Partner PostsGraduate's degree project gets international exposure - Scottish News

Graduate’s degree project gets international exposure – Scottish News

AN EDINBURGH NAPIER graduate has won international recognition for her degree project.

Rachel Naysmith, a product design graduate  has been selected for an international show after her degree app project M.O.S.S – my own sustainable self for a project which rewards good environmental deeds and helps combat climate anxiety.

Rachel’s project has been selected for the Global Grad Show, an initiative by the Art Dubai Group which showcases 100 potentially world-changing ideas.

Rachel, 23, of Insch, Aberdeenshire, developed M.O.S.S. as her major project on her way to a first class B Des (Hons) Edinburgh Napier degree and the 2020 Class Medal, and she was encouraged to enter the Global Grad Show after her work was spotted on Instagram.

Rachel Naysmith - Scottish News
Rachel Naysmith, 23, has won international recognition for her work

M.O.S.S. recognises that people doing their best to follow environmentally-friendly lifestyles can easily become disheartened and feel their personal initiatives count for little when set against the catastrophes which play out on the news.

However, the app-based project keeps motivation levels high by providing targets and allowing users to keep tabs on their own sustainable efforts.

It rewards the achievement of goals with a M.O.S.S. panel housing a mini ecosystem which can be attached to the outside of any building.

The newly-opened exhibition, normally in Dubai but being held online this year, attracted 1,600 applications from 270 universities in 60 countries.

Rachel’s app has been selected for the Global Grad Show.

The project appears at the interactive online show under the category, “Coping in a complex world: Supporting mental health in challenging online and offline environments”.

Speaking on her work Rachel said: “A one metre squared area of moss produces the same amount of oxygen as 78 trees,”

“You are not only provided with a visual representation of your efforts but you also help purify the air, reducing air pollution one M.O.S.S. panel at a time.”

She added: “I am very proud of the project and also proud to be one of the first four graduates from Scotland to be represented on this international platform.”

The app-based project keeps motivation levels high by providing targets and allowing users to keep tabs on their own sustainable efforts.

Tadeu Baldani Caravieri, director of Global Grad Show, said: “The diversity of the community of young talented researchers we bring together at Global Grad Show has many facets: they span across six continents, institutions from Ivy League to regional colleges and disciplines from bioengineering through to architecture.

“They do have however, a reassuring common denominator: they investigate problems, social and environmental, that matter for everyone.

“Today we present 100 projects that are, in essence, alternatives and remedies put forward by our global community of graduates whose ambition is to create a future-ready world.”

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