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Guyana wins bronze medal at Caribbean STEM Olympiads

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Guyana has won a bronze medal at the Caribbean STEM (Science, Technology, Engineerin­g and Math) Olympiads.

A release yesterday from the Caribbean Science Foundation (CSF) said that the bronze medal for Guyana was earned in Level I of the Computer Coding Olympiad by Tejasvarun Kandavel of Queen’s College for his video game “Adventurin­g Climate Change” which focused on climate change awareness.

The release said that Guyana also had two other finalist teams in the Olympiads, 12-year-old Temidara Oyedotun from School of the Nations who competed in the Level I Math Olympiad and “QC’s Mc²” consisting of Angel Henry, Samara Munro and Ariel Mohanlall from Queen’s College who also participat­ed in the Level I Math Olympiad.

The CSF held the second annual Caribbean STEM Olympiads (CSO) on 17 – 21 January 2024 in a virtual format. In these Science, Technology, Engineerin­g and Math (STEM) Olympiads, individual­s and teams representi­ng educationa­l institutio­ns, clubs or themselves contested in the (a) Math Olympiad, (b) Computer Coding Olympiad and (c) Robotics Olympiad at three different age levels (12 – 15, 16 – 18 and 19 – 21).

The release said that the Math Olympiad was held in a Jeopardy-style format and covered topics ranging from consumer arithmetic to vector calculus. The Computer Coding Olympiad

required applicants to create apps, games, and websites aimed at solving a challenge faced by Caribbean communitie­s. The challenges tackled by teams in the 2024 Olympiads encompasse­d geohazards and climate change, inter and intra country transporta­tion, public health, non-communicab­le diseases, crime, and money movement and financial education. The Robotics Olympiad tasked applicants with building innovative robots from kits at Level I, and complex robots starting from scratch with a set of random parts at Level III.

A total of 131 students from 11 Caribbean countries registered for the 2024 Olympiads.

After the preliminar­y rounds, 39 teams (83 students) made it to the finals. There were 47 finalists in the Math Olympiad, 22 in the Computer Coding Olympiad, and 14 in the Robotics Olympiad. Medal certificat­es and cash prizes of US$ 500, 400, 300 and 200 were awarded to the teams winning platinum, gold, silver, and bronze medals, respective­ly. The Awards and Closing Ceremony, held on Sunday 21 January 2024, showed that Jamaica led the medal count with 8 medals, followed by Antigua and Barbuda with 6, Belize with 4, Barbados with 3, Saint Lucia with 2, and Grenada, Guyana, Saint Kitts & Nevis and Trinidad &Tobago with 1 each.

Kandavel said, “I would like to thank the CSF for giving me the opportunit­y to participat­e in the Coding Olympiad Finals. I would also like to thank the judges for reviewing my project and giving me feedback on how to improve it.” One of the

finalists Temidara Oyedotun also from Guyana said, “I enjoyed how calming and caring the staff, judges and the overall atmosphere of the competitio­n was, and these Olympiads now (emboldened) me to continue competing in STEM

Olympiads”.

The Institutio­nal sponsors included CIBC, Emera Caribbean, Peloton Internatio­nal, Trident Insurance, and TAG software. The Caribbean STEM Olympiads is an initiative of the CSF - a regional

non-profit NGO with the mission of assisting with the developmen­t and diversific­ation of the economies of the Caribbean Region by promoting STEM education reform and stimulatin­g technology-based entreprene­urship.

 ?? ?? Tejasvarun Kandavel won the bronze medal in the Level I Computer Coding Olympiad for his video game focused on climate change awareness titled “Adventurin­g Climate Change”.
Tejasvarun Kandavel won the bronze medal in the Level I Computer Coding Olympiad for his video game focused on climate change awareness titled “Adventurin­g Climate Change”.
 ?? ?? Temidara Oyedotun, a finalist in the Level I Math Olympiad.
Temidara Oyedotun, a finalist in the Level I Math Olympiad.

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