Today is all about Girl Power and on International Women’s Day

Today is all about Girl Power and on International Women’s Day (8th March 2018), one all-girls school in London is celebrating their achievements in STEM learning as students prepare to embark on a journey to be crowned VEX Robotics World Champions. Hampstead based Henrietta Barnett School for Girls has its own robotics club which has been solely credited for increasing the uptake of pupils enrolling on Design &Technology courses at both GCSE and A-Level at the school. The GCSE course alone has seen a dramatic 40% increase in uptake, which for an all-girls school, is quite extraordinary, especially when the subject is on the decline in many UK schools.

The school is fast-achieving cult status in robotics circles as their female pupils continue to be one of the top performing UK schools in robotics learning. Led by teacher and mentor Andrew Duffey and his colleague Sean Kelly, the school teaches robotics both during the curriculum and in extra-curricular clubs with 75 girls designing, building and programming working robots.

As the stand-out school at the VEX IQ Challenge UK National Finals, Henrietta Barnet School will now send their outstanding teams to Kentucky, USA in April to compete on the world stage at the VEX Robotics World Championships. There they will compete against the leading student teams from over 40 countries from around the world.

Judged by UK industry heavyweights and experts in the field of robotics, including STEM ambassadors from, Autodesk, COMAU, RAF and Lockheed Martin, and not to mention the brains behind prolific Robot Wars teams, Apollo, Concussion and Sabretooth. The event is not the first year that Henrietta Barnett has bowled over the judging panel and is testimony to the work put in throughout the school year.

The school’s extra-curricular robotics club is over-subscribed and even has a waiting list that’s 90 students long. Andrew’s only reasons for not increasing the team numbers at the moment are space and budget. Those taking part range from 12-18 years of age.

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