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Computer Science & Engineering Department » Awards & Recognitions

Awards & Recognitions

Computer Science Students Among Best in Nation
 
YVIP2022
 
September 30, 2022
 
Congratulations to Philip Chrostowski ’24 and Farhan Reza ‘24 who have been selected as Round 2 Semi-Finalists (Top 100 in the nation) in the 2022 “Your Voice is Power” coding competition. Your Voice is Power is a collaboration with Amazon Future Engineer, Georgia Tech, and YELLOW. In the 2022 competition, students wrote code to remix songs by Pharrell, Alicia Keys, and Khalid. Their remix was awarded honors in quality of music, code, and messaging by a panel of industry professionals. Thank you, Philip and Farhan, for sharing the power of your voice to explore how computer science, music, and entrepreneurship can advance equity!
 

by Ms. Edit Boral

CS21

Over the summer, CS110 (Programming with Python) students Sebastian Sanabria ’23 and Tyler Tabarovsky ‘23 placed in the top 70 winners of the nationwide “GOAT: Decoding a Successful App” challenge created by Amazon and GOAT. Hundreds of feature prototypes went through multiple rounds of judging by Amazon employees, GOAT employees, and the GOAT CEOs themselves, and the judges selected Tyler’s and Sebastian’s prototypes as standouts based on innovation, creativity, and design.

“We had so many incredible submissions, and it's no small feat that your students won this challenge,” said the GOAT: Decoding a Successful App team.

During the five-day long GOAT: Decoding a Successful App Challenge, students learned about the GOAT company and how different members of their team have developed the technology solutions that have helped them grow to be worth over a billion dollars.

On day one, students heard from Eddy Lu, GOAT’s CEO and co-founder, as he described the importance of problem solving in successful entrepreneurship and app design. The next day, the GOAT team shared their first Black Friday experience. On day three, students explored the role of a DevOps Engineer and learned how multiple people and teams must work together to solve complex problems. During the fourth day of the challenge, students learned how GOAT uses data science and artificial intelligence to authenticate sneakers and run their business more effectively. They also learned how to use customer data to personalize the user experience. At the end of the five days, students were ready to tackle the challenge and to build a new app feature using App Lab to help GOAT’s customers find the right product at the right time.

Please click on the images below to see Tyler’s and Sebastian’s winning apps and hear from them how they solved the problem GOAT is facing. Both students received prize packages from Amazon and GOAT.

ABOUT GOAT: GOAT is the global platform for the greatest products from the past, present, and future. Since its founding in 2015, GOAT has become the leading and most trusted sneaker marketplace in the world. Through its unique positioning between the primary and resale markets, the company offers styles across various time periods on its digital platforms and in its retail locations, while delivering products to over 30 million members across 170 countries.

robot

In March of 2020, TCEA made the difficult decision to cancel its 2020 State Computer Science and Robotics contests and turn its 3D Design Contest into a virtual event in response to the threats and challenges posed by the COVID-19 pandemic.

Those challenges, however, were faced head-on by the students and sponsors at Archbishop Molloy High School in Queens, New York, and Brazoswood High School near the Gulf Coast of Texas, each team collaborating remotely to put in the educational work required for the contest, all amongst changing schedules and changing lives. While the changes in teaching kept many schools from submitting to the competition, these two teams stayed the course and completed their projects.

“3D design is really great,” says Molloy sponsor Edit Boral. “It integrates so many skills: artistic skills, math and statistics, engineering skills. And this competition was extremely good because we developed team-building skills also.”

The 3D Design Contest

TCEA’s 3D Design Contest is designed to promote STEAM thinking. Teams develop and design an invention to solve a real-world problem, using the Engineering Design Process and 3D modeling software to research, design, and promote a solution.

This year, teams were posed the challenge of the 2019-20 Australian wildfires and charged with “designing something to help meet a need or solve a problem associated with wildfires,” whether a completely new product or an improvement to an existing one.

For this years’ teams, the project began before schools were physically shut down. Molloy sophomore Amir, the team’s leader, describes a daily process of meeting to develop the team’s design. “We would brainstorm, we would review yesterday’s research, and we would split up our work evenly, depending on who needed to do what.”

“We worked to our strengths,” adds ninth-grade student Charles, the lead designer for the Molloy team. “So we all worked to our abilities and made a good team.”

