“I was really
shocked!” exclaims Asabi Rawlins, evidently still in disbelief, “But
I’m excited. It’s always a good feeling to win something.”
The 16-year-old
student of Naparima Girls’ High School has placed fourth in the 4th
Annual World Telecommunications Information Society Day Essay
Competition held by CANTO, the Caribbean Association of National
Telecommunication Organisations.
Based in Trinidad
and Tobago and founded in 1985, this non-profit organisation strives
to present a forum through which issues of concern to
telecommunication industries throughout the region may be addressed.
The competition was launched to commemorate World Telecommunication
Information and Society Day, which took place on Monday, the 17th of
May.
In order to win the
competition, teenagers Caribbean-wide were asked to write an essay
on the impact of Information and Communication Technologies (ICTs)
on their society.
Asabi, who hails
from Union Village, Claxton Bay, was the only contestant from
Trinidad and Tobago who has placed in the top four. In recognition
of her win, bmobile and BLINK, on behalf of CANTO, will award her
with a Blackberry cell phone.
Though Asabi’s win
came as a surprise to her, she laughingly explains that her parents
received the news with nonchalance. “They were proud,” she says,
“but they know that it’s not an unusual thing for me.” When one
hears of Asabi’s feats, it becomes easy to understand why they would
have reacted that way- when your daughter has received an award for
Junior Achiever 2009, has decided to take 12 subjects at the CXC
level, and was once featured in a newspaper article under the
headline “The Chosen One,” it is expected that any other achievement
would be received with an exasperated nod of the head.
Yet Asabi still
manages to find the time to engage in several other extra-curricular
activities. Presently, the teenager is involved in various
environmental and youth initiatives, especially those committed to
“mitigating climate change.” The ambitious young woman also loves to
debate, has started to learn German, and writes articles for an
online youth organisation based in India.
In fact, it was when
Asabi realised the extent to which she depended on Information and
Communication Technologies in order to participate in her various
interests that she became motivated to write the essay.
Information and
Communication Technologies, or ICTs, refer to the channels through
which digital information is stored, sent or received. ICTs
therefore take the form of the cell phones, personal computers and
Internet technology.
“I was a bit naïve
to the term,” The teenager humbly admits. Once she conducted her
research, however, she realised that Information and Communication
Technologies were crucial to the functioning of her daily life.
“When I told my
friends that I work for an Indian-based company, they asked me,
‘Does that mean you will have to travel to India?’ I told them no,
that I can communicate with them via e-mail,” she confidently
states. “I always try to keep up with new initiatives in technology.
A lot of the people I need to communicate with are all over the
world. ICTs are a really important thing for me, personally.”
“All across the
globe,” she writes, “Information and Communication Technologies are
playing an instrumental role in the improvement of our lives. The
incredible resource must only be capitalised upon in the future so
as to further our positive development.”
Asabi speaks
confidently and quickly, her words as clear and strong as those used
in her award-winning essay. “I am seriously considering pursuing a
career in international law or international relations,” she admits,
and immediately one wonders who could disagree with such an ideal
career path. It is no surprise when the bright young student
confidently admits that she is “really passionate about expressing
my opinion.”
One should never,
however, mistake her confidence for arrogance- Asabi admits that she
still has not told her teachers or classmates about the competition.
She and her friends were writing their examinations for CXC when the
bright young student had heard that she had won, so she wisely
decided to keep the news to herself.
Asabi’s present aim,
however, is to ensure that she shares the knowledge she has gained
through entering the competition with everyone she knows. She is
prepared to speak to them on ICTs and its impact on their lives, as
well as to encourage them to represent their country by entering
similar essay competitions.
“I will continue to
read and be enlightened, and to teach other people,” she declares.
“I will take any chance to put Trinidad’s name out there.”