(Published: 12/21/2009)
PghTech Women Network sponsors all-girls teams in First Lego League (FLL) Robotics Challenge
Pittsburgh, PA, December 9, 2009, On Saturday, December 5th, nearly 1000 regional robotics
enthusiasts attended the First Lego League (FLL) Challenge at Carnegie Mellon University´s National
Robotics Engineering Center (NREC). Over seventy student teams participated in the event, including
two all female teams, sponsored by the PghTech Women Network.
FLL is a robotics competition for students 9 to 14 years old, during which each team must build
a robot using the same toolkit. The 2009 competition was dubbed "Smart Move" with all
teams working on a unique transportation-related research project, which was presented to
judges during the competition. One of the all female teams opted to do research on
Pittsburgh´s tunnels, the pros and cons. For example, they learned that when it rains traffic
slows down when approaching a tunnel. During the actual competition, each team places the robot on
a platform - about the size of a pool table - and the robot maneuvers around it.
The PghTech Women Network sponsored "Executive Powers" team took second place out of 72 teams
in the Teamwork category. "Girls Investigating Robots" (GIR) comprised the
second all-female team; these teams were formed by sixteen girls from several Pittsburgh-area
schools and some home school students. As a result of the PghTech Women Network
advisory committee, these students from around the region were encouraged to participate and
are referred to as "Jr. PghTech Women" by the committee. This group of students decided on the team
names mentioned above. Sara Sibenaller, an engineer at Philips Home Healthcare Solutions and lead
coach for the girls teams commented, "The PghTech Women Network is proud of the outstanding
accomplishments of a very young, first-year team and we look forward to working with them again
next year. We encourage any other young girls in Pittsburgh to contact us if they are interested in
joining these teams." One of the competition judges commented, "The Executive Powers team had the
ability to explain the technical process coupled with fresh enthusiasm." PghTechWomen Network team
coaches and advisory committee were all volunteers, and included Krystle Englehart, Sharon Long,
Miranda Berner, Erika Franzen, Joyce Query, Rena Venturini, Mollie Llewellyn, and Sara Sibenaller.
Twenty corporate sponsors from the region made these teams become a reality.
About PghTech Women Network
PghTech Women NetworkTM, hosted by the Pittsburgh Technology Council and sponsored by Google
Pittsburgh and SYCOR AMERICAS Inc., provide female technology professionals a
forum for networking, best practice exchange, online interaction and community visibility.
PghTech Women NetworkTM provides women working in technology positions (STEM) an opportunity for
peer-to-peer networking, targeted career development and technology-focused civic and business
engagement. Conceptualized by female industry thought-leaders, this network will seek to provide
strategic direction to women in the field of information technology.