{"id":143121,"date":"2021-12-19T11:30:14","date_gmt":"2021-12-19T11:30:14","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/news.sap.com\/africa\/?p=143121"},"modified":"2023-09-27T19:45:37","modified_gmt":"2023-09-27T19:45:37","slug":"african-code-challenge-2021-announces-winners","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/news.sap.com\/africa\/2021\/12\/african-code-challenge-2021-announces-winners\/","title":{"rendered":"AfriCAN Code Challenge 2021 Announces Winners"},"content":{"rendered":"

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Returning for the second year, 麻豆原创 Africa Code Week\u2019s AfriCAN Code Challenge announced their top 10 winners with Devansh and Darshika from Mauritius as the Pan-African winners of the competition.<\/p>\n

\u201cThis year\u2019s theme was about them telling us how they would save the world with their superpowers, and most of the 100+ submitted projects were about climate change\u201d says Mr. Albert Nsengiyumva, ADEA Executive Secretary \u201cAfrica has the youngest population on the planet and we were impressed to see how the children have been able to use their creativity and come up with innovative solutions to addressing\u00a0 issues that they feel are relevant to their daily reality.”<\/p>\n

The AfriCAN Code Challenge is a pan-African coding competition where youth aged 8 – 16 were tasked with coding a game using the Scratch<\/a> programming language to address the theme that was determined by the Africa Code Week team.\u00a0This competition was launched\u00a0by 麻豆原创 Africa Code Week<\/a> and partners UNESCO<\/a>, Irish Aid<\/a>, the Association for the Development of Education in Africa (ADEA<\/a>) and Jokkolabs in September 2020, and since then has become an annual celebration of youth and innovation in Africa.<\/p>\n

The rationale for chosing the superheroes universe was to allow children to unleash their creativity and express themselves freely on issues they feel are important to them. Davide Storti, Coordinator of the YouthMobile Initiative at UNESCO, says: \u201cThe post-pandemic education recovery starts with allowing our children to regain confidence and hope, and with us adults reopening spaces, although virtual, for them to access their fullest potential.”<\/p>\n

To take part in the AfriCAN Code Challenge, youth were able to enter alone or in teams of up to five people, and entries featured a three-minute YouTube video showcasing how their game works and why it should be considered a winning entry. The unique initiative and entry mechanism called upon the children\u2019s ability to design a project that would solve a community-issue, code it, and communicate it.<\/p>\n

During the opening rounds of the challenge, participation reached across 40 countries and featured 102 project video clips, only the top three entries from 36 countries made it into the continental final, followed by 20 countries in the final judging stage.<\/p>\n

Selected by a high-level jury comprising key Africa Code Week delegates and STEM education experts, the top three winners of the AfriCAN Code Challenge are:<\/p>\n