Agastya has now achieved two gold medals at the competition
Indian-American teenager Agastya Goel, who resides in California, achieved a gold medal at the esteemed 36th International Olympiad in Informatics (IOI) in Egypt. Agastya has now achieved two gold medals at the most challenging programming competition for high school students, coming in fourth place overall with a commendable score of 438.97 out of 600.
Agastya, the son of Ashish Goel, who is a Stanford professor and a former top scorer in IIT-JEE, has emulated his father by achieving academic success and gaining recognition in the global tech community.
“Agastya Goel just got his 2nd IOI Gold medal for the US, the hardest programming contest for high schoolers in the world. He was #4 overall. His father Ashish Goel was #1 of ~1M in the IIT exam 1990 in India and a PhD and CS algo professor at Stanford!” Ashish wrote.
“Like father, like son,” Das added.
The accomplishment of Agastya Goel has attracted significant focus on social media, with numerous people drawing parallels between his achievements and those of his father, Ashish Goel. In 1990, Ashish was the highest scorer in the IIT-JEE exam and later obtained a PhD in computer science from Stanford.
He has established a remarkable professional reputation by working with companies such as Twitter and Stripe, and also gaining recognition as a distinguished professor in algorithmic research.
The International Olympiad in Informatics
The International Olympiad in Informatics (IOI) is considered as one of the top five toughest International Science Olympiads.
Created in 1989 under the auspices of UNESCO, the competition evaluates contestants’ programming abilities and their capacity to tackle intricate algorithmic challenges. The competition lasts for two days and includes challenges that test the skills of even the most advanced high school programmers from around the globe.