Cavetown Releases Album Running With Scissors Along With Empowering ‘Cryptid’ Music Video

This album is a perfect soundtrack for anyone feeling caught between who they were and who they’re becoming.

ASEAN Travel Exchange In Cebu Yields PHP1.4 Billion In Initial Sales Leads

With 363 exhibitors, TRAVEX showcased a diverse range of tourism stakeholders across Southeast Asia.

Cybersecurity Experts Urge Extra Vigilance As Valentine’s Day Scams Rise

Cybersecurity specialists caution users to stay alert as scammers exploit heightened emotions this Valentine season.

Government Infra Projects Helping Boost Demand For Residential Real Estate

Game development and robotics companies add momentum to office leasing activity.

Filipino ICT Professional Delegates Win Australian Taxation Office Challenge

Equal work, equal earn! Project “Closing the Data Gap” receives recognition for taking on the migrant women workforce dataset challenge in Australia.


Filipino ICT Professional Delegates Win Australian Taxation Office Challenge

15
15

How do you feel about this story?

Like
Love
Haha
Wow
Sad
Angry

Promoting financial equity among women, Filipino Tech Community Canberra-Australia (FTTC Australia) delegates won the Australian Taxation Office Challenge category ‘helping women financially’ in the GovHack 2023 International Red Carpet.

On October 6, FTTC Australia congratulated the team members Ahira Martin, Bryan Pajarito, Ryan Macalandag, Reg Macalandag, and Louis Peter Staubitz for their winning project “Closing the Data Gap”.

The project team received the award on November 18 at the University of the Sunshine Coast, Australia.

Inconsistent datasets were a challenge for the team; in the combined data from the Australian Taxation Office and the Australian Bureau of Statistics, the spatial fields were missing and mismatched.

They decided on the project ‘Closing the Data Gap’ to allow women in the workforce, especially migrants who have provisional visas, to present quick results of eligible government services by answering short questionnaires.

Aside from saving time for research, the project also created a prototype website that marks red for the local government areas with low financial outcomes and blue if otherwise.

With a successful initial launch, the team, along with FTCC Australia, aims to conduct user research to understand the root cause of the data gap, the services unknown to migrant women workers, and the most efficient way to connect them.

FTTC Australia proves there is still a big hole to fill in order for women to earn equally; their project can possibly improve the quality of life for future migrants or the Philippine labor force’s inequality.

Photo Credit:
https://hackerspace.govhack.org/, https://www.facebook.com/SBSFilipino
Source:
https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100094100317256, https://hackerspace.govhack.org/