Calgary

Calgary Science Olympics features students creations

Hundreds of K to 12 students showed off their science chops at the Olympic Oval on Saturday at the 14th annual Science Olympics put on by the Association of Professional Engineers and Geoscientists of Alberta.

K to 12 students show off everything from frisbee bots to remote-controlled airplanes

Tyler MacKinnon stands next to his team's remote-controlled airplane at Calgary's Science Olympics. (Andrew Brown/CBC)

Hundreds of K to 12 students showed off their science chops at the Olympic Oval on Saturday at the 14th annual Science Olympics put on by the Association of Professional Engineers and Geoscientists of Alberta (APEGA).

"Science Olympics are an inter-school competition where students from all over Calgary participate in engineering and geoscience-related challenges to find out what it's like to be an engineer or geoscientist," said Travis Martin, the outreach coordinator for APEGA and the chair of the event. 

There were 125 teams of five participating in the event. 

"We've got things from building a Rube Goldberg machine at home for some of the younger guys, to coding a level for Mario for the older students," Martin said.

This robot was just one of the creations on display at the Olympic Oval on Saturday. (Andrew Brown/CBC)

From planes to robots

Tyler MacKinnon's team focused their energy on building a remote-controlled plane. 

"It can fly carrying about five pounds of weight and the plane itself weighs about 15 pounds," he said. 

His team placed 19 out of 43 at a recent competition in Fort Worth for their machine. 

Mechaela Gartner and her team opted for a more lighthearted invention. 

"This is a Frisbee-bot. It shoots frisbees. It was built in 2011 and we kind of refurbished it. We added underglow and fun things," she said. "It actually tours across Canada to show what we do and what robotics is all about."

Gold medals

And while the event is a competition, Martin says it's not what you might think, with first, second and third place winners. 

"It doesn't matter if 10 students have gold medal-worthy ideas or only two," he said. 

"We want to show [the students] that excellence in innovative thinking, it is stuff that the world needs now."