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Clearwater Student's Invention Takes Top Prize at USF

Ariane Custic of Clearwater High won the top prize for high school inventors at the USF Young Innovator awards. John Maciel of Oak Grove Middle and Aashi Patel of St. Paul's School also were honored.

 
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Ariane Custic, a student at Clearwater High, won the USF Young Innovator award for creating a combined wall outlet and USB port. The device is designed to make charging smartphones easier. University of South Florida
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Ariane Custic, a student at Clearwater High, won the USF Young Innovator award for creating a combined wall outlet and USB port. The device is designed to make charging smartphones easier.
Custic won $1,000 for her invention.
John Maciel, an eighth-grade student at Oak Grove Middle School, received the Accuform Signs award for safety innovation.
Maciel invented a concept for water-reactive clothing that would make it easier to spot a victim during a water rescue.
Inventions were judged on originality, functionality and market potential by a panel of experts and celebrities.
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A wall receptacle that reflects the 21st-century lifestyle won a Clearwater high school inventor $1,000 at the USF Young Innovators competition.

Ariane Custic, a ninth-grade student at Clearwater High, developed an integrated wall outlet and USB port that won her $1,000 at the invention competition.

Three winners (elementary, middle and high school) were selected from 14 finalists. There was a record-setting field of 536 entries from eight counties.

Inventions were judged on originality, functionality and market potential by a panel of expert and celebrity judges.

Custic said the device would make charging smartphones easier. It also would reduce the use of toxic materials used to manufacture computer components.

Winners of each of the three categories also are granted honorary membership in USF’s Chapter of the National Academy of Inventors and are honored during ResearchOne, the university’s annual celebration of research achievement.

Other Clearwater students were also honored:

John Maciel, an eigth-grade student at Oak Grove Middle School, won the Accuform Signs award for safety innovation for his concept for water-reactive clothing. The fabric changes color when it gets wet. The bright colors would help make a victim more visibile during a water rescue.

Aashi Patel, a third-grade student at St. Paul’s School, came up with the idea for the Eco Shower timing system. The device uses ultrasonic technology to measure the gallons of water used.

Related Topics: Clearwater High School, Inventions, Oak Grove Middle, St. Paul's School, University of South Florida, and Young Innovator awards

Serge Rodriguez

6:54 pm on Thursday, February 16, 2012

I love and respect creative people, especially if they're part of a young generation like these kids! Well done for them!!

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