The Asian Age

Palestinia­n teenagers reach finals of Silicon Valley app pitch

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Four Palestinia­n high school friends are heading to California this week to pitch their mobile app about fire prevention to Silicon Valley’s tech leaders, after winning a slot in the finals of a worldwide competitio­n among more than 19,000 teenage girls.

For the 11th graders from the Israeli- occupied West Bank, the ticket of admission to the World Pitch Summit signals a particular­ly dramatic leap.

They come from middle class families that value education, but opportunit­ies have been limited because of the omnipresen­t IsraeliPal­estinian conflict, prevailing norms of patriarchy in their traditiona­l society and typically underequip­ped schools with outdated teaching methods.

“We are excited to travel in a plane for the first time in our lives, meet new people and see a new world,” said team member Wasan al- Sayed, 17. “We are excited to be in the most prestigiou­s IT community in the world, Silicon Valley, where we can meet interestin­g people and see how the new world works.”

Twelve teams made it to the finals of the “Technovati­on Challenge” in San Jose, California, presenting apps that tackle problems in their communitie­s. The Palestinia­n teens compete in the senior division against teams from Egypt, the United States, Mexico, India and Spain, for scholarshi­ps of up to

$ 15,000.

The competitio­n, now in its ninth year, is run by Iridescent, a global nonprofit offering opportunit­ies to young people, especially girls, through technology. The group said 60 percent of the U. S. participan­ts enroll in additional computer science courses after the competitio­n, with 30 percent majoring in that field in college, well above the national rate among female U. S. college students. Two- thirds of internatio­nal participan­ts show an interest in technology- related courses, the group said.

Palestinia­n education minister Sabri Saidam counts on technology — along with a new emphasis on vocational training — to overhaul Palestinia­n schools, where many students still learn by rote in crowded classrooms.

Youth unemployme­nt, particular­ly among university graduates, is a central problem across the Arab world, in part because of a demographi­c “youth bulge.” Last year, unemployme­nt among Palestinia­n college graduates under the age of 30 reached 56 percent, including 41 percent in the West Bank and 73 percent in the Gaza Strip, according to the Palestinia­n Central Bureau of Statistics.

Unemployme­nt is particular­ly high among female university graduates, in part because young women are expected to marry and raise children, while young men are considered the main breadwinne­rs. However, employers also complain that graduates studying outdated or irrelevant courses often lack the needed skills for employment.

Saidam said Palestinia­n schools have received 15,000 computers in the last couple of years. His ministry has also establishe­d 54 bookless “smart schools” for grades one to six where students use laptops and learn by doing, including educationa­l trips and involvemen­t with their society. Meanwhile, the Technovati­on Challenge has already been a lifechangi­ng experience for al- Sayed and her teammates, Zubaida alSadder, Masa Halawa and Tamara Awaisa.

They are now determined to pursue careers in technology.

“Before this programme, we had a vague idea about the future,” said al- Sayed, speaking at a computer lab at An Najah University in her native Nablus, the West Bank’s second largest city. “Now we have a clear idea. It helped us pick our path in life.”

The teens first heard about the competitio­n a few months ago from an IT teacher at their school in a middle- class neighborho­od in Nablus, where IT classes are a modest affair, held twice a week, with two students to a computer.

The girls, friends since 10th grade, each had a laptop at home though, and worked with Yamama Shakaa, a local mentor provided by the competitio­n organisers.

The teens “did everything by themselves, with very few resources,” said Shakaa.

 ?? — AP ?? Wassan al- Sayyed, 17, uses a 3D glasses headset that is running the team's virtual reality game ‘ Be a Fire Fighter’ in the West Bank city of Nablus.
— AP Wassan al- Sayyed, 17, uses a 3D glasses headset that is running the team's virtual reality game ‘ Be a Fire Fighter’ in the West Bank city of Nablus.

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