating across schools, genders, and experience levels. Their motto: “We are Prosper. We are one.”
Now, every season, when their three gleaming robots line up on the field under the bright lights of competition, they aren’t just representing their schools—they’re representing a living model of what’s possible when education, engineering, and community collide.
Because in Prosper, the lights still shine on Friday nights—but the real legends are built in the shop.In a town where Friday night lights once defined school pride, a new kind of roar began to rise from the engineering labs. Prosper, Texas—known for its football and fast growth—was about to become famous for something far more technical: robots.
It started in 2015, when a small group of high school students and a handful of mentors built their first competitive machine under the banner FRC Team 5411, the RoboTalons. The shop was small, the tools were borrowed, and the team logo was printed on copy paper and taped to the wall. What they lacked in resources, they made up for in relentless curiosity and caffeine.
Their rookie robot barely held itself together through the regional season—but by the end of it, they had built something bigger than a machine. They’d built a culture. A culture where mistakes were trophies, and failures were simply proof of progress.
By 2023, the program had exploded. Prosper’s schools were multiplying, and so were the engineers. Instead of capping enrollment, the mentors made a radical choice: expand. Thus, FRC Team 9105, the TechnoTalons, was born at Rock Hill High School. They entered their rookie season like a storm—young, hungry, and equipped with the hard lessons 5411 had learned the hard way. Against all odds, they earned a trip to the FIRST World Championship in their debut year, turning heads across Texas.
Then came FRC Team 9492, the LadyTalons—Prosper’s boldest move yet. An all-girls team founded at Walnut Grove High School in 2024, they weren’t formed as a novelty. They were built to compete. And compete they did—winning both the Rookie All-Star and Rookie Inspiration awards in their first season. Their pit became a hub of laughter, precision, and glittered safety glasses.
Together, these three teams form what the community calls The Prosper Engineering Team. 70+ students, several mentors, and one mission: build better humans by building better robots.
Their shared facility at Walnut Grove hums with the sound of drills, code compiles, and occasional Nerf gun ambushes. A mentor might be explaining PID control while a student 3D-prints a bracket, and across the room, another is presenting a sponsorship pitch to a Lockheed engineer.
They aren’t just competing—they’re collaborating across schools, genders, and experience levels. Their motto: “We are Prosper. We are one.”
Now, every season, when their three gleaming robots line up on the field under the bright lights of competition, they aren’t just representing their schools—they’re representing a living model of what’s possible when education, engineering, and community collide.
Because in Prosper, the lights still shine on Friday nights—but the real legends are built in the shop.In a town where Friday night lights once defined school pride, a new kind of roar began to rise from the engineering labs. Prosper, Texas—known for its football and fast growth—was about to become famous for something far more technical: robots.
It started in 2015, when a small group of high school students and a handful of mentors built their first competitive machine under the banner FRC Team 5411, the RoboTalons. The shop was small, the tools were borrowed, and the team logo was printed on copy paper and taped to the wall. What they lacked in resources, they made up for in relentless curiosity and caffeine.
Their rookie robot barely held itself together through the regional season—but by the end of it, they had built something bigger than a machine. They’d built a culture. A culture where mistakes were trophies, and failures were simply proof of progress.
By 2023, the program had exploded. Prosper’s schools were multiplying, and so were the engineers. Instead of capping enrollment, the mentors made a radical choice: expand. Thus, FRC Team 9105, the TechnoTalons, was born at Rock Hill High School. They entered their rookie season like a storm—young, hungry, and equipped with the hard lessons 5411 had learned the hard way. Against all odds, they earned a trip to the FIRST World Championship in their debut year, turning heads across Texas.
Then came FRC Team 9492, the LadyTalons—Prosper’s boldest move yet. An all-girls team founded at Walnut Grove High School in 2024, they weren’t formed as a novelty. They were built to compete. And compete they did—winning both the Rookie All-Star and Rookie Inspiration awards in their first season. Their pit became a hub of laughter, precision, and glittered safety glasses.
Together, these three teams form what the community calls The Prosper Engineering Team. 70+ students, several mentors, and one mission: build better humans by building better robots.
