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Elementary school students build Lego robots to solve water problems

More than 40 teams of elementary students from across Ontario came together in Waterloo Sunday to compete in the First Lego League West Ontario Championships.

Over 40 elementary school teams across Ontario came together to compete in the First Lego League championships

The Water Cyclists, is an all-girls team of eight members, from Etobicoke (Peggy Lam/CBC News)

More than 400 elementary students, teachers, parents and supporters crowded into thePhysical Activities Complex at the University of Waterloo Sunday for theFirst Lego League championships.

A total of 40teams signed up for the competition, which had the students focusing on water.

"How we can source it, transport it, use it, dispose of it," said Dave Ellis, the director of First Lego League Ontario."The teams had to look at those problems in the four categories and identify solutions for that."

The team Unresolved chose to solve the problem of water contamination in First Nations communities. (Peggy Lam/CBC News)

Water safety concerns

Prior toSunday,elementary school students, age 9 to 14, from across the province, spent five months designing Lego robotsto solve some of the world's water problems.

SrijayMundler, 14, is a member of the team Unresolved, made up of 10studentsfrom Mississauga.

"The name was pretty much found based on the fact that when we tried to pick a name, we kept on disagreeing," he said.

Jenan Abderrahman says she's been hosting workshops to encourage more girls to join the First Lego League teams. (Peggy Lam/CBC News)

Mundler and his team designed a robot to solve the issue of water contamination in First Nations communities.

After visiting communities at Lake Scugognear Port Perry and learning people there live withwater-boil advisories, they decided to pick that issue as their cause. The team designed water filters that people in the community can put in their homes,and then demonstrated how it worked with their robot.

Jesslyn Bach, 8, stands with her mentor, Allie Waddell, 16. Both are members of the Water Cyclists. (Peggy Lam/CBC News)

The team's coachJenanAbderrahmansaid the students led the project.

"This is something they felt really passionate about because they didn't realize that it affected such a huge population of people in a country with such clean water," Anderrahman said.

'Girls should have the same opportunity'

Abderrahman said she's been trying to recruit more girls onto the team, but so far, has been met with difficulty.

"We've been really pushing for it by running workshops but for some reason the interest is not there," she said.

"I'm not sure how we can combat that, but we're definitely trying as much as we can."

A Lego robot sitting at the 'practice table.' Teams are judge upon three areas: research, robot design and core values. (Peggy Lam/CBC News)

On the other hand, the Water Cyclists, a team from Etobicoke, is an all-girls team made up of eight members, including 8-year-old Jesslyn Bach.

"It feels great because I think girls should have the same opportunity that guys have," Bach said.

Judges watch teams demonstrate their robots. (Peggy Lam/CBC News)

Allie Waddell, 16, served as a mentor for the team and said they didn't plan for the all-girl team.

"It's just that these girls are all really interested in technology, wanted to be a part of this team, and happen to know each other," Waddellsaid.

"I think it's great because it's important for young girls to be a part of this field."

The winners of the West Ontario championships will compete atthe world championships in Houston or Detroit in April.