Santosh Baral

Category: St Cat’s Spotlight

  • Woodside Scholarship profile: Robert Sambo

    Robert Sambo is a Torres Strait Islander student from Karratha, Western Australia who graduated from Wesley College (2014). 

    In 2015, Robert decided to take a gap year where he travelled to the U.S.A to run a program for Camp America and continued to travel for the remainder of the year. Upon his return, Woodside offered Robert a traineeship which saw him develop an interest in computer technology and analysis. After spending two years with Woodside, a friend who participated in the Graduate Program at Woodside convinced him to study Computer Science at The University of Western Australia (UWA) – which he decided to pursue.

    Robert is now a recipient of a Woodside Scholarship living at St Catherine’s College (a valued member of the Dandjoo Darbalung Program) whilst completing his Computer Science undergraduate at UWA.

    Robert recognises the support and opportunities that  Woodside has given him and hopes he can contribute to the company in the future.


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  • Beazley Medallist: Pooja Ramesh

    Pooja Ramesh is the recipient of the 2018 Beazley Medal for WACE students. It is an award that is given to the highest achieving student from the WACE (Western Australian Certificate of Education) and the VET (Vocational Education and Training) pathways in Western Australia. This Perth Modern School graduate never thought the award was a possibility for her but through hard work and sheer determination, she earned the highest ATAR score in the state and gained a direct pathway into her medical degree.

    Pooja has many interests outside of academics. She has learned Indian Classical Singing and Dance since she was seven years of age. She plays the violin in the Western Australian Medical Students’ Orchestra and enjoys exploring and arranging music from South-East Asia in the Anandadhara WA orchestra. For sport, Pooja enjoys badminton, basketball and recreational swimming.

    Pooja is the recipient of the 2019 St Catherine’s Beazley Medal Scholarship and is the first resident to live in the Dr Elizabeth Constable Room. “I have so much to thank St Catherine’s College for. It’s the medium through which I’ve been able to pursue all my interests. Being at St Catherine’s has helped me open up to new experiences, opportunities and challenges.”

    Pooja is enjoying her double major in Medical Sciences and French Studies, even with its challenges. She plans to explore the field of pediatric medicine or global health policy.

    Pooja’s words of wisdom are: “The main thing is to love what you’re doing. Choose subjects and pathways based on what you love doing and devote yourself to it. If you are passionate and self-motivated, you will find it easier to work towards achieving your goals.”


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  • Alumni Profile: Matthew Robson

    What is your favourite memory of St Catherine’s? What was the most meaningful thing you learned?

    I have a lot of favourite memories from my time at St Catherine’s! The first one that comes to mind was the ‘Secret Friends’ Week’ in first year, where I went down the creepy route by handmaking a personalised storybook about scary bears for my secret friend. Another great memory I have was the Neon Foam Party that took place in the Jull courtyard, but it only occured once because it ruined the lawn. We also won two out of three Inter-College cups in 2014, so we set off a bunch of fireworks to celebrate. A final favourite memory was helping organise and semi hosting the Four Seasons Ball in my first year. Even though it was stressful, the event was so much fun.

    Coming to St Catherine’s was a very memorable experience for me. I completed my undergraduate over East and then decided to take a year off. Afterward, I applied to UWA in Perth to start my Ph.D. and was fortunate enough to be able to stay at St Catherine’s. St Catherine’s enabled me to be immersed in an academic and social culture which I missed out on during my undergrad. Personally, this was very meaningful. Some words of wisdom for the current residents: Always get involved and throw yourself in and give everything a go. However, remember not to overload yourself as your studies are just as important.

    You are currently completing your Ph.D. in Psychology at UWA. Tell us about your project?

    My project is specialising in atypical face perception. Specifically, we are looking at people with congenital prosopagnosia, a condition that affects about 2.5-3% of the population. It is a specific face identity recognition impairment that prevents people from deriving identity cues from the face. This can affect an individual’s functioning throughout their life, as they can have trouble recognising friends and family or even following movies. It is important to note that I am not looking for a cure or treatment. The actual research is quite young, and it has only been reliably diagnosed since 2006. I am looking at other abilities related to face identification that those with prosopagnosia may or may not be able to do. This will tell us whether the impairment is specific to all face aspects or identity.

