Asian Journal

$230,000 funding helps prepare more students for in-demand STEM jobs

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Victoria: Secondary students with a passion for coding and science, technology, engineerin­g and math (STEM) will now have more opportunit­ies to expand their skillsets and participat­e in the Play to Learn program, thanks to a one-time $230,000 provincial government grant that will expand the program. “B.C.’S thriving technology sector provides significan­t employment opportunit­ies with tens of thousands of jobs that need to be filled,” said Rob Fleming, Minister of Education. “Our government is committed to increasing training and learning opportunit­ies to help prepare our students for these in-demand jobs. These new funds will help students in all corners of the province follow their passions and achieve their future career goals.” Since Play to Learn launched in B.C. in 2016, the program has engaged over 6,000 students across 96 Lower Mainland schools. The expansion of the program is facilitate­d by Digibc and provides students with the opportunit­y to learn the basics of math, technology, computer science and coding skills needed for video-game design and other technology-related and STEM career fields. These new funds will help expand opportunit­ies to schools outside of Metro Vancouver.

“Using game play to engage youth with technology has proven results. We care about the technology gap, and about exposing B.C. youth to the excellent careers in the creative technology industry in our province,” said Brenda Bailey, executive director, Digibc. “This program, supported by the Ministry of Education, allows us to bring awareness of and engagement with B.C.’S creative industries to more B.C. high school students.”

Digibc - The Interactiv­e & Digital Media Industry Associatio­n of British Columbia is a member-supported, non-profit organizati­on engaged in using interactiv­e technology to draw people into careers in STEAM (science, technology, engineerin­g, math).

Government is committed to providing support for students to learn coding in the classroom and parterning with innovative non-profits and tech companies to implement B.C.’S new school curriculum. It will provide new technology, lab equipment, learning material and profession­al developmen­t support for teachers. arts and

Quick Facts:

• Digibc (The Digital Media Associatio­n of B.C.) is based in Vancouver.

• It represents companies in the creative technology sector in B.C., which is made up of over 1,150 companies and 16,500 people.

• Digibc members include large companies, such as Electronic Arts (EA), Sony Imageworks and Microsoft, as well as locally grown studios like Codename Entertainm­ent, Phoenix Labs (Burnaby), Atomic Cartoons (Vancouver), Hyper Hippo (Kelowna) and Volcanic Gaming (Prince George).

• Digibc’s mission is to promote, support and accelerate the growth of British Columbia’s interactiv­e and digital media industry to the benefit of current and future generation­s.

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Rob Fleming

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