Jamaica Gleaner

Top of the world

11-y-o Jamaican coder beats rivals in 70 nations

- Tamara Bailey/gleaner Writer

STANDING TALL above young coders from 70 other countries, an 11-year-old innovator from Jamaica has copped the top prize in the internatio­nal XPRIZE Code Games Challenge.

One of 17 winners from across the world, Dominic Darby was awarded ‘Best in Class’ and a cash prize of US$1,000 for his video game entry, using MIT’S Scratch coding software, in the Junior division.

The challenge, created by XPRIZE – a non-profit organisati­on based in California that encourages technologi­cal developmen­t through competitio­ns, registered more than 3,000 innovators aged 10-18 for the 2020 competitio­n.

Approximat­ely 70 persons registered from Jamaica and XPRIZE received entries from 800 participan­ts all told.

Dominic, who wants to study and work in computer science, said that the sense of victory was “amazing” – particular­ly because he did not expect to win.

“When I realised I won, I felt good and I wanted to tell everyone, but I couldn’t at the time. This is my first time entering an internatio­nal competitio­n and to win it feels amazing.”

The young i nnovator said his platformer game, which involves a subject transition­ing up different levels and eluding threats, took him a few months to complete.

Dominic’s mother, Shellian

Darby, said her son was introduced to coding and the platform Scratch at age six during a summer programme held at The University of the West Indies.

POSITIVE OUTCOME

However, she revealed that he is partly self-taught through his voracious appetite for books on coding and Youtube videos.

“The year 2020 was filled with so much doom and gloom, and for him to find a positive way to come out of it with an additional skill and be able to achieve internatio­nal recognitio­n, I am extremely happy for my son,” said

Darby.

Melanie Subratie, chairman of the Seprod Foundation, an internatio­nal outreach partner for XPRIZE, is looking forward to a long-standing collaborat­ion with organisati­ons such as XPRIZE to secure even more opportunit­ies for Jamaican children.

“. . . It’s about having our Jamaican children meet worldclass standards and that’s why we do it. ... There is a surely nothing that Jamaican kids cannot do on a level with kids all over the world,” Subratie told The Gleaner.

Executive director of t he Seprod Foundation, Lisa D’oyen,

said the organisati­on has for the past seven years taken the initiative to advance the skills and knowledge of children in technology.

That cooperatio­n i nvolves coding and robotics workshops.

D’oyen said with coding being the language of the future, the foundation was willing to partner with Halls of Learning and XPRIZE to hone local talent.

“We want to invest in all our children because all of them have potential and we want to give them the opportunit­y and resources to fulfil that potential,” said D’oyen.

 ?? RICARDO MAKYN/CHIEF PHOTO EDITOR ?? Eleven-year-old Dominic Darby shows off the game he created to conquer hundreds of rivals across 70 countries in a coding competitio­n sponsored by XPRIZE.
RICARDO MAKYN/CHIEF PHOTO EDITOR Eleven-year-old Dominic Darby shows off the game he created to conquer hundreds of rivals across 70 countries in a coding competitio­n sponsored by XPRIZE.

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