    Tell us about your experience as a Ph.D. student? What advice would you give to our current residents about going into research?

    Research is very different from your undergraduate studies. In undergrad, you have prescribed coursework and your professors and tutors have the answers. There is this idea that your Ph.D. supervisors will also have the answers, but this is not the case.

    Your supervisors are there to mentor and work collaboratively with you. They don’t know the answers, and that is why you are working on your Ph.D. project. I changed my area of focus from social psychology in honours to neuropsychology for my Ph.D., as I was interested in perception. Most people tend to go into a Ph.D. based on their honours work, so shifting gears made it more difficult to get started.

    My advice to current students who are wanting to go into research is to make sure you are statistics trained. I find a lot of undergraduates have inadequate statistics skills and to really engage in a lot of research, you will need to be proficient beyond the basics. This will open a new world of understanding for you. Secondly, I recommend that you should take the opportunity to learn specialised skills because you have a lot of opportunities that won’t be available to you after you finish your Ph.D.. These will help you get a job in the future. Remember a Ph.D. is a marathon, not a sprint. You are going to feel like an imposter and you may think you don’t know what is going on. It is a slow pace and you will see results over the years. Don’t lose sight, you will get there.


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  • Winner of the Boston Consulting Group Scholarship for 2019

    By Sian O’Sullivan

     Director of Bloom, Elizabeth Knight
    Director of Bloom, Elizabeth Knight

    Elizabeth Knight is the recipient of the Boston Consulting Group Scholarship for 2019. This scholarship is open to students in their penultimate year of study across Australia and New Zealand and awarded to two students who display academic excellence, communication, critical thinking and leadership skills.

    Elizabeth is completing a Bachelor of Philosophy with a double-major in Management and Political Science & International Relations. She is also an active member of Bloom at St Catherine’s and currently is the Director for the organisation. “Bloom’s vision is to be the catalyst for young founders to realise their purpose and create impact through entrepreneurial pursuits.”

    Receiving the BCG Scholarship has empowered Elizabeth to continue to chase her goals. For her, the scholarship not only represents an investment in future potential, but is also recognition of the value of young people. “It is about true empowerment, which is achieved by instilling confidence and trust in a young person’s abilities, passion and purpose. I’ve never felt more empowered to be my authentic self and to chase after the vision I have for my future.”

    Elizabeth attended Perth Modern School and in her spare time works on her own startup and gets involved in a wide variety of College activities.


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  • Pitching out of this world

    The third annual Space Apps Perth hackathon concluded Sunday night with 7 teams pitching their solutions to various NASA challenges. Two teams will now progress to the global competition…

    It was geek heaven down at the FLUX basement on Sunday afternoon as seven Perth teams battled it out for a place in a global NASA pitch contest featuring 25,000 participants in 200 cities from across 70 countries.

    Teams took on such diverse interplanetary challenges as building a VR environment for the surface of Mars, an autonomous free-flyer to inspect spacecraft or a concept for a time capsule to teach extra terrestrials about human culture.

    Startup News was there to watch the final pitches and to see what the teams had come up with, as they explained their solutions to an audience of supporters and judges.

    The two winners will be elevated to the global judging competition, after completing a 30 second video by the end of this week. The global finalists and winners will be known in January.

    These teams received tech prizes + CORE-Woodside Space Hub Award – 2 months team hot desk in CORE and support to connect across the resources, energy and tech sector to advance their space enterprise ambitions and participant tickets to the flagship Unearthed Perth resources and energy industry hackathon in 2019.

    Supergiant Scuti were the first to pitch and were made up of Jordi Clarke, Rico Beti, Luke Stokes, Nathan Glover, Stephen Mott, Samuel Bishop and Renee Kenny. They analysed and displayed data to better communicate interesting findings and improve public understanding of our home planet.

    The DIY Mars team – made up of Jiaranai, Aditi Basu, Sam McSweeney & Tabea Rettelbach – showed off their VR application which allowed the user to explore the red planet using 3-D modelling provided by NASA.

