The Mercury News

Milpitas High students win top honors in Technology Inclusion Challenge event

- By Anne Gelhaus agelhaus@bayareanew­sgroup.com

A team of four students from Milpitas High School won top honors for their app designed to help stressed-out students relax.

TramAhn Nguyen, Tiffany Hyde, Lauren Le and Jason Rojas Pacheco developed Azalea, an augmented reality game designed for students who struggle with mental illnesses like obsessive compulsive disorder or anxiety, or who just feel stressed in general. Working as Tangoe Games Inc., the quartet of students designed the game around the azalea flower, which symbolizes healing.

The gardening game is intended to provide a relaxing experience that allows users to channel their emotions into healthy cultivatio­n. Azalea also offers users coping techniques, like reminders to drink water or stretch, as they tend their virtual gardens.

“The peaceful scenery is meant to calm the user and reduce stress,” the students explain in their video submission to the KnoPro Technology Inclusion Challenge. “They're mean to feel safe and comfortabl­e while playing. … Players will be encouraged to go outside and explore the outdoors in order to grow their own garden.”

The Azalea team took home $2,000 cash from the challenge, hosted by the nonprofit Name a Future and KnoPro, NAF's free, web-based platform where students can tackle real-world problems and compete to win large cash prizes and scholarshi­ps.

Co-developed with Lenovo, the Technology Inclusion Challenge tasked students age 13 and older with pitching an innovative product idea that engages their peers who may experience underrepre­sentation in traditiona­l education, including those with disabiliti­es.

For the Azalea team, developing the app helped them cope

with their own anxiety about the demands of high school academics.

“I'm so tired every day, and I want to put effort into school, but I'm so stressed and don't know how to stop,” one team member says in the video. “My grades are so low, and I feel so helpless.”

Team members say the app was designed for high school students who are struggling with mental health issues to get “the help they need and deserve.”

“We wanted an app that can be used as an outlet for stress and also encourages healthy ways for people to deal with mental health issues,” says one team member in the video.

Data from the CDC highlights the need for such an outlet.

In 2022 the CDC reported that 44% of high school students it surveyed said they'd struggled with mental health during the pandemic or were feeling mentally unwell during the following school year.

“An app like Azalea could bring the positive impact students need,” says one team member.

 ?? COURTESY PHOTO ?? Azalea, an augmented reality game in which players tend to virtual gardens, is intended to provide a relaxing experience that allows users to channel their emotions into healthy cultivatio­n. Developed by four Milpitas High School students, Azalea also offers users coping techniques, like reminders to drink water or stretch.
COURTESY PHOTO Azalea, an augmented reality game in which players tend to virtual gardens, is intended to provide a relaxing experience that allows users to channel their emotions into healthy cultivatio­n. Developed by four Milpitas High School students, Azalea also offers users coping techniques, like reminders to drink water or stretch.

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