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Lakshmipat Singhania Academy, Kolkata shining dozen

Lakshmipat Singhania Academy, Kolkata

A dozen shining stars of the co-ed, CBSE-affiliated Lakshmipat Singhania Academy, Kolkata (LSA, estb.1996), a K-12 day school (ranked #14 in the latest EW India School Rankings in the city of joy), won the 20 Settlement Design Competition of the Johnson Space Centre, Houston, Texas, held between August 2-5. Earlier in February, the LSA team won the first prize in the Asia preliminary held at Manesar, Haryana, under the guidance of their teacher Subroto Chakraborty. The school’s ‘outer space shining dozen’ comprised nine boys — Pulkit Parolia, Devansh Agarwal, Yashwant Kedia, Pronil Roy, Yash Mehta, Yash Manpuria, Yashwardhan Nevatia, Vibhor Sharma, Amitabh Agrawal — and three girls viz, Manshi Sanghai, Darshika Agarwal, and Vatsal Mohta. In Houston, they were included in Team Grumbo Aerospace comprising students of Edgewater High School (Orlando, USA), Princess Margaret High School (Vanco-uver, Canada), Cardiff Sixth Form School (UK) and the Johnson Space Centre Team (Texas, USA). Team Grumbo Aerospace was one of four ‘companies’ consisting of school teams from India, Pakistan, USA, Australia, Wales, Arg-entina, Romania, China, and Uruguay. Each company had 48 students aggreg-ating a total of 192 participants in this annual global competition. The International Space Settlement Design Competition, supported by America’s pioneer National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA), required each company to design a human colony in space, in different locations, with different scenarios. To qualify for the finals in Houston, two schools had to win the Asia Round to represent Asia. “Our company comprised two teams from Pakistan, a team from China and LSA. We won because of innovative solutions, addres-sing the key issues of water production in space, and methods of ensuring a constant supply of solar power. In the Asia Round, we were given 22 hours to complete the propo-sal, and in the Houston Inter-national, we worked the entire 45 hours in shifts,” enthuses team member Amitabh Agrawal. “The magnitude of the competition, and the chance to work cooperatively with schools from Asia, if not the entire world, was hugely motivating,” adds Pronil Roy. From among the shining dozen, Devansh Agarwal is studying aero-space engineering at Georgia Tech, USA, and Pulkit Parolia is pursuing the aerospace engineering degree programme of Purdue University. The rest are class XII students of LSA, who intend studying and researching space and other sciences. Baishali Mukherjee (Kolkata)

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