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Page 14

EVENTS

Credit: SARAO

SARAO UPSKILLS AFRICA’S BRIGHT YOUNG MINDS IN BIG DATA BY SARAO COMMUNICATIONS Twenty-five young science and engineering students took part in the 2019 Big Data Africa School, hosted by the South African Radio Astronomy Observatory (SARAO) in Cape Town from 6th to 16th October. They were selected out of 200 applicants to take part in the school, which is an initiative of the UK-South Africa Newton Fund Partnership, part of the Development in Africa with Radio Astronomy (DARA) Big Data project. The aim was to teach the students important techniques when working with large data sets, which they can then apply to their own postgraduate research. They were given access to real-life astronomy, healthcare and sustainable agriculture data sets, which they were asked to use to solve real-life problems. Working in teams, under the guidance of local and international big data experts, the students then presented their solutions to their peers.

Graduates and undergraduates in a range of STEM disciplines took part, representing South Africa, Botswana, Ghana, Kenya, Madagascar, Mauritius, Mozambique, Namibia and Zambia. “The fact that this 3rd Big Data Africa School has brought together students from the eight SKA African partner countries, from different fields, is a testimony that astronomy can contribute to the broader societal needs of the continent,” said Takalani Nemaungani, Director of Multiwavelength Astronomy in the Department of Science and Innovation. “I am grateful that our partnership with the UK through the Newton Fund and the DARA initiative, is equipping a new

generation of data entrepreneurs, data scientists and data professionals.” For the participants, the school also offered the chance to network and build working relationships for their future careers, and several were recognised with awards. The school was followed by a two-day industry session giving students exposure to data science careers, from leading experts from a variety of industries such as higher education, cloud and data services, supercomputing, research and radio astronomy.

The fact that this 3rd Big Data Africa School has brought together students from the eight SKA African partner countries, from different fields, is a testimony that astronomy can contribute to the broader societal needs of the continent. Takalani Nemaungani, Department of Science and Innovation

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C O N TA C T | D E C E M B E R 2 019


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TeamSKA - Jonas Flygare

5min
pages 26-27

SKA Jobs

1min
page 25

News from around the web

1min
page 25

SHAO and Huawei join forces on SRC prototype

3min
page 24

SKA data pipelines tested on world's fastest supercomputer

2min
pages 22-23

Common purpose & momentum for SKA teams in Shanghai

4min
pages 20-22

Observing Wajarri Yamaji Heritage

3min
pages 18-19

Setting the world's eye on the sky with the SKA

2min
page 17

HQ staff get baking for charity

1min
page 16

Two minutes with...Prof. Toshihiro Handa

1min
page 16

Upcoming Events

1min
page 15

Astronomy for Equity, Diversity & Inclusion

1min
page 15

SARAO upskills Africa's bright young minds in Big Data

1min
page 14

MeerKAT reveals galactic bubbles

1min
pages 12-13

Let's talk about... black holes

4min
pages 10-11

Messages of support for SKA in Japan

1min
page 9

Virtual reality app showcases SKA site and multi-wavelength night sky

1min
page 9

France inaugurates SKA-Low pathfinder

1min
page 8

New upgrade for SKA-Low gemini board

1min
page 7

West Australian astronomy festival wins coveted science award

1min
page 6

ADASS conference draws hundreds to the Netherlands

1min
page 5

Italy hosts SKA data challenge workshop

1min
page 5

SARAO hosts SKA African Partners

1min
page 4

Foreword by Prof. Philip Diamond

2min
page 3
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