QC gov't awards 3 schools for best innovative climate solutions in QC Minecraft Challenge.
The Quezon City local government awarded three schools for winning as overall champions in the city's first QC Minecraft Challenge.
“We will continue to empower, involve, and consider you in our decision-making process, not only because the youth are among the most vulnerable to the risks of climate change, but also because they have the most potential in developing solutions that will allow us to reach our environment and climate change goals,” QC Mayor Joy Belmonte said on Saturday, Oct. 14, during the presentation and awarding ceremony.
The students of Old Balara Elementary School, Ateneo De Manila Junior High School, and San Francisco High School were lauded by the local government for creating solutions to help reimagine, reconfigure, and revitalize the city.
The QC Minecraft Challenge was launched last April to give students an opportunity to design climate solutions for their city through Minecraft Education, a game-based learning platform, and to present their ideas to city leaders.
The contest was initiated by the CCESD as part of the Schools Reinventing Cities program, a collaboration between C40’s Reinventing Cities and Minecraft Education.
It had three categories: Grades 4 to 6, Junior High School, and Senior High School.
The students were tasked to build innovative solutions that enhance biodiversity, promote sustainable mobility, and improve public health on the following roads: White Plains Avenue, Agham Road, and Belfast Avenue.
Other category winners were Old Balara Elementary School for the elementary category, Jose P. Laurel High School for the junior high school category, and Leandro Locsin Integrated School for the senior high school category for the Most Innovative Build.
Special Citation for the Most Impactful Proposal was also given to Villa Verde Elementary School, Ateneo De Manila Junior High School, and San Bartolome High School.
The 15th Avenue Elementary School, Camp General Emilio Aguinaldo High School, and San Francisco High School received the Special Citation for the Best Pitch.
Overall Team Champion from each category received P30,000; Team Champion Moderator with P15,000; and Team Champion School with P15,000, while other finalists received 5,000 each.
Among the judges of the contest were QC Mayor Belmonte, CCESD head Andrea Villaroman, Education Affairs Unit (EAU) head Maricris Veloso, Clarissa Segismundo of Microsoft Philippines, and John Erwin Magno of Line Learning and Development Solutions.