Their shared facility at Walnut Grove hums with the sound of drills, code compiles, and occasional Nerf gun ambushes. A mentor might be explaining PID control while a student 3D-prints a bracket, and across the room, another is presenting a sponsorship pitch to a Lockheed engineer.
They aren’t just competing—they’re collaborating across schools, genders, and experience levels. Their motto: “We are Prosper. We are one.”
Now, every season, when their three gleaming robots line up on the field under the bright lights of competition, they aren’t just representing their schools—they’re representing a living model of what’s possible when education, engineering, and community collide.
Because in Prosper, the lights still shine on Friday nights—but the real legends are built in the shop.In a town where Friday night lights once defined school pride, a new kind of roar began to rise from the engineering labs. Prosper, Texas—known for its football and fast growth—was about to become famous for something far more technical: robots.
It started in 2015, when a small group of high school students and a handful of mentors built their first competitive machine under the banner FRC Team 5411, the RoboTalons. The shop was small, the tools were borrowed, and the team logo was printed on copy paper and taped to the wall. What they lacked in resources, they made up for in relentless curiosity and caffeine.
Their rookie robot barely held itself together through the regional season—but by the end of it, they had built something bigger than a machine. They’d built a culture. A culture where mistakes were trophies, and failures were simply proof of progress.
By 2023, the program had exploded. Prosper’s schools were multiplying, and so were the engineers. Instead of capping enrollment, the mentors made a radical choice: expand. Thus, FRC Team 9105, the TechnoTalons, was born at Rock Hill High School. They entered their rookie season like a storm—young, hungry, and equipped with the hard lessons 5411 had learned the hard way. Against all odds, they earned a trip to the FIRST World Championship in their debut year, turning heads across Texas.
Then came FRC Team 9492, the LadyTalons—Prosper’s boldest move yet. An all-girls team founded at Walnut Grove High School in 2024, they weren’t formed as a novelty. They were built to compete. And compete they did—winning both the Rookie All-Star and Rookie Inspiration awards in their first season. Their pit became a hub of laughter, precision, and glittered safety glasses.
Together, these three teams form what the community calls The Prosper Engineering Team. 70+ students, several mentors, and one mission: build better humans by building better robots.
Their shared facility at Walnut Grove hums with the sound of drills, code compiles, and occasional Nerf gun ambushes. A mentor might be explaining PID control while a student 3D-prints a bracket, and across the room, another is presenting a sponsorship pitch to a Lockheed engineer.
They aren’t just competing—they’re collaborating across schools, genders, and experience levels. Their motto: “We are Prosper. We are one.”
Now, every season, when their three gleaming robots line up on the field under the bright lights of competition, they aren’t just representing their schools—they’re representing a living model of what’s possible when education, engineering, and community collide.
Because in Prosper, the lights still shine on Friday nights—but the real legends are built in the shop.In a town where Friday night lights once defined school pride, a new kind of roar began to rise from the engineering labs. Prosper, Texas—known for its football and fast growth—was about to become famous for something far more technical: robots.
It started in 2015, when a small group of high school students and a handful of mentors built their first competitive machine under the banner FRC Team 5411, the RoboTalons. The shop was small, the tools were borrowed, and the team logo was printed on copy paper and taped to the wall. What they lacked in resources, they made up for in relentless curiosity and caffeine.
Their rookie robot barely held itself together through the regional season—but by the end of it, they had built something bigger than a machine. They’d built a culture. A culture where mistakes were trophies, and failures were simply proof of progress.
By 2023, the program had exploded. Prosper’s schools were multiplying, and so were the engineers. Instead of capping enrollment, the mentors made a radical choice: expand. Thus, FRC Team 9105, the TechnoTalons, was born at Rock Hill High School. They entered their rookie season like a storm—young, hungry, and equipped with the hard lessons 5411 had learned the hard way. Against all odds, they earned a trip to the FIRST World Championship in their debut year, turning heads across Texas.
Then came FRC Team 9492, the LadyTalons—Prosper’s boldest move yet. An all-girls team founded at Walnut Grove High School in 2024, they weren’t formed as a novelty. They were built to compete. And compete they did—winning both the Rookie All-Star and Rookie Inspiration awards in their first season. Their pit became a hub of laughter, precision, and glittered safety glasses.
