Toronto Star

REWARDING CHARACTER

Six GTA students, including Katherine Gotovsky, have won the prestigiou­s Loran Scholarshi­p,

- MIRIAM KATAWAZI STAFF REPORTER

When Katherine Gotovsky sees a problem, her response is immediate. The gears in her 17-year-old mind start working away, determined to come up with a solution whether it’s at school, retirement residences or in the tech industry.

She is one of six GTA students selected as Loran Scholars, an award that recognizes character, community contributi­ons and future leadership potential.

From a pool of more than 5,000 applicants, 34 young Canadians were selected for the award valued at $100,000 over four years. The honour includes an annual stipend of $10,000, matching tuition waiver and access to up to $10,000 in funding for summer internship­s.

The other winners from the GTA are: Elektra Dakogianni­s, Georgia Koep-Freifeld, Eden Wondmeneh, Lauren Prophet and John Milkovich.

The selection of a Loran Scholar focuses on the young person’s character with the belief that integrity, courage, grit and personal autonomy are better indicators of overall potential than standard academic measures.

Gotovsky, a University of Toronto Schools student, founded and leads a robotics team and the Girls in Tech conference.

She teaches code to women and youth, plans initiative­s for a national student organizati­on and created her school’s foreign-language newspaper. She establishe­d a companions­hip program at a retirement residence.

Most of her endeavours began with her desire to problem solve, she said.

“I take up all these opportunit­ies because it gives me exposure to different problems that I feel like I can solve,” Gotovsky said.

“I think it’s so interestin­g to put your passion and energy into something and watch solutions grow.”

The Thornhill resident’s passion for solving problems began as a child, when she would use her limited amount of Lego blocks to build elaborate and complex structures.

“She was always hardworkin­g and attentive,” said her mother, Gail Gotovsky.

“She can spend hours working on something, even when she was a baby.”

Gotovsky now helps others solve their problems by teaching code to women and girls at Canada Learning Code, a digital skills program.

“I get to see them figure something out or grasp a new concept or solve a bug in their code that was really stressing them out,” she said. “To see their eyes light up at that is really rewarding.”

Gotovsky plans on pursuing a degree in computer science at either McGill University or the University of Waterloo.

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 ?? VINCE TALOTTA/TORONTO STAR ?? Katherine Gotovsky, a Loran Scholarshi­p winner, plans on pursuing a degree in computer science.
VINCE TALOTTA/TORONTO STAR Katherine Gotovsky, a Loran Scholarshi­p winner, plans on pursuing a degree in computer science.

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