Invitation to the royal couple for a picnic in the Bahamas

Bahama girls present gift to raise awareness on climate change in the region to William and Kate with help from UK teens

At the final destination of William and Kate’s first official Caribbean tour, a team of girls from the Bahamas hope their gift of a family picnic blanket made with recycled crisp packaging will help shine a spotlight on the need for STEM education for young people and the climate crisis in the local region to a global audience.

The girls are all budding innovators from the FEM STEM Club in the Bahamas, taking part in the BIEA 2022-23 STEM Competition on Sustainable Cities. The making of the picnic blanket was a truly international collaboration. Team Quadrofolium made up of four teenage girls from Greater London (Eltham College) and Kent (Tonbridge Grammar School, Sackville School) jumped on the invitation to collaborate. The UK girls originally made a picnic blanket with recycled crisp bags for their BIEA 2021 STEM Competition entry. They shared ideas of their creation and how-to virtually. For the new royal gift, the Bahamas girls adapted the design using plastic waste collected from the coastal shorelines, recycling centres and local sustainable fabrics. The final result was a stunning piece of artwork that’s also incredibly functional and carries the voice of young people.

The gift was presented to First Lady Ann Marie Davis of the Bahamas who was impressed by these young’s creativity, commended their passion for STEM and action to mitigate the climate crisis.

“Young people didn’t create the climate problem, but they are the ones who have to live with it. We need to do everything we can to help them build up the skills and mindset to deal with the future. And through collaboration like these, we are doing something right.” Said Dr Alex Holmes, Head of STEM at BIEA.

Tyrhonda Glinton, Founder of FEM STEM Bahamas echoed the sentiment, “We need our youngsters to have the right skills and knowledge to prepare for an uncertain future, and the international experience plays an important part in that development.”

Regardless of the final destination of the picnic blanket, this collaborative project has fostered an enduring friendship between the youth of the two countries, learning about each other’s living environment and working towards the same vision to make a difference to the planet we live on.

For more information about the BIEA International STEM Youth Innovation Competition visit www.bieacompetition.org.uk or follow BIEA @BIEAeducation on social media.

Notes to Editors

About BIEA
The British International Education Association (BIEA) exists to promote and export the best British educational practices overseas. BIEA is a charitable organisation working to facilitate accessible STEM and early-year education to teachers and students internationally. BIEA runs the BIEA International STEM Youth Innovation Competition which aims to promote STEM education and careers for young people all over the world. We have a special interest in STEM education for girls, especially in Africa. For more information, please visit www.biea.org.uk

About FEM STEM
FEM STEM Bahamas is a youth-based non-profit organization founded in The Bahamas in July 2019. We believe in providing high school girls with the fundamentals for self-growth and career development specifically in science, technology, mathematics and engineering (STEM) fields. We are an empowerment program focused on making opportunities for STEM accessible across The Bahamas. With the continuous shift forward in bridging the gender and skill gap in STEM, this platform acts as a catalyst to engage as many young women in the field as possible through a variety of events, resources and our after school club.

FEM STEM is the partner of BIEA in the Bahamas. Tyrhonda Glinton, the founder of FEM STEM, is a valued judge on the international judging panel of BIEA’s STEM Competition.

About the BIEA International STEM Competition and education campaign
The BIEA International STEM Youth Innovation Competition has been running for 5 years and reaches students from all parts of the world. The Competition focuses on developing transferable skills such as problem-solving, team working and communication through a STEM challenge, made relevant via real-world problems.

In the 2022-23 season, it has kicked off a campaign for Education for Sustainable Development (ESD). The campaign theme ‘Greening Cities, Sustaining Lives’ has the UN SDGs at its core. We view cities as key centres of thought and action when it comes to education and learning about sustainable development. The goal is to help connect cities with future innovators and help young people to master life skills for making cities and communities more inclusive, safe, resilient, and sustainable.

The competition received support from the Duchess of Cornwall during the 2020 competition season on Save Our Shores From Plastic Pollution.


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About British International Education Association

The British International Education Association exists to promote and export the best British educational practices overseas. BIEA is a not for profit organisation which works to promote STEM and early-years educational practices to overseas teachers and institutions. BIEA also runs the International STEM Youth Innovation Competition www.bieacompetition.org.uk which aims to promote STEM education and careers for young people all over the world. For more information, please visit www.biea.org.uk


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