Eighth-Grader Competes in DU鈥檚 Madden Challenge
Angelina Adkis took all the tests and wrote all the papers in the Daniels College鈥檚 Gateway to Business course
When the slight, baby-faced girl in class stood up to present her idea, Audrey Legate didn鈥檛 think too much of it. Maybe she just looked young for her age in the freshman-level Gateway to Business course.
She clearly had the brains to pitch an app to improve the study abroad experience, so Legate decided to jump on board.
鈥淗onestly, it was kind of shocking when I found out she was 13,鈥 Legate said. 鈥淪he is honestly incredible. She鈥檚 the one who came up with the entire idea. And then she told us she was an eighth-grader, and I was just shocked.鈥
Join the club.
Once again last week, Angelina Akdis鈥 age and poise wowed a crowd, this time at the finals of the听听鈥 the quarterly competition in which students develop a functional mobile app and market it to a panel of judges.
鈥淚t means a lot to me to even be accepted to compete,鈥 Akdis said before taking the stage to present 鈥淭ravel Time.鈥 The app, which offers such features as a packing assistant, maps and attraction guides, is the culmination of a quarter in a college course. 鈥淚t blows my mind every single day, but I鈥檓 so thankful for the opportunity. It鈥檚 been really great.鈥
In an effort to bolster the University鈥檚 relationship with its community,听听director for entrepreneurship at the听听has welcomed students from underprivileged high schools to participate in what鈥檚 known as听听Over the last year and a half, they have worked alongside college students building app prototypes, websites and logos.
Never before, though, has a younger student 鈥 let alone a newly minted teenager 鈥 actually enrolled in the Gateway to Business course. But every Tuesday and Friday this quarter, Akdis 鈥渉ad to mature up鈥 as she sat in on lectures, taking every test and writing every paper.
鈥淚t鈥檚 definitely more intense,鈥 said Akdis, a student at听DU鈥檚 Ricks Center for Gifted Children.听鈥淓ighth grade is a little more forgiving. You鈥檙e still learning a lot, but you haven鈥檛 figured out what you want to do. In college you have to pick majors.鈥
The girl who envisions herself with her own fashion label (but would settle for running Chanel or Amazon) chose business. With a desire to explore the field, she turned to the administration at Ricks, an on-campus school staffed by the 黑料门 and student teachers听from the听听which in turn looked to Haag, who was happy to oblige.
鈥淵ounger kids are sharper, smarter, better problem solvers than any generation before,鈥 he said. 鈥淎ge just no longer matters the way it used to. You could be an eighth-grader, you could be a 58-year-old. You can work together. You can find common passions. It works.鈥
When all was said and done, Akdis, her team and their Travel Time app did not make the podium in the Madden Challenge. Instead, the top prize went to Redeemer, a mobile app to help users quickly sort waste, recyclables and compost.