Together, these three teams form what the community calls The Prosper Engineering Team. 70+ students, several mentors, and one mission: build better humans by building better robots.
Their shared facility at Walnut Grove hums with the sound of drills, code compiles, and occasional Nerf gun ambushes. A mentor might be explaining PID control while a student 3D-prints a bracket, and across the room, another is presenting a sponsorship pitch to a Lockheed engineer.
They aren’t just competing—they’re collaborating across schools, genders, and experience levels. Their motto: “We are Prosper. We are one.”
Now, every season, when their three gleaming robots line up on the field under the bright lights of competition, they aren’t just representing their schools—they’re representing a living model of what’s possible when education, engineering, and community collide.
Because in Prosper, the lights still shine on Friday nights—but the real legends are built in the shop.In a town where Friday night lights once defined school pride, a new kind of roar began to rise from the engineering labs. Prosper, Texas—known for its football and fast growth—was about to become famous for something far more technical: robots.
It started in 2015, when a small group of high school students and a handful of mentors built their first competitive machine under the banner FRC Team 5411, the RoboTalons. The shop was small, the tools were borrowed, and the team logo was printed on copy paper and taped to the wall. What they lacked in resources, they made up for in relentless curiosity and caffeine.
Their rookie robot barely held itself together through the regional season—but by the end of it, they had built something bigger than a machine. They’d built a culture. A culture where mistakes were trophies, and failures were simply proof of progress.
By 2023, the program had exploded. Prosper’s schools were multiplying, and so were the engineers. Instead of capping enrollment, the mentors made a radical choice: expand. Thus, FRC Team 9105, the TechnoTalons, was born at Rock Hill High School. They entered their rookie season like a storm—young, hungry, and equipped with the hard lessons 5411 had learned the hard way. Against all odds, they earned a trip to the FIRST World Championship in their debut year, turning heads across Texas.
Then came FRC Team 9492, the LadyTalons—Prosper’s boldest move yet. An all-girls team founded at Walnut Grove High School in 2024, they weren’t formed as a novelty. They were built to compete. And compete they did—winning both the Rookie All-Star and Rookie Inspiration awards in their first season. Their pit became a hub of laughter, precision, and glittered safety glasses.
Together, these three teams form what the community calls The Prosper Engineering Team. 70+ students, several mentors, and one mission: build better humans by building better robots.
Their shared facility at Walnut Grove hums with the sound of drills, code compiles, and occasional Nerf gun ambushes. A mentor might be explaining PID control while a student 3D-prints a bracket, and across the room, another is presenting a sponsorship pitch to a Lockheed engineer.
They aren’t just competing—they’re collaborating across schools, genders, and experience levels. Their motto: “We are Prosper. We are one.”
Now, every season, when their three gleaming robots line up on the field under the bright lights of competition, they aren’t just representing their schools—they’re representing a living model of what’s possible when education, engineering, and community collide.
Because in Prosper, the lights still shine on Friday nights—but the real legends are built in the shop.In a town where Friday night lights once defined school pride, a new kind of roar began to rise from the engineering labs. Prosper, Texas—known for its football and fast growth—was about to become famous for something far more technical: robots.
It started in 2015, when a small group of high school students and a handful of mentors built their first competitive machine under the banner FRC Team 5411, the RoboTalons. The shop was small, the tools were borrowed, and the team logo was printed on copy paper and taped to the wall. What they lacked in resources, they made up for in relentless curiosity and caffeine.
Their rookie robot barely held itself together through the regional season—but by the end of it, they had built something bigger than a machine. They’d built a culture. A culture where mistakes were trophies, and failures were simply proof of progress.
By 2023, the program had exploded. Prosper’s schools were multiplying, and so were the engineers. Instead of capping enrollment, the mentors made a radical choice: expand. Thus, FRC Team 9105, the TechnoTalons, was born at Rock Hill High School. They entered their rookie season like a storm—young, hungry, and equipped with the hard lessons 5411 had learned the hard way. Against all odds, they earned a trip to the FIRST World Championship in their debut year, turning heads across Texas.
