Renowned 13-year-old Coder from Iceland speaks to Pace High School

Education By Rene D. Basulto, Special to The Miami Laker Wednesday, November 5, 2014

 

Students from Monsignor Edward Pace High School’s Academy for Emerging Computer Technologies listened and chatted with Olina Helga Sverrisdottir, a 13-year-old coder from Iceland, in the new Innovation Center at Pace High School.

Sverrisdottir is a 2013 Runner-Up for the Digital Girl of the Year European award and is an assistant Instructor & Designer at Skema Education. She also won competitions held by the FBI and Carnegie Mellon University when she was just 11 years old.

Sverrisdottir started programming at the age of 9 by using the programming language Alice. She credits her mother, Rakel Solvadottir, for getting her into programming. Rakel, who accompanied her daughter to the event, owns and operates Skema Education in Iceland, which is dedicated to teaching children as young as 6 how to program and code. Her company is expanding to Redmond, Washington as reKode Education.

During her speech, Sverrisdottir talked about the importance of keeping a good self-image in order to succeed, especially when dealing with the challenges of working in programs such as Unity 3D. She acknowledged that programming, coding, and other technological pursuits are usually thought to be male activities. To help remedy this, she has launched her own blog, techolina.com, that focuses on getting more girls into tech.

Students from the Academy of Emerging Computer Technologies asked Sverrisdottir questions ranging from what programming language was worth learning (she answered C++), to what her favorite video game was (her answer: Minecraft). When asked how learning programming could be helpful, she said it builds critical thinking and problem-solving skills.

“[Programming] is a challenge and you have to really think to look and find a problem,” she said.

Bianca Diosdado, vice president of IT Recruitment & Staffing at Octagon Technology Staffing, also accompanied Sverrisdottir to the event and fielded questions from students regarding career options in technology. She, Sverrisdottir, and her mother all agreed on one basic idea: everyone should know how to code.

Following her talk with Pace students, Sverrisdottir gave the keynote address at the Geeki Girls’ “Geekiwood” conference at Florida International University on September 27.