Frisco ISD Focus Magazine February 2018 | Page 36

Student Entrepreneur Aims to Make the World a Safer Place Every Frisco ISD student has his or her own story and dreams. Meet Gouzia Sivarajah. Gouzia Sivarajah thinks big. “I’m hoping to take SIINNO Technology global and improve the lives of people all around the world,” she said. The young entrepreneur is just a soph- omore at Heritage High School, but al- ready she has achieved things many people only dream about. A g ra d u a t e o f Fr i s c o Yo u n g Entrepreneurs Academy (YEA!), she launched her own company at only 14 years old. She got the idea for her first product, a device to assist people with low or no vision, at age 12. “I saw a blind person hit his head on a tree branch and he had a cane,” she said. “That inspired me to start creating the MAVI.” The Movement Aid for the Visually Impaired, or MAVI, has sensors to detect objects around someone and uses buzz- ing tones and vibrations to alert the per- son of potential hazards. The device could be used independently or with a cane or service animal to minimize mobility ob- stacles and improve safety. Sivarajah created early prototypes of the MAVI for her eighth grade science proj- ect after her older brother, Krish, taught her the basics of coding. The project won the grand prize in the junior division for physical sciences at the 2016 Dallas Regional Science and Engineering Fair, and moved on to a second-place finish at the Texas Science & Engineering Fair. It’s the first of many technological devices Sivarajah hopes to bring to the market to enhance people’s lives. “I can’t wait to get the MAVI into the hands of the blind community so they can live safer and better lives,” she said. The desire to compete and innovate runs in the family. Both Gouzia and anoth- er older brother, Keirth, were top winners of start-up funding through the annual YEA! investor panel. The YEA! program, a partnership be- tween the Frisco Chamber of Commerce, Frisco Economic Development Corporation and Frisco ISD, guides mid- dle and high school students through the process of starting a real business. Gouzia says her teachers and mentors through the YEA! program helped inspire her success. Her family has also been a huge influence. “I know it sounds boring, but research is one of my favorite things to do,” she said, noting her father has always stressed the importance of learning new things. Sivarajah says she learned organiza- tion from her grandmother and the value of hard work and competition from her mother. “My mom says, ‘You can never lose anything through competition, but there is so much you can gain,’” Sivarajah said. Gouzia took first place for entrepre- neurship at the Business Professionals of America (BPA) State Leadership Conference last spring and advanced to national competition. She is active in BPA and HOSA-Future Health Professionals this school year and hopes to one day work in the medical field. “I want to become a successful doc- tor to help people and help save lives,” she said. She is already making an impact. n Heritage High School sophomore Gouzia Sivarajah founded her own company, Safety Integrated Innovation or SIINNO Technology, to develop solutions that improve people’s lives.