Then came FRC Team 9492, the LadyTalons—Prosper’s boldest move yet. An all-girls team founded at Walnut Grove High School in 2024, they weren’t formed as a novelty. They were built to compete. And compete they did—winning both the Rookie All-Star and Rookie Inspiration awards in their first season. Their pit became a hub of laughter, precision, and glittered safety glasses.
Together, these three teams form what the community calls The Prosper Engineering Team. 70+ students, several mentors, and one mission: build better humans by building better robots.
Their shared facility at Walnut Grove hums with the sound of drills, code compiles, and occasional Nerf gun ambushes. A mentor might be explaining PID control while a student 3D-prints a bracket, and across the room, another is presenting a sponsorship pitch to a Lockheed engineer.
They aren’t just competing—they’re collaborating across schools, genders, and experience levels. Their motto: “We are Prosper. We are one.”
Now, every season, when their three gleaming robots line up on the field under the bright lights of competition, they aren’t just representing their schools—they’re representing a living model of what’s possible when education, engineering, and community collide.
Because in Prosper, the lights still shine on Friday nights—but the real legends are built in the shop.In a town where Friday night lights once defined school pride, a new kind of roar began to rise from the engineering labs. Prosper, Texas—known for its football and fast growth—was about to become famous for something far more technical: robots.
It started in 2015, when a small group of high school students and a handful of mentors built their first competitive machine under the banner FRC Team 5411, the RoboTalons. The shop was small, the tools were borrowed, and the team logo was printed on copy paper and taped to the wall. What they lacked in resources, they made up for in relentless curiosity and caffeine.
Their rookie robot barely held itself together through the regional season—but by the end of it, they had built something bigger than a machine. They’d built a culture. A culture where mistakes were trophies, and failures were simply proof of progress.
By 2023, the program had exploded. Prosper’s schools were multiplying, and so were the engineers. Instead of capping enrollment, the mentors made a radical choice: expand. Thus, FRC Team 9105, the TechnoTalons, was born at Rock Hill High School. They entered their rookie season like a storm—young, hungry, and equipped with the hard lessons 5411 had learned the hard way. Against all odds, they earned a trip to the FIRST World Championship in their debut year, turning heads across Texas.
Then came FRC Team 9492, the LadyTalons—Prosper’s boldest move yet. An all-girls team founded at Walnut Grove High School in 2024, they weren’t formed as a novelty. They were built to compete. And compete they did—winning both the Rookie All-Star and Rookie Inspiration awards in their first season. Their pit became a hub of laughter, precision, and glittered safety glasses.
Together, these three teams form what the community calls The Prosper Engineering Team. 70+ students, several mentors, and one mission: build better humans by building better robots.
Their shared facility at Walnut Grove hums with the sound of drills, code compiles, and occasional Nerf gun ambushes. A mentor might be explaining PID control while a student 3D-prints a bracket, and across the room, another is presenting a sponsorship pitch to a Lockheed engineer.
They aren’t just competing—they’re collaborating across schools, genders, and experience levels. Their motto: “We are Prosper. We are one.”
Now, every season, when their three gleaming robots line up on the field under the bright lights of competition, they aren’t just representing their schools—they’re representing a living model of what’s possible when education, engineering, and community collide.
Because in Prosper, the lights still shine on Friday nights—but the real legends are built in the shop.In a town where Friday night lights once defined school pride, a new kind of roar began to rise from the engineering labs. Prosper, Texas—known for its football and fast growth—was about to become famous for something far more technical: robots.
It started in 2015, when a small group of high school students and a handful of mentors built their first competitive machine under the banner FRC Team 5411, the RoboTalons. The shop was small, the tools were borrowed, and the team logo was printed on copy paper and taped to the wall. What they lacked in resources, they made up for in relentless curiosity and caffeine.
Their rookie robot barely held itself together through the regional season—but by the end of it, they had built something bigger than a machine. They’d built a culture. A culture where mistakes were trophies, and failures were simply proof of progress.
By 2023, the program had exploded. Prosper’s schools were multiplying, and so were the engineers. Instead of capping enrollment, the mentors made a radical choice: expand. Thus, FRC Team 9105, the TechnoTalons, was born at Rock Hill High School. They entered their rookie season like a storm—young, hungry, and equipped with the hard lessons 5411 had learned the hard way. Against all odds, they earned a trip to the FIRST World Championship in their debut year, turning heads across Texas.