The Solutions

“We went through a couple iterations of the design,” Charles says of their idea to build a robot to fight fires. After considering the potential pitfalls of vehicles shaped like cubes or tanks, they took inspiration from the snowcat all-terrain vehicles used in frigid and harsh environments. Then they went further, considering ways to create an autonomous vehicle to reduce danger to machine operators and firefighters.

Molloy High School’s Zeus autonomous firefighting vehicle:

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Their final creation, the Zeus, has two independent tracks for locomotion, and is designed to clear combustible vegetation, dig firebreaks, and create defensible space, all without an onboard driver.

At Brazoswood, Brad Whitehead’s engineering students dug in with gusto. “The first day, we got together,” Whitehead says, “and we probably brainstormed 40 or 50 ideas.” They picked the top three to investigate further. One was a sensor that could attach to trees and detect favorable fire conditions, with many sensors connecting through a wireless network. They also considered designing improved face masks to protect nearby human populations from smoke inhalation, but found that safety concerns in designing such a product difficult to navigate.

Another idea was a tree house designed to create bird habitats in deforested areas, specifically for the unique fauna of Australia. They followed this path after finding out the the sensor network idea was a real-world proposal.

One of Brazoswood High School’s Bird Box designs:

bird

“There was an existing product that was almost identical to what we were thinking.” Proof of a good idea, perhaps, but Whitehead’s student chose to develop a novel product, the custom birdhouse.

Brazoswood’s Bird Boxes were designed to house seven common Australian bird species. The designs could be downloaded as files for computerized routers or cutters, allowing individuals to make their own with minimal supplies (a single sheet of plywood and zip ties will work) and easy upkeep.

Lessons Learned

But during the contest, the world changed. Schools closed, schedules flipped, and in New York especially, people were getting sick.

“On March 12, when we went home and started distance learning, it was a real shock, being in New York City,” Boral says. Family members and colleagues were sick, even hospitalized. “It was emotionally very hard for us to adjust.”

“It was kind of hard at first,” says Xavier, a member of the Molloy team. “We were used to seeing each other face-to-face in the classroom.” But they found their rhythm, he says. “It wasn’t that bad after awhile.”

Both teams had organized online even before closures, and could keep tracking their work in learning management systems, by email, and even by text message. And soon, they found themselves excited to have a project to focus on.

Finding Focus

“It was a nice escape, for me at least,” Charles says. “If I’m stressed by work or school, or what’s going on, it’s nice to just sit down and focus on one thing for an hour or two.

“In the midst of all these changes, the one stable thing we had was this competition, which we’d been working on for a while” adds Samantha.

Each team dove into the design process, brought to bear their STEAM skills, and completed their doubly challenging tasks. And they learned even more beyond that, as the world continued to change around them.

Things were different for the Brazoswood team, as local precautions and ordinances were different from those in New York, where the virus has hit hardest in the U.S. Still, the contest gave Whitehead’s students a chance to stay connected during a sudden isolation.

Amir says he hadn’t always enjoyed working with other students. “But when it came down to this project,” he says, “I found out that working with other student is quite a pleasant experience. And when they’re your friends, it’s even better.”

“And they did it,” Boral says. “They’re amazing.”


In Computer Science, several Stanners presented their original mobile phone apps at The Mobile App Expo organized by Trinity College. In this competition, students demonstrate the mobile phone apps they have spent long hours developing in their AP Computer Science Principles class. The competition for the NYC region was hosted at North Shore Hebrew Academy on May 22nd. Molloy won a total of four awards and one honorable mention (winners and other participants pictured below):

ap

  • Stevenson Chittumuri '19 – Most Original App
  • Stephanie Szpylka '19 – Most Socially Useful App
  • Nathan Papadogiannis '19 – Most Functional App
  • Lorraine Guintu '18 – Best Presentation
  • Thanu Kumar '19 – Honorable Mention
 

 

In May 2019, the College Board announced that Archbishop Molloy High School would receive its AP® Computer Science Female Diversity Award for attaining female student representation in AP Computer Science Principles for 2018. Among the more than 18,000 secondary schools worldwide that offer AP courses, Molloy is one of just 685 schools that has achieved this important milestone. The College Board recognizes the importance of diversity in computer science and has commended Molloy’s leadership in computer science and commitment to preparing its young women for the in-demand tech jobs of the future.

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