Fifteen senior high-school teams from public and private schools in the country were selected to participate in the five-day training/workshop on Arduino programming recently at a hotel in Manila.
The event was part of imake.wemake, an innovative technology contest organized by the Department of Science and Technology-Science Education Institute (DOST-SEI) in partnership with C&E Publishing Inc.
The qualifying school teams are Adelle Grace Montessori School, Bayambang National High School, Far Eastern University High School-Manila, Liceo-De La Salle Senior High School, Malinta National High School, Manila Science High School, New Era University-General Santos, New Era University-Lipa City, New Era University-Main Campus, Pavia National High School, Philippine Science High School-Central Luzon Campus, Ramon Magsaysay Cubao High School, Rizal High School, Science Technology Education Center Cebu, and Saint Scholastica’s Academy Marikina.
Each team, composed of three senior high-school students and one teacher-coach, attended the training facilitated by Thinklab Philippines. They were chosen as finalists after besting 70 other school teams who submitted project proposals for the competition.
The panel of judges, composed of UP Electrical and Electronics Engineering Institute professor Engr. Percival Magpantay, Ateneo de Manila University Professor Engr. Carlos Matti Oppus, and C&E Publishing Business and Market Research Head Rodel Cruz selected the finalists’ proposals based on project viability and potential to address important societal and community issues, such as food safety, security, traffic/road congestion, health, education, disaster mitigation, entrepreneurship, agriculture and environment.
The competition, now in its third run, was launched on July 17, during the National Science and Technology Week celebration with the signing of the memorandum of agreement between DOST-SEI and C&E Publishing.
DOST-SEI Director Josette Biyo graced the opening ceremony of the training along with C&E Publishing Vice President Gerric Gomez.
Biyo thanked C&E for their support in the project and congratulated the students for their selection in the competition.
“We wish to create a space where you can share resources and knowledge as you work on your projects. Hopefully, at the end of the process, you will have your technology solution for your respective communities,” Biyo said.
Imake.wemake seeks to unleash the creativity of young Filipinos in innovation using accessible technologies.
This year participants will use the Arduino CTC 101 kits provided by C&E Publishing to build their projects. During the event, they were also given free kit-of-parts to start their project prototype.
“C&E is committed to actively raise the quality of creative and innovative minds of every Filipino student, especially with the advent of integrated STEAM [science, technology, engineering, arts and mathematics] education or STEM [science, technology, engineering and mathematics] education in the global arena,” Gomez said.
The teams were given three months to build and test their projects. They will convene again in December 2019, for the final presentation and awarding ceremony where the winning top three teams will receive P100,000 cash prize and the Youth Innovation Prize each.