Then came FRC Team 9492, the LadyTalons—Prosper’s boldest move yet. An all-girls team founded at Walnut Grove High School in 2024, they weren’t formed as a novelty. They were built to compete. And compete they did—winning both the Rookie All-Star and Rookie Inspiration awards in their first season. Their pit became a hub of laughter, precision, and glittered safety glasses.
Together, these three teams form what the community calls The Prosper Engineering Team. 70+ students, several mentors, and one mission: build better humans by building better robots.
Their shared facility at Walnut Grove hums with the sound of drills, code compiles, and occasional Nerf gun ambushes. A mentor might be explaining PID control while a student 3D-prints a bracket, and across the room, another is presenting a sponsorship pitch to a Lockheed engineer.
They aren’t just competing—they’re collaborating across schools, genders, and experience levels. Their motto: “We are Prosper. We are one.”
Now, every season, when their three gleaming robots line up on the field under the bright lights of competition, they aren’t just representing their schools—they’re representing a living model of what’s possible when education, engineering, and community collide.
Because in Prosper, the lights still shine on Friday nights—but the real legends are built in the shop.In a town where Friday night lights once defined school pride, a new kind of roar began to rise from the engineering labs. Prosper, Texas—known for its football and fast growth—was about to become famous for something far more technical: robots.
It started in 2015, when a small group of high school students and a handful of mentors built their first competitive machine under the banner FRC Team 5411, the RoboTalons. The shop was small, the tools were borrowed, and the team logo was printed on copy paper and taped to the wall. What they lacked in resources, they made up for in relentless curiosity and caffeine.
Their rookie robot barely held itself together through the regional season—but by the end of it, they had built something bigger than a machine. They’d built a culture. A culture where mistakes were trophies, and failures were simply proof of progress.
By 2023, the program had exploded. Prosper’s schools were multiplying, and so were the engineers. Instead of capping enrollment, the mentors made a radical choice: expand. Thus, FRC Team 9105, the TechnoTalons, was born at Rock Hill High School. They entered their rookie season like a storm—young, hungry, and equipped with the hard lessons 5411 had learned the hard way. Against all odds, they earned a trip to the FIRST World Championship in their debut year, turning heads across Texas.
Then came FRC Team 9492, the LadyTalons—Prosper’s boldest move yet. An all-girls team founded at Walnut Grove High School in 2024, they weren’t formed as a novelty. They were built to compete. And compete they did—winning both the Rookie All-Star and Rookie Inspiration awards in their first season. Their pit became a hub of laughter, precision, and glittered safety glasses.
Together, these three teams form what the community calls The Prosper Engineering Team. 70+ students, several mentors, and one mission: build better humans by building better robots.
Their shared facility at Walnut Grove hums with the sound of drills, code compiles, and occasional Nerf gun ambushes. A mentor might be explaining PID control while a student 3D-prints a bracket, and across the room, another is presenting a sponsorship pitch to a Lockheed engineer.
They aren’t just competing—they’re collaborating across schools, genders, and experience levels. Their motto: “We are Prosper. We are one.”
Now, every season, when their three gleaming robots line up on the field under the bright lights of competition, they aren’t just representing their schools—they’re representing a living model of what’s possible when education, engineering, and community collide.
Because in Prosper, the lights still shine on Friday nights—but the real legends are built in the shop.In a town where Friday night lights once defined school pride, a new kind of roar began to rise from the engineering labs. Prosper, Texas—known for its football and fast growth—was about to become famous for something far more technical: robots.
It started in 2015, when a small group of high school students and a handful of mentors built their first competitive machine under the banner FRC Team 5411, the RoboTalons. The shop was small, the tools were borrowed, and the team logo was printed on copy paper and taped to the wall. What they lacked in resources, they made up for in relentless curiosity and caffeine.
Their rookie robot barely held itself together through the regional season—but by the end of it, they had built something bigger than a machine. They’d built a culture. A culture where mistakes were trophies, and failures were simply proof of progress.
