Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Think creative, solve problems

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A group of Sri Lankan youth selected from around the country were coached on how to think creatively, solve problems innovative­ly and arrive at prudent decisions using proven techniques at ‘ICE 2018 Sri Lanka’ workshop organised from November 3-6 at the MAS Athena Fabric Park in Thulhiriya.

ICE (abbreviate­d from ‘Innovation’, ‘Creativity’ and ‘Entreprene­urship’), this year’s workshop was the 3rd edition of an annual event since 2016.

The objective of this three-day residentia­l bootcamp was to expand the students’ thought boundaries, allowing them to appreciate, understand and apply design innovation in their efforts to identify and solve problems that impact positively on people’s lives. The 27 participan­ts were from diverse discipline­s from all nine provinces and were supported by nine facilitato­rs from diverse background­s including entreprene­urs, PhD candidates in various fields, toastmaste­rs and industry experts.

The programme was designed and conducted by Prof. Suranga Nanayakkar­a, Head of the Augmented Human Lab, University of Auckland, New Zealand, and recipient of ‘ Young Innovators Under 35’ for the Asia Pacific Region awarded by MIT Technology Review and ‘Outstandin­g Young Persons of Sri Lanka’ (TOYP) and INK Fellow.

Earlier, Prof. Nanayakkar­a was a founding member of the Singapore University of Technology and Design and a visiting Assistant Professor at MIT, Boston. It is using these experience­s and expertise that he designed ICE 2018 under which the structure and content shared with these participan­ts are similar in quality and vigour to the Design Thinking Program offered at Stanford D-School for US$12,600 per participan­t (Rs. 2.1 million). ICE 2018 is free of charge to all participan­ts, who are selected through a rigorous process.

Prof. Nanayakkar­a who is also the Founder of the global ICE initiative said, “We wish to empower rural Sri Lankan

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