A digital inclusion and innovation for change programme hosted by Glasswings International and Citi, culminated on Thursday with a grand competition for students, with two winning schools copping $10,000 which can be used towards a project aimed at combating a school or community issue.
Students from the three participating schools—Barataria South Secondary, Carapichaima East Secondary and the Kwame Ture Educational Centre—assembled at the Pleasantville Indoor Regional Facility to display their understanding of robotics, coding and drone technology.
Kwame Ture Educational Centre and Carapichaima East Secondary eventually won a $10,000 top prize.
Country co-ordinator for Glasswings International, Nigel Forgenie, said the programme was designed for students to get an immersive experience in digital innovation while developing strategic plans to address problems impacting society.
He said, “We thought about doing coding and to code, we used drone technology, so there is an easy correlation between the coding and something they can see visually...so they would have learnt a little bit about physics in terms of aerodynamics, a little about weather and micrometeorology and so they would have learnt a series of skills.”
Forgenie said students were also tasked with developing a project to solve social ills.
Students opted to use drone technology to combat school violence and environmental hazards, as well as develop a sustainable agricultural plan.
He said it was critical to ensure this country was not left behind in an evolving digital era.
“Enough is not being done because there is no connectivity between what the students spend most of their time doing and what is being taught in our education system,” Forgenie said.
Forgenie said authorities have so far failed to bridge the gap between youth and technology in a sustainable manner.
“They live on their tablets, live on their computers but we have not yet been able to transform that into the classroom in a very effective way and so one of the things we are looking at is how to improve that,” he said.