By 2023, the program had exploded. Prosper’s schools were multiplying, and so were the engineers. Instead of capping enrollment, the mentors made a radical choice: expand. Thus, FRC Team 9105, the TechnoTalons, was born at Rock Hill High School. They entered their rookie season like a storm—young, hungry, and equipped with the hard lessons 5411 had learned the hard way. Against all odds, they earned a trip to the FIRST World Championship in their debut year, turning heads across Texas.
Then came FRC Team 9492, the LadyTalons—Prosper’s boldest move yet. An all-girls team founded at Walnut Grove High School in 2024, they weren’t formed as a novelty. They were built to compete. And compete they did—winning both the Rookie All-Star and Rookie Inspiration awards in their first season. Their pit became a hub of laughter, precision, and glittered safety glasses.
Together, these three teams form what the community calls The Prosper Engineering Team. 70+ students, several mentors, and one mission: build better humans by building better robots.
Their shared facility at Walnut Grove hums with the sound of drills, code compiles, and occasional Nerf gun ambushes. A mentor might be explaining PID control while a student 3D-prints a bracket, and across the room, another is presenting a sponsorship pitch to a Lockheed engineer.
They aren’t just competing—they’re collaborating across schools, genders, and experience levels. Their motto: “We are Prosper. We are one.”
Now, every season, when their three gleaming robots line up on the field under the bright lights of competition, they aren’t just representing their schools—they’re representing a living model of what’s possible when education, engineering, and community collide.
Because in Prosper, the lights still shine on Friday nights—but the real legends are built in the shop.In a town where Friday night lights once defined school pride, a new kind of roar began to rise from the engineering labs. Prosper, Texas—known for its football and fast growth—was about to become famous for something far more technical: robots.
It started in 2015, when a small group of high school students and a handful of mentors built their first competitive machine under the banner FRC Team 5411, the RoboTalons. The shop was small, the tools were borrowed, and the team logo was printed on copy paper and taped to the wall. What they lacked in resources, they made up for in relentless curiosity and caffeine.
Their rookie robot barely held itself together through the regional season—but by the end of it, they had built something bigger than a machine. They’d built a culture. A culture where mistakes were trophies, and failures were simply proof of progress.
By 2023, the program had exploded. Prosper’s schools were multiplying, and so were the engineers. Instead of capping enrollment, the mentors made a radical choice: expand. Thus, FRC Team 9105, the TechnoTalons, was born at Rock Hill High School. They entered their rookie season like a storm—young, hungry, and equipped with the hard lessons 5411 had learned the hard way. Against all odds, they earned a trip to the FIRST World Championship in their debut year, turning heads across Texas.
Then came FRC Team 9492, the LadyTalons—Prosper’s boldest move yet. An all-girls team founded at Walnut Grove High School in 2024, they weren’t formed as a novelty. They were built to compete. And compete they did—winning both the Rookie All-Star and Rookie Inspiration awards in their first season. Their pit became a hub of laughter, precision, and glittered safety glasses.
Together, these three teams form what the community calls The Prosper Engineering Team. 70+ students, several mentors, and one mission: build better humans by building better robots.
Their shared facility at Walnut Grove hums with the sound of drills, code compiles, and occasional Nerf gun ambushes. A mentor might be explaining PID control while a student 3D-prints a bracket, and across the room, another is presenting a sponsorship pitch to a Lockheed engineer.
They aren’t just competing—they’re collaborating across schools, genders, and experience levels. Their motto: “We are Prosper. We are one.”
Now, every season, when their three gleaming robots line up on the field under the bright lights of competition, they aren’t just representing their schools—they’re representing a living model of what’s possible when education, engineering, and community collide.
Because in Prosper, the lights still shine on Friday nights—but the real legends are built in the shop.In a town where Friday night lights once defined school pride, a new kind of roar began to rise from the engineering labs. Prosper, Texas—known for its football and fast growth—was about to become famous for something far more technical: robots.
It started in 2015, when a small group of high school students and a handful of mentors built their first competitive machine under the banner FRC Team 5411, the RoboTalons. The shop was small, the tools were borrowed, and the team logo was printed on copy paper and taped to the wall. What they lacked in resources, they made up for in relentless curiosity and caffeine.
