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MyScience was awarded the 2008 Best Education and Training Collaboration at the Business and Higher Education Round Table (B-HERT) Awards ceremony on Friday November 21, 2008.

Anne Forbes accepts the BHERT award on behalf of the MyScience team

The B-HERT awards recognize outstanding achievements in collaboration between business and higher education in the fields of Research and Development, Education and Training and Community Engagement.   The criteria for judging collaborations as worthy of an award are innovativeness, the strength of the relationship between collaborating partners, outreach inclusion, wider outcomes achieved and cultural impact on the partner/organization.
The purpose of the B-HERT is to pursue initiatives that will advance the  goals and improve the performance of both business and higher education for  the benefit of Australian society.  B-HERT is the only body where leaders  of Australia’s business, research, professional and academic communities come  together to address important issues of common concern, to improve the  interaction between Australian business and higher education institutions, and  to help guide the future directions of higher education.  In pursuing this mission B-HERT aims to influence public opinion and government policy on selected issues of importance. B-HERT believes that a prerequisite for a more prosperous and equitable society in Australia is a more highly-educated  community.

The Deputy Prime Minister and Minister for Education, Julia Gillard,  in her address at the Awards gala dinner challenged universities and business to work more closely with schools, including primary schools. This is in line with recent media comments from the new Chief Scientist Professor Penny Sackett, Rupert Murdoch, and Heather Ridout (Australian Industry Group).

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The recent Young Scientist 2008 Awards presentation was a proud moment for all of us involved in MyScience – students, parents, teachers, principals, mentors and project team  members from ACU, DET, IBM and Sydney University. This year, 50% of the awards in the primary category were given to MyScience students. There were over 500 primary school teams that submitted entries to the Young Scientist Award Scheme and only 24 finalists.  Of these 12 were from MyScience schools: Beecroft PS, Beresford Road PS, Quakers Hill PS and Quakers Hill East PS. In addition, seven teams from both Beecroft PS and Quakers Hill Public School were each given a Certificate of Excellence, a secondary award also indicating submissions of a high standard.

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The Budding Young Scientist Award, the K-2 equivalent of the Young Scientist Award was given to students from Quakers Hill Public School.

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The Arup Built Environment Award, given to the primary entry that best demonstrates scientific/engineering efficiency, resource planning, structural design and/or environmental sustainability was awarded to students from Beecroft Public School.

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In his address to the audience on behalf of the NSW Minister of Education, Lindsay Wasson, Director of the Department of Education, Western Region paid tribute to the efforts of those involved in MyScience and acknowledged the impact the program has made in primary science education so far.

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Congratulations to all the award winners and their teachers, principals and mentors!

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