    There were also honourable mentions for Team Tether, Guardians of Humanity and USafe (which was an all young women team of machine learning skills).

    The two Perth 2018 winning teams will have their entry elevated to the global competition judged by NASA, with the winning team invited to attend the upcoming NASA’s Rocket Launch at the NASA Kennedy Space Centre in Florida. The global finalists and winners will be known in January.

    “Our goal at CORE in supporting the Space Apps Challenge, together with our partners Unearthed, Spacecubed and Space Hub Perth, is to draw on our thriving technology, resources and energy sector to deliver the capabilities that are required in space, including autonomous vehicles and remote asset management,” said Tamryn Barker, CEO of CORE.

    “By linking the resources and space sector, we are building a community of practice that drives advanced capability and new enterprise. We are delighted to have industry, technology and education sponsors such as Woodside, Pawsey Supercomputing Centre and Curtin University to help propel this journey.”

    ~~

    For those of you who missed it, you can follow the NASA Space Apps Perth twitter account here

    https://twitter.com/SpaceAppsPerth

    Startup News was a media partner for the event.

    __

    Original source: This post was originally uploaded to Startup News https://www.startupnews.com.au/2018/10/23/pitching-out-of-this-world/


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  • St Catherine’s resident wins UWA Student Innovation Challenge

    St Catherine’s College is celebrating the success of one of its residents, University of Western Australia’s (UWA) Master of Information Technology student, Jiaranai Keatnuxsuo. Along with UWA Master of Data Science student, Alastair Parker, together they have won the 2018 UWA Student Innovation Challenge with their creative solution to on-road driver inattention safety.

    Working in teams over the duration of a weekend, 12 student teams were presented with a range of issues and encouraged to devise broad problem resolutions to realise a bold new vision. 

    With a growing number of road fatalities and injuries being caused by driver inattention, the student team explored the impact of mobile phone use while driving.

    Their winning solution focused on their design thinking process and validated problem solving and was evaluated by judges from Bloom, RAC, Commonwealth Bank (CommBank) and UWA Innovation Quarter Exchange (IQX)

    “We learnt so much from the competition, but the design thinking process is what really elevated our solution.” Said Jiaranai. 

    “Thinking laterally and honing the scope and scale of our problem, we were able to test the understanding from users, and build our prototype. Our value proposition hinged on positively incentivising drivers to avoid using their phones on the road, than negatively punishing with a fine system.” Said Alastair.

    The student’s $10,000 prize includes a trip to Sydney to visit the CommBank Innovation Centre as well as networking opportunities with the RAC.

    Media references
    Lauren Humfrey (St Catherine’s College, UWA) (+61 8) 9442 0591
     

     

     Photo credit: Angela Reimers
    Photo credit: Angela Reimers
  • Interview with Co-founder of Futuristic Skills, Conor McLaughlin

    Jordan Hunter from the St Catherine’s College, Marketing & Communications team, sat down with recent winner of the 2018 UWA IQ Student Start-up award, Conor McLaughlin, co-founder of Futuristic Skills and Alumnus of St Catherine’s College.

    Jordan: So Conor, what is your start up and what is it about?

    Conor: Thanks for having me Jordan. So Futuristic Skills is a start-up that through this venture we aim to help high school students learn the most important job skills for the future. So, whether that’s creativity, emotional intelligence, critical thinking. Those soft skills you need in any job that will help you in the future. We have been mainly working with high school students but are starting to work with some university students as well.

    Jordan: Seeing that you are the co-founder of Futuristic Skills, who is your partner and how did you two come up with the idea of creating this start up?

    Conor: My other cofounder is David Castelanelli, he is studying at Curtin and we met in America. We are both from Perth, but we met in a course at UCLA which was basically about business. We became friends and we knew that we were similar, we both wanted to start up a business as well as help people in some way. So, in March last year, I had a different idea but was still in the same line, so we started off wanting to make a web app that helped students see what actual careers look like. The initial idea was to interview doctors, dentists, mechanics, teachers, etc… and ask them that they like and don’t like about their job, what they do on a day-to-day basis, just general questions. But it eventually changed along the way.