Their rookie robot barely held itself together through the regional season—but by the end of it, they had built something bigger than a machine. They’d built a culture. A culture where mistakes were trophies, and failures were simply proof of progress.
By 2023, the program had exploded. Prosper’s schools were multiplying, and so were the engineers. Instead of capping enrollment, the mentors made a radical choice: expand. Thus, FRC Team 9105, the TechnoTalons, was born at Rock Hill High School. They entered their rookie season like a storm—young, hungry, and equipped with the hard lessons 5411 had learned the hard way. Against all odds, they earned a trip to the FIRST World Championship in their debut year, turning heads across Texas.
Then came FRC Team 9492, the LadyTalons—Prosper’s boldest move yet. An all-girls team founded at Walnut Grove High School in 2024, they weren’t formed as a novelty. They were built to compete. And compete they did—winning both the Rookie All-Star and Rookie Inspiration awards in their first season. Their pit became a hub of laughter, precision, and glittered safety glasses.
Together, these three teams form what the community calls The Prosper Engineering Team. 70+ students, several mentors, and one mission: build better humans by building better robots.
Their shared facility at Walnut Grove hums with the sound of drills, code compiles, and occasional Nerf gun ambushes. A mentor might be explaining PID control while a student 3D-prints a bracket, and across the room, another is presenting a sponsorship pitch to a Lockheed engineer.
They aren’t just competing—they’re collaborating across schools, genders, and experience levels. Their motto: “We are Prosper. We are one.”
Now, every season, when their three gleaming robots line up on the field under the bright lights of competition, they aren’t just representing their schools—they’re representing a living model of what’s possible when education, engineering, and community collide.
Because in Prosper, the lights still shine on Friday nights—but the real legends are built in the shop.In a town where Friday night lights once defined school pride, a new kind of roar began to rise from the engineering labs. Prosper, Texas—known for its football and fast growth—was about to become famous for something far more technical: robots.
It started in 2015, when a small group of high school students and a handful of mentors built their first competitive machine under the banner FRC Team 5411, the RoboTalons. The shop was small, the tools were borrowed, and the team logo was printed on copy paper and taped to the wall. What they lacked in resources, they made up for in relentless curiosity and caffeine.
Their rookie robot barely held itself together through the regional season—but by the end of it, they had built something bigger than a machine. They’d built a culture. A culture where mistakes were trophies, and failures were simply proof of progress.
By 2023, the program had exploded. Prosper’s schools were multiplying, and so were the engineers. Instead of capping enrollment, the mentors made a radical choice: expand. Thus, FRC Team 9105, the TechnoTalons, was born at Rock Hill High School. They entered their rookie season like a storm—young, hungry, and equipped with the hard lessons 5411 had learned the hard way. Against all odds, they earned a trip to the FIRST World Championship in their debut year, turning heads across Texas.
Then came FRC Team 9492, the LadyTalons—Prosper’s boldest move yet. An all-girls team founded at Walnut Grove High School in 2024, they weren’t formed as a novelty. They were built to compete. And compete they did—winning both the Rookie All-Star and Rookie Inspiration awards in their first season. Their pit became a hub of laughter, precision, and glittered safety glasses.
Together, these three teams form what the community calls The Prosper Engineering Team. 70+ students, several mentors, and one mission: build better humans by building better robots.
Their shared facility at Walnut Grove hums with the sound of drills, code compiles, and occasional Nerf gun ambushes. A mentor might be explaining PID control while a student 3D-prints a bracket, and across the room, another is presenting a sponsorship pitch to a Lockheed engineer.
They aren’t just competing—they’re collaborating across schools, genders, and experience levels. Their motto: “We are Prosper. We are one.”
Now, every season, when their three gleaming robots line up on the field under the bright lights of competition, they aren’t just representing their schools—they’re representing a living model of what’s possible when education, engineering, and community collide.
Because in Prosper, the lights still shine on Friday nights—but the real legends are built in the shop.In a town where Friday night lights once defined school pride, a new kind of roar began to rise from the engineering labs. Prosper, Texas—known for its football and fast growth—was about to become famous for something far more technical: robots.
