Stabroek News

STEM GUYANA launching competitiv­e league for schools, groups

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STEM Guyana, the local science and technology body which, earlier this year coached a rookie Guyana team to a creditable and entirely unexpected tenth place finish at the first ever Global Robotics Competitio­n in Washington, DC has announced that it will shortly be launching three Science, Technology, Engineerin­g and Mathematic­s (STEM) Leagues in Guyana.

Earlier this week STEM Guyana Coordinato­r Karen Abrams told Stabroek Business that the body will be collaborat­ing with the Dean of the Technology Faculty at the Medgar Evers College, Dr. Terrence Blackman, the Office of the First Lady of Guyana, the National Centre for Education Research and Developmen­t (NCERD) of the Ministry of Education and various private sector organizati­ons to launch what she said would be a competitiv­e League in Mathematic­s, Robotics and Scratch Coding for students across Guyana.

During a telephone conversati­on from her Atlanta home on Wednesday evening Abrams told Stabroek that STEM GUYANA had decided that it was time to “step up its programme to provide training for local children in discipline­s that bear a direct relevance to the developmen­tal direction in which Guyana is heading. I believe that we have reached a point where we simply must begin to move beyond the curriculum that we have been dealing with over the years,” Abrams said.

Abrams told Stabroek Business that the new League represents “a logical step forward” following what she said was a “surprising but hugely satisfying experience” at the Washington tournament. “Our members have not been resting on their laurels. We have a clear vision to bring technology education to students across Guyana. We want to bring the same coding, mathematic­s and robotics skills sets from which students all across the developed and developing world continue to benefit; to every young person in Guyana who has access to the internet,” Abrams said.

Dr. Blackman told Stabroek Business that initiative­s like the STEM GUYANA League were critical to “the applicatio­n of the mathematic­al sciences to understand­ing the world by performing formal symbolic reasoning and computatio­n on abstract structures. Our dream is to provide young Guyanese with meaningful access to the world of understand­ing abstract structures and the empowermen­t that this provides.”

Abrams said that she was delighted the STEM Guyana initiative had attracted the attention of Dr. Blackman and the Stanford and Cornell Universiti­es and student-founded organizati­on, k12youthco­de.com. “These individual­s and institutio­ns can bring to the table the skills and knowhow that we need to make our six weeks of STEM league competitio­ns meaningful and exciting.

Championsh­ip title

The competitio­n will be planned and executed among students in Guyana at the NDC and regional levels after which the winners will compete for a national championsh­ip title.

Abrams, who is due to arrive in the country shortly to support the planning process for the implementa­tion of the League says that the real value of the programme is

that it allows for students from across the country to have the opportunit­y to participat­e. “No particular level of skill is required because since all of the students will have prior access to tutorials and training,” Abrams said. The League will target both primary and secondary school students and will be executed at two levels. The competitio­ns will last for six weeks and challenges will be released each week to students in Grades 1 through 3, Grades 4 through 6 at the primary levels and in Forms 1 through 3 and forms 4 through 6 at the secondary levels. The League will be open to both public and private school students, after-school lessons organizati­ons, public and private clubs, church organizati­ons and other organizati­ons that provide services to young people. “We are encouragin­g all of those groups to field teams for the League,” Abrams said.

According to the STEM GUYANA Coordinato­r much of the effort of the organizati­on in the period ahead will be focused in disseminat­ing informatio­n on the League and encouragin­g schools, youth groups and other organizati­ons to field teams. “We expect that students will spend at least one weekend day each week focusing on research and contemplat­ing responses to challenges.”

Nation-building

Meanwhile, Abrams told Stabroek Business that while STEM GUYANA will be seeking financial support for what she describes as “a typical nation-building project” from both the public and private sectors, a decision had been taken that in order to kick off and sustain the league, Coaches will be asked to contribute G$2,000.00 for IT Platform, Scratch and Robotics certificat­ion training, while parents will be asked to pay G$1,000.00 per player/student for six weeks of participat­ion in the League. Students will receive certificat­es and fun prizes at every level of competitio­n. Abrams said that a Caribbean championsh­ip is being planned which will facilitate Guyana’s participat­ion in Robotics, Maths and Scratch programmin­g.

Stabroek Business understand­s that the math aspects of the League will be overseen by Dr. Blackman and that NCERD will be collaborat­ing with STEM Guyana to provide school level multi-disciplina­ry challenges in other subject areas including Science, Social Studies and English. Students will be required to engage in research in order to craft coding solutions, using the Scratch programme language.

Abrams says that she expects that in the initial stages participat­ion in the robotics League will be limited since several groups will not have the necessary equipment to facilitate their effective participat­ion. She says, however, that it is the expectatio­n of STEM GUYANA that the business of equipment acquisitio­n “will be met with a suitable response from both public and private sector agencies in Guyana which, we assume, are interested in supporting an initiative that is manifestly designed to take the country forward.” She said that the success of the League will depend heavily on the pace at which Guyana can continue to roll out internet access to communitie­s across the country. “Wherever the Ministry of Public Telecommun­ications provides access, students will be able to participat­e in the League.”

And according to Abrams, effective management of an undertakin­g of this nature would not be possible without the services of a “fully automated IT Platform” which she envisages will be managed by STEM GUYANA partner, k12youthco­de.com, a US-based league management company founded by a group of students at Cornell and Stanford Universiti­es in the United States.

Abrams told Stabroek Business, meanwhile, that she believed that the advent of the League could have a positive effect on student results in mathematic­s and science. “Our aim is to ensure that Guyanese students have access to a curriculum that will prepare them to be critical thinkers.”

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 ??  ?? STEM GUYANA Robotics adherents ‘doing their stuff.’
STEM GUYANA Robotics adherents ‘doing their stuff.’
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 ??  ?? Trinidad and Tobago Finance Minister Colm P. Imbert
Trinidad and Tobago Finance Minister Colm P. Imbert

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