WHERE ARE THE GIRLS?
With only one in five girls opting for the whole range of science subjects, SI Bournemouth has issued a challenge, as part of the celebrations of the club’s 75th Anniversary this year, to budding women scientists which could help people living in the poorest parts of the world.
The STEM based challenge (Science, Technology, Engineering, Mathematics), issued last autumn to teams of girls in Years 9 and 10 at local schools, was to design, build and cost a project to help people in the poorest parts of our world. It had to be sustainable, fit for purpose and cost effective in a world where 884 million people lack access to clean water, nearly three and a half million people die each year from water, sanitation and hygiene related causes and every 20 seconds a child dies from a water related illness. An estimated 925 million people are hungry while the world produces enough food to feed everyone.
Of the projects submitted by four teams three focused on clean water and the fourth on capturing snake venom for medical purposes.
Five judges drawn from local companies and organizations – Bournemouth Borough Council, Fonix, Proctor and Gamble and Sembcorp Bournemouth Water – selected the winning projects, one in each year group, on 12th March.
The winners of the “Celebrating Science Challenge” were:
- The Arnewood School, New Milton (Year 9 Key Stage 3) with their “Water-Phant” – a simple device, with no moving parts and minimal maintenance, to produce clean water from contaminated supplies using the principle of evaporation and condensation.
- Bournemouth School for Girls (Year 10 Key Stage 4) with their project SNAID (Snake Aid) – promoting the capture of venomous snakes and the extraction and selling of their venom for medical advances.
The girls spoke of how much they had enjoyed the challenge and of how much they had learned about the problems of the developing world and possible ways of relieving them as well as learning a whole range of new skills in developing their projects. One girl commented: “this was the most interesting and exciting project I have ever been involved in”. For three of the girls the challenge has resulted in their choosing the triple science option (chemistry, physics and biology), having had no thought of doing so before.
The judges were “truly inspired by the enthusiasm shown for the project by the girls in all four teams, by the quality of the ideas and the way that the girls worked together, developing and presenting their ideas.”
SIB President–Elect Kirsteen Harding said: “We were delighted at girls’ enthusiasm and the standard of their projects. We are attempting to address the lack of women in all fields of the sciences by encouraging schoolgirls in years 9 and 10 to think NOW, before they make their GCSE choices.”
The winners must wait until the S.I. Bournemouth 75th Anniversary Lunch 18th May, to be attended by SIGBI President-Elect Margaret Oldroyd, to receive their prizes (£250 for each winning team and £250 for their respective schools) which will be presented by Roma Agrawal, winner of the Young Structural Engineer of the Year 2011 and Senior Structural Engineer on The Shard, London, Europe’s tallest building. In the meantime, all the girls who entered the challenge received an Easter egg donated by Procter and Gamble and a voucher from Clarins at Debenhams.