    Jordan: So how long did it take for your start up to become operational and how has your customer/user base grown since it has started?

    Conor: It always takes longer than you expect, is the first thing I’d say. So, it has been about a year now since we had our first business meeting about the idea and in that time, it was about mainly meeting potential customers and gaining validation about the idea. Since then we have been working with about ten schools which is about 1000 students. Even though that sample size is low for App based start-ups in general, our start up contains a high value product so even though we are working with about 1000 students, we have seen the real impact on each individual and is definitely growing with 10 more schools for next term. So hopefully it will continue to grow at this rate and hopefully more over time.

    Jordan: In terms of the vision for your product, what is the problem that Futuristic Skills aims at solving?

    Conor: The main problem that we are trying to solve is the skills development of young people which we think there is a lack of. We initially started off talking to a lot of high school students, university students and also employers, and the general consensus was that these most important soft skills (skills that are not so technical) are really lacking. These skills like the ability to relate to other people, to think on their feet and problem solve, these don’t have any context which they are taught in, as opposed to us learning academic subjects which is only a part of the picture. So, our goal is to help students learn these skills, which will then make them more employable and particularly as the future becomes a reality, where there is more technology automation doing the technical side of things, it is really important that young people focus a lot on those people skills and more soft skills.

    Jordan: So you are mainly focusing becoming street smart as well as book smart?

    Conor: There are 10 skills that we do: creativity, critical thinking, problem solving, emotional intelligence, coding, cultural relations, social media, branding, general literacy and numeracy. There are still technical elements to it but the most important factors for success when you do get a job has shown to be emotional intelligence and people skills.

    Jordan: What does Futuristic Skills want to ultimately change for their customers?

    Conor: Ultimately, we are trying to transform the way that students experience and view education. There are a lot of students that are burnt out by the end of school, even more so by the end of university. By the end of their education journey they have developed a hate towards learning because of the way the education system is structured. So, what we are trying to do, particularly with the years 9 and 10s who are our main target age, is to excite them again in learning. So, we ultimately want to change our student’s perception of education to be more positive.

    Jordan: If you had to identify Futuristic Skills’ five most important features, how did you decide that those features would be the most valued by customers? (how did you prioritise these features)

    Conor: The reason why 9/10 start ups fail is because they don’t talk to people before they create their product. So, when you come up with an idea for a start-up you become emotionally attached to it and create a bias towards it, but the truth is what you think doesn’t matter its what your customers think is what is important. So, what we did differently is that for seven months we didn’t build anything, we went to over one hundred meetings with all types of stakeholders such as teachers and careers co-ordinators which we had about 60 across 60 schools. We also set up meeting with parents and students as well as university staff and corporate companies to see if they would find this valuable for students to learn to help them get employed. This helped us change our idea drastically from what it was originally to what it is today.

    Jordan: How long did it take you to conduct your market research?

    Conor: It took a lot of time! Last year was the hardest I have ever worked. Until now being the start of the school year we haven’t earnt a cent. Last year from March to December was complete research and validation which you don’t make any money from. So, it’s easy to give up, and it would have been at least 500 hours plus that we spent on it.

     I am particularly grateful to Bloom and the reason being is that they provide workshops on how to target customer segments and what we learnt is the process know as Leans start up. Starting off with a basic low-cost product, not putting heaps of capital into it to make it flashy and nice, that comes later once you have validation that your product is valuable.

     Its only when your basic product is loved that you then scale up in size. Our main strategy was to keep it as basic as possible whiles interviewing as many people as we could and that way we could research and change accordingly. We actually changed our idea about 6 times, but we would never have gotten to the final product without the interviews.

    Jordan: So what was Bloom’s role in helping you create your start up?

    Conor: They gave us a helpful financial investment of $500 which we won at a pitch night Bloom hosted. That helped us cover the basic costs at the start which was mainly spent on fuel costs from travelling to all the 60 schools. Secondly, they gave us a lot of mentoring. They gave us legal support and general mentoring about the process of creating a start-up. 

    Jordan: Thanks for coming in today Conor. Wish you all the best.


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