Aberdeen students win national competition to address gender imbalance in Scotland’s digital tech sector

13/03/2021
L-R Aliya Orujova & Eloise Reid

TWO talented students from International School Aberdeen (ISA) have won a national competition addressing gender imbalance in Scotland’s digital technologies sector.

Eloise Reid, 15, and Aliya Orujova, 16, have been awarded first place in the ADA Scotland Festival (ADA) with their video presentation on why women should be recognised as equal players in the computing science industry.

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The ADA festival, named after the pioneering 19th century mathematician Ada Lovelace, aims to tackle the gender imbalance in computer science education in Scotland and is focused on creating female role models in the ‘tech’ industry.

The fourth year pair worked together remotely to create an entire storyboard, voiceover, slideshow animation and video compilation sharing their personal journey in the world of Computing Science.

Shashi Krishna, ISA computer science teacher, said: “The pandemic has presented us ways to convert challenges into opportunities through technology.

“It has been inspiring to see these two very talented girls take on this contest during virtual school and find a way to create a unique representation and identity at a national level.”

Eloise said she believes more women should join the computer science sector to disprove the idea that only men can code well.

“We made this video to show that computer science is for anyone, regardless of their gender,” she said.

“Most science and technology teachers are male, so I thought that computing was just for boys, not for people like me. But Aliya and I signed up for a computer science course together and, at first, we didn’t feel like we should be there with the rest of the boys. But we were both passionate about learning more and pushed ourselves to improve.”

Aliya said: “Computer science has taught me how to break down problems into smaller pieces which has helped me in other subjects such as maths and physics.

“More girls should definitely learn coding. Computer science is for anyone who wants to add a different perspective in computing and create code to help other people.”

 

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