The culminating awards ceremony honored the following three National Winners with $100,000 in Samsung technology and classroom supplies for their schools:
SCHOOL | CITY/STATE | COMMUNITY ISSUE, STEM SOLUTION & VIDEO |
Bentonville West High School | Centerton, AR | Public Health – Cancer: Oral cancer causes 170,000 deaths annually, with early detection critical to saving lives. In Arkansas, limited access to affordable specialists and diagnostics makes detection especially challenging, particularly in rural and low-income areas. In 2024, 90% of residents didn’t visit a dentist. To address this, students developed an AI-powered mobile cancer screening app, allowing users to take images of their mouths and self-screen for oral cancer—offering an affordable, accessible early detection solution. https://youtu.be/f0uTMiuasF8 |
Bloomington High School South | Bloomington, IN | Accessibility – Sports: Nearly 20% of Americans experience hearing loss, and with 8 million high school athletes participating in sports, many are at risk of damaging their hearing aids during physical activities. Current solutions are bulky and non-compliant. Storm Shield, a lightweight, eco-friendly headband, protects hearing aids from wind, rain, and impact using hydrophobic mesh and a wireless motion sensor for safety. Combining material science, programming, IoT, machine learning, and 3D printing, this all-girl student-led project offers an affordable, sustainable, and innovative solution for athletes' hearing aid protection. https://youtu.be/PlQEmMA2O9w |
Charter School of Wilmington | Wilmington, DE | Public Health – Physician Shortage: Delaware's physician shortage has left several counties without adequate access to healthcare, causing primary care wait times to soar by nearly 200%. High school students developed the AKQUA-Gel hydrogel bandage—a smart, AI-powered smart bandage with IoT sensors and 3D-printed components that monitors wound healing in real-time. Linked to a mobile app, it tracks biomarkers like moisture, pH, and oxygen, providing data to patients and doctors, advancing treatment, and reducing hospital congestion by enabling remote wound monitoring. https://youtu.be/Vs-Ou3CnCZg |
In addition to the National Winners, four special honors were awarded and presented by leaders across the Samsung Solve for Tomorrow community: Tony Nobles of BUILD.org presented the Rising Entrepreneurship Award; Anne Kelly of Ceres awarded the Sustainability Innovation Award; Tim Chau, Co-founder and CEO of Impact Media, presented the Community Choice Award; and Cordell Hull, Samsung Electronics America’s Executive Vice President of U.S. Public Affairs announced the Employee Choice Award. Each of these honors came with additional prize packages on top of the $50,000 awarded to all National Finalists—or $100,000 for each of the three National Winners. To build on that school support, all 10 teams also received a Samsung WAF Interactive Display and hands-on training from the Samsung Education Solutions team to help bring AI and interactive display technology into their classrooms.
SCHOOL | CITY/STATE | COMMUNITY ISSUE, STEM SOLUTION & VIDEO |
Rising Entrepreneurship Award: From the 50 State Winners, one school was selected for the Rising Entrepreneurship Award, receiving a $25,000 prize to develop a sustainable venture extending beyond the competition. |
Bloomington High School South | Bloomington, IN | Accessibility – Sports: Nearly 20% of Americans experience hearing loss, and with 8 million high school athletes participating in sports, many are at risk of damaging their hearing aids during physical activities. Current solutions are bulky and non-compliant. Storm Shield, a lightweight, eco-friendly headband, protects hearing aids from wind, rain, and impact using hydrophobic mesh and a wireless motion sensor for safety. Combining material science, programming, IoT, machine learning, and 3D printing, this all-girl student-led project offers an affordable, sustainable, and innovative solution for athletes' hearing aid protection. https://youtu.be/PlQEmMA2O9w |
Sustainability Innovation Award Winner: One State Winner earned the Sustainability Innovation Award for driving sustainable change through STEM, receiving an additional $25,000 prize package including Samsung ENERGY STAR® technology. |
Academy of Aerospace and Engineering | Windsor, CT | Climate Action – Heat Disparities: In approximately 65 U.S. cities, the Urban Heat Island (UHI) effect causes temperatures to rise by 8°F for 34 million people, a significant temperature increase that impacts public health and sustainable city development. To identify locations with heat-absorptive surfaces (e.g., dark pavement, roofs) or areas lacking cooling vegetation, high school students created H.E.A.T.M.A.P., an AI-powered app using 3D-printed, solar-powered IoT sensors with thermal imaging to track, predict, and mitigate UHI locations in real-time, combatting climate-driven heat disparities. https://youtu.be/MZ2a3BZEHzI |
Community Choice Winner: The public voted for one Community Choice Winner from the 10 National Finalists, awarding the school an added $10,000 prize package. |
Edgerton Elementary School | Maplewood, MN | Public Safety – Ice Hazard: Minnesota’s frozen lakes pose a serious safety risk, with numerous fatalities each winter from falling through ice. To address this, middle school students developed Ice Savers, a sensor system that measures ice thickness and shares real-time data through a mobile app. Using ultrasonic sensors, buoys, and AI-driven analysis, their solution helps prevent accidents by informing users when lake ice is safe to walk on. https://youtu.be/LzUOlEAJ-0w |
Employee Choice Winner: Samsung employees selected one Employee Choice Winner from the 10 National Finalists, awarding the winning school an additional $10,000 in prizes. |
Bentonville West High School | Centerton, AR | Public Health – Cancer: Oral cancer causes 170,000 deaths annually, with early detection critical to saving lives. In Arkansas, limited access to affordable specialists and diagnostics makes detection especially challenging, particularly in rural and low-income areas. In 2024, 90% of residents didn’t visit a dentist. To address this, students developed an AI-powered mobile cancer screening app, allowing users to take images of their mouths and self-screen for oral cancer—offering an affordable, accessible early detection solution. https://youtu.be/f0uTMiuasF8 |
To learn more about Samsung Solve for Tomorrow, please visit www.samsung.com/solve and follow us on Instagram and Facebook. Applications for the 2025-2026 national STEM competition will open in August.