It started in 2015, when a small group of high school students and a handful of mentors built their first competitive machine under the banner FRC Team 5411, the RoboTalons. The shop was small, the tools were borrowed, and the team logo was printed on copy paper and taped to the wall. What they lacked in resources, they made up for in relentless curiosity and caffeine.
Their rookie robot barely held itself together through the regional season—but by the end of it, they had built something bigger than a machine. They’d built a culture. A culture where mistakes were trophies, and failures were simply proof of progress.
By 2023, the program had exploded. Prosper’s schools were multiplying, and so were the engineers. Instead of capping enrollment, the mentors made a radical choice: expand. Thus, FRC Team 9105, the TechnoTalons, was born at Rock Hill High School. They entered their rookie season like a storm—young, hungry, and equipped with the hard lessons 5411 had learned the hard way. Against all odds, they earned a trip to the FIRST World Championship in their debut year, turning heads across Texas.
Then came FRC Team 9492, the LadyTalons—Prosper’s boldest move yet. An all-girls team founded at Walnut Grove High School in 2024, they weren’t formed as a novelty. They were built to compete. And compete they did—winning both the Rookie All-Star and Rookie Inspiration awards in their first season. Their pit became a hub of laughter, precision, and glittered safety glasses.
Together, these three teams form what the community calls The Prosper Engineering Team. 70+ students, several mentors, and one mission: build better humans by building better robots.
Their shared facility at Walnut Grove hums with the sound of drills, code compiles, and occasional Nerf gun ambushes. A mentor might be explaining PID control while a student 3D-prints a bracket, and across the room, another is presenting a sponsorship pitch to a Lockheed engineer.
They aren’t just competing—they’re collaborating across schools, genders, and experience levels. Their motto: “We are Prosper. We are one.”
Now, every season, when their three gleaming robots line up on the field under the bright lights of competition, they aren’t just representing their schools—they’re representing a living model of what’s possible when education, engineering, and community collide.
Because in Prosper, the lights still shine on Friday nights—but the real legends are built in the shop.In a town where Friday night lights once defined school pride, a new kind of roar began to rise from the engineering labs. Prosper, Texas—known for its football and fast growth—was about to become famous for something far more technical: robots.
It started in 2015, when a small group of high school students and a handful of mentors built their first competitive machine under the banner FRC Team 5411, the RoboTalons. The shop was small, the tools were borrowed, and the team logo was printed on copy paper and taped to the wall. What they lacked in resources, they made up for in relentless curiosity and caffeine.
Their rookie robot barely held itself together through the regional season—but by the end of it, they had built something bigger than a machine. They’d built a culture. A culture where mistakes were trophies, and failures were simply proof of progress.
By 2023, the program had exploded. Prosper’s schools were multiplying, and so were the engineers. Instead of capping enrollment, the mentors made a radical choice: expand. Thus, FRC Team 9105, the TechnoTalons, was born at Rock Hill High School. They entered their rookie season like a storm—young, hungry, and equipped with the hard lessons 5411 had learned the hard way. Against all odds, they earned a trip to the FIRST World Championship in their debut year, turning heads across Texas.
Then came FRC Team 9492, the LadyTalons—Prosper’s boldest move yet. An all-girls team founded at Walnut Grove High School in 2024, they weren’t formed as a novelty. They were built to compete. And compete they did—winning both the Rookie All-Star and Rookie Inspiration awards in their first season. Their pit became a hub of laughter, precision, and glittered safety glasses.
Together, these three teams form what the community calls The Prosper Engineering Team. 70+ students, several mentors, and one mission: build better humans by building better robots.
Their shared facility at Walnut Grove hums with the sound of drills, code compiles, and occasional Nerf gun ambushes. A mentor might be explaining PID control while a student 3D-prints a bracket, and across the room, another is presenting a sponsorship pitch to a Lockheed engineer.
They aren’t just competing—they’re collaborating across schools, genders, and experience levels. Their motto: “We are Prosper. We are one.”
Now, every season, when their three gleaming robots line up on the field under the bright lights of competition, they aren’t just representing their schools—they’re representing a living model of what’s possible when education, engineering, and community collide.
Because in Prosper, the lights still shine on Friday nights—but the real legends are built in the shop.