Annual science competition awards celebrate students

Scots, Glennie Heights, Freestone

School students from across Queensland were yesterday presented with a range of awards as part of a national annual Hermitage Schools Plant Science Competition, which this year celebrated native foods.

The Department of Agriculture and Fisheries competition attracted more than 3,600 Prep to Year 12 students from 137 schools nationwide, who experienced first-hand how to prepare native food plants to learn about the role of science and agriculture, and traditional, native foods and food production systems in sustaining people today and for the past 60,000 years.

Minister for Agricultural Industry Development and Fisheries Mark Furner said the science and art entries in this year’s competition were exceptional and gave great hope for the future of science and agriculture.

“These aspiring young scientists have learned about plant science, food technology and native foods, and how this applies to developing nutritious and delicious fresh produce,” Mr Furner said.

“Students also created native food plant herbariums, carried out a marketing activity, cooked with bush tucker, researched the science behind using native plants for food production across the world and used a mobile gaming app to spot and identify pests that impact our precious native plant life and interfere with agricultural production.”

Major science award prize winners from the Southern Downs:

Crawford Fund International Agricultural Science Awards:

• Winner: Daniel Kuhn, year 7, Scots PGC College, Warwick

• Runners-up: Bonnie Petersen, year 7, Scots PGC College, Warwick

QUT Most Outstanding Poster Awards

• Ciara McRae, Belle Sweedman & Bridie Hutchinson, year 7, Scots PGC College, Warwick

• Year 5/6 class, Glennie Heights State School, Warwick

• Year P-2 class, Freestone State School, Warwick

Ag Institute of Australia Junior Science Achievement Award

• Runner-up: Daniel Kuhn, year 7, Scots PGC College, Warwick

Joe Baker Outstanding Achievement Awards

• Freestone State School, Warwick

John and Chris Purdie Young Science Investigator Award

• Winner: Violet Trigg, Prep, Freestone State School, Warwick

The competition’s Art in Agriculture section linked to the Hermitage Research Facility’s 125th-anniversary theme ‘agriculture through the ages’, saw students create a mosaic depicting a native food or food system that has sustained First Nations people for thousands of years, or one that could enrich our diets today.

Students from Freestone State School took out the top art prize of ‘Most Outstanding School’ and Pilton State School students were awarded a host of individual awards for their beautiful creations.

Students participated in private mosaicking workshops with local Warwick artist, Christopher Hulme, for the chance to have their entries recreated and installed in the larger mosaic piece created by Chris earlier in the year.

A third component of the competition involved students from across the globe participating in a citizen science, biosecurity-themed adventure about the environment and the animals and organisms that invade plants.

The 2022 ‘Pest Invaders’ BioQuest attracted 33 teams with 3,650 sightings, 6,132 identifications and 1,719 species mapped, via a mobile gaming app.

Students from across Australia were among the prize winners.

The competition’s sponsors include QuestaGame and the Grains Research and Development Corporation.

These Southern Downs schools were awarded various science, art and QuestaGame prizes: Scots PGC College, Glennie Heights State School and Freestone State School.