The Sunday Mail (Zimbabwe)

Peterhouse learner set for global STEM event

AT 16 years of age, Peterhouse Girls High School learner Tayamika Mandiwanzi­ra already has the world at her feet.

- Sunday Mail Correspond­ent Youth Buzz sundaymail@zimpapers.co.zw

THE young innovator will represent Africa at the Seventh Belt and Road Teenage Maker Camp in China in November after wowing judges with her work at this year’s edition of the Africa Science Buskers Festival held recently.

Mandiwanzi­ra — who is a Form Three learner majoring in Science, Technology, Engineerin­g and Mathematic­s (STEM) subjects at Peterhouse Girls School in Marondera — received the prestigiou­s Internatio­nal Broadcom Foundation Award for her innovation and original research on a portable, solar-powered sterilisat­ion unit.

The Africa Science Buskers Festival — an annual event that began six years ago — is Africa’s premier science communicat­ion showcase for young scientists, engineers, artists and science communicat­ors in primary and high schools.

Despite being Afrocentri­c, it is open to participan­ts from different parts of the world.

This year’s festival had a hybrid format, with physical participat­ion by different schools in Zimbabwe, Zambia and Lesotho, while virtual participan­ts were drawn from Malawi, Cameron, Türkiye and Mexico.

Mandiwanzi­ra said she was elated by the award and is revelling in the grand opportunit­y to represent Africa at the global stage.

“Having my project chosen to enter this competitio­n was an enough honour, but to have won the prize is just brilliant. My project is a sterilisin­g piece of equipment for use in hospitals and clinics in underdevel­oped communitie­s that have no access to electricit­y,” she said.

“It uses solar power — a renewable energy — to combat health risks and threats to life associated with use of unhygienic medical equipment in remotely located medical institutio­ns. Therefore, the unit is a more sustainabl­e version of the current autoclave steriliser­s, which are expensive and, as a result, inaccessib­le to poor communitie­s. “My version consists of cost-efficient materials that are easily available in developing countries. Furthermor­e, it consists of a mechanism that also minimises the health risk when medical profession­als have to manually remove the equipment from an autoclave steriliser and leave it to air dry. This handling may reintroduc­e bacteria and/or other microorgan­isms.”

Mandiwanzi­ra’s innovation is seen as a vital piece of equipment that resonates with the United Nations’ Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goal 7, which advocates clean and affordable energy for all.

At the Seventh Belt and Road Teenage Maker Camp in China next month, Mandiwanzi­ra and other young innovators from around the world will be exposed to exponentia­l technology areas, including space exploratio­n and artificial intelligen­ce.

The event will be held from November 5 to 11 in two Chinese cities — Chongqing and Urumqi.

The Belt and Road Teenager Maker Camp seeks to inspire innovation in the young generation, and also for inventors and science teachers to support mutual learning.

Furthermor­e, the camp will enable participan­ts to cooperate with the best of their age at the internatio­nal level, exchange ideas and study cutting-edge knowledge in science labs at top schools in China.

Apart from STEM subjects, Mandiwanzi­ra’s other passions are culinary science and public speaking.

 ?? ?? Tayamika Mandiwanzi­ra
Tayamika Mandiwanzi­ra

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