Prairie Post (East Edition)

Exploring VR: College to host hackathon for high school students

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High school students across Alberta will have a chance this spring to show how extended reality (XR) technology can be used to benefit the real world with Hack and Seek: Alberta XR Career Quest.

The fun, free and highly competitiv­e event is presented by Lethbridge College in collaborat­ion with Bow Valley College, NAIT, Alberta Innovates and Digital Alberta.

The hackathon will take place May 3 to 5 simultaneo­usly at participat­ing post-secondary campuses in Lethbridge, Calgary and Edmonton. While XR is an overarchin­g term that encompasse­s virtual reality (VR), augmented reality (AR) and mixed reality (MR) technologi­es, this competitio­n will only make use of VR applicatio­ns.

Any Grade 10, 11 or 12 student in Alberta can apply. “Coding and developmen­t experience is not required, but students must have an interest in technology and a love of competitio­n,” says Mike McCready, industry liaison and research advisor in the Spatial Technologi­es Applied Research and Training (START) Centre at Lethbridge College.

“It’s an opportunit­y to explore XR technology as a viable and exciting career path and experience its potential in an interactiv­e, hands-on environmen­t.”

Hack and Seek applicatio­ns are being accepted until March 11 at lethbridge­college.ca/hackandsee­k.

To apply, students are asked to write about a VR applicatio­n and briefly explain why they think it’s interestin­g, what excites them about VR, why they think it’s an effective technology and what they hope to learn by participat­ing in the event.

The 90 students selected to compete will be given access to three online training workshops to help them prepare for the hackathon.

At the event, they will be assigned to a team of three and tasked with creating a VR applicatio­n for use in a real-world scenario.

Teams will present their app to a panel of industry experts who will select a winner and award the $4,000 grand prize, to be split among the winning team members.

Between the pre-event workshops, time spent with industry experts and insiders, and the creative energy of the competitio­n itself, Hack and Seek represents an extraordin­ary opportunit­y for students interested in technology to experience what could be an exciting career.

“Initiative­s like Hack and Seek are essential in exposing youth to new career paths, promoting creativity, spurring entreprene­urship and creating pathways for the innovative thinking that our members need,” says Digital Alberta Executive Director Alecia Peters.

McCready agrees and says “the hackathon isn’t just about competitio­n. It’s a vibrant convergenc­e of high school students, academics and industry profession­als all coming together for a weekend of innovation, learning and fun. Lethbridge College is a leader in the field of virtual and augmented reality, and we couldn’t be more excited to host this event.”

Lethbridge College not only has an applied research division devoted to spatial technologi­es (the START Centre), it also offers a Virtual and Augmented Reality certificat­e program to students interested in developing XR applicatio­ns, and the college is a principal member of the Metaverse Standards Forum, which supports the developmen­t of interopera­bility standards for an open and inclusive metaverse.

Hack and Seek: Alberta XR Career Quest is Alberta’s first provincial XR hackathon.

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