To encourage experiential learning and
inspire young minds to innovate, Intel brings Innovation Festival, a 2-day
celebration at the Indian Institute of Science (IISC), Bengaluru on April 16t
and 17, 2016. Drawing
participation from over thirteen states in India, the Innovation Festival is a
showcase of bright new ideas – featuring 70+ real time projects, ideation and
DIY workshops.
The primary objectives behind this
two-day festival were to provide a national level platform to students at K12
and higher education levels to showcase their projects and prototypes, and
capacity building for students through workshops. The Innovation Festival is a
collection of innovation from all across the country that aims to encourage
discussion and deliberation on how to nurture innovation in India’s education
space. The projects covered a variety of areas such as Healthcare, Women
Safety, solutions for different kinds of disabilities, and Internet of Things.
Apart from these projects, there was a separate showcasing of some bright
futuristic ideas from school students, and a special showcasing by girls from
governments schools from 4 different states.
The rapid developments in technology over
the past few years have created a fertile ground for bright innovative ideas to
flourish. With the rising imperative to prepare young future citizens and
empower them with essential “Future World skills” such as computational
thinking, design mind set, tinkering, coding etc., Intel has been working over
the years with children starting right from grades 6 to college going young
adults. There have been a series of programs aimed for this next generation; a
host of platforms created over the past couple of years – all with an aim to
motivate students to become solution providers and technology creators.
The Innovation Festival draws from ideas
that were intensely fostered over the last year through a series of Ideathons – or design
thinking workshops with the
objective to encourage students to develop innovative ideas and detail the
process of execution. Each and every child who participates in the Ideathon
submits an idea. These ideas are then evaluated and shortlisted by a group of
mentors to participate in Makeathons – hands-on
workshop where students with
the help of mentors are enabled to convert their ideas into a prototype, using
microcontroller boards with appropriate sensors, connectors and SD cards. In a
special emphasis to encourage girls to become technology creators, Intel
supported the Rashtriya Avishkar Abhiyan, an initiative of the Government of
India, to inspire the girl child to develop interest in design, coding and
think ‘out-of-the-box’. The ideathons and makeathons were thus conducted
specifically for girls from government schools.
For the college going students, Intel has been running
specific programs, with the key objective to develop IoT related skills and
spur innovations in a variety of application areas. Students selected under
this program have been working on projects from areas of social relevance like
healthcare, environmental monitoring, large scale monitoring of valuable data,
agriculture etc. and are being mentored by faculty from reputed science
colleges and institutes.
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