RICHARD WOODD - Taranaki Daily News Friday, 14 September 2007
Joshua Brungar, and Simon Wadsworth who have beaten out competitiors to become two of the country's best young computer programmers.
Hawera High School has three computer programming champions - and one of them could be a genius.
They have beaten 50 other schools for top honours in a nation-wide programming teams contest.
One, Kieran McLaughlan, hasn't hung around. Twelve days after the contest, he flew to Boston to start a five-year scholarship at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, worth $250,000. He sat the US college entrance exams and scored near-maximum in all the papers.
Kieran (18) will probably go into science-based practical research and development, says the school's head of computing, Andrew Phayer.
His two team-mates, Simon Wadsworth (17) and Joshua Brungar (18), yesterday were presented with certificates by the NZ Computer Society chief executive Douglas White, and products by corporate supporters, Obertech Group of Hawera and Gen-i Taranaki. The contest is run annually by the society.
Mr White said Hawera's success was surprising, as it was up against bigger schools with more money and resources.
Mr Phayer was the team mentor and helped the students work as a unit. They had to share one computer in the five-hour contest, at Waikato University on August 4.
"Kieran was a key member. He likes to solve the problem first, and the other two did the programming, creating the code and get it working. They were complementary," Mr Phayer said.
Most people could be trained in computer programming. "But there's also an art to it. You need desire, discipline and a flair."
Simon says the Hawera team got a lucky break: "We tackled a really difficult one first and found it fairly easy and scored very high points."
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