Local robotics novices preparing to engage overseas high fliers in Washington competition
The initiators of STEM-Guyana are currently preoccupied with a new pursuit that involves pitting an ambitious but inexperienced ten-member team from Guyana against experienced and highly talented international opponents in an international robotics competition in Washington DC in July this year. Five students and two adults will travel from Georgetown while the remaining members of the team will come from the USA.
Lead coordinator for the STEM-Guyana project Atlanta-based Guyanese Karen Abrams whose initiatives to upgrade local children’s understanding of and appreciation for robotics has been well-received told Stabroek Business in an interview on Wednesday that it was a bold move that would test the interest of the Guyanese participants in the competition. “By any measure this is an ambitious undertaking for a team with only limited exposure to robotics,” Abrams said.
The children who will be travelling to Washington for the event were only recently exposed to robotics during a series of technology summer camps offered in Buxton, Lusignan and Georgetown during the summer of 2016. “To be sure, the Guyanese youngsters will be competing against young people of varying levels of robotics experience from 150 countries around the world, some of whom have been exposed to robot-building and programing all their lives. Others, like Team Guyana, are simply enthusiastic and motivated novices,” she noted.
Abrams, who along with her three children organized and executed last year’s summer camp said, however, that despite its lack of experience, Team Guyana’s members are “keen, hungry and brilliant” and determined to represent Guyana well at the event, titled the First Global Games, in Washington DC.
The Guyana team will include students from the University of Guyana, the Government Technical Institute, the Kuru Kuru Training College and graduates of the STEM-Guyana robotics camp.
Abrams told Stabroek Business that preparations for the “Washington mission” are well supported by various local public and private entities, including the Department of Sport, which has made the Cliff Anderson Sports Hall available for the practice sessions. She named the Office of First Lady Sandra Granger, the Minister of Public Telecommunications and the Minister of Education as sponsors and supporters of the event. “The efforts of the First Lady have been of considerable help in our pursuit and the Ministry of the Presidency has also provided support,” Abrams said.
On the private sector side, Abrams said, “our Diaspora partners have already contributed financially to the team and fundraising efforts continue.” Locally, she said that support had already