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Longfellow Middle School students attended a “Stay All Day” event where they got to compete with other teams in science ed activities after they competed at the Science Bowl at Jefferson Lab in Newport News, Va., on Saturday March 2, 2024. (Emily Perdue | Jefferson Lab).
Longfellow’s goal for this Science Ed Activity was to hold a tennis ball up with tape and straws.
New building for the Faculty of Science of Leiden University. The first phase will be completed in the first quarter of 2016.
and her sidekick Science Boy...
She wanted to use different liquids to see if they'd clean dirty pennies (she did it this week at the Children's Museum)...
Science Boy wanted to do it to only he misunderstood and started eating the yogurt... luckily there wasn't a penny in it yet :)
Vita Scientia 2016 conference at the Joint Life Sciences Centre in Vilnius, Lithuania. Thanks to Egidijus Songaila for the photos!
The annual Friends of the Sciences Reception was hosted on Saturday, October 19, 2019, from 10-11 a.m. in McGlothlin-Street Hall Atrium. Current students and professors mingled with visitors showing off their award-winning research.
On behalf of iLearn STEAM Crew, I would like to congratulate the participants of the 6th Annual North Jersey Science Olympiad. This year’s 300 Olympians worked in 20 teams to complete 14 challenges in science, technology, engineering and problem solving. It was a wonderful tournament with full of energy and enthusiasm. The four highest scoring teams were awarded trophies and individual students received 1st to 6th place medals.
Cooper Middle School during Round Robbin Match Four at the Science Bowl at Jefferson Lab in Newport News, Va., on Saturday March 2, 2024. (Emily Perdue | Jefferson Lab).
The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) National Science Bowl is a nationwide academic competition that tests students’ knowledge in all areas of science and mathematics.
Another science project gone horribly wrong
I've been waiting for a reason to use this adorable image.
Thanks for giving me one
Linda
Dreyfuss + Blackford Architecture’s design for the Powerhouse Science Center re-envisions a historic riverfront structure as a hub for science education, exploration and promotion in the City of Sacramento. On the banks of the Sacramento River, the Science Center grows out from an abandoned power station building. As a principal component of the Riverfront activation, the Powerhouse Science Center anchors Robert T. Matsui Waterfront Park and borders the southern terminus of the 32-mile American River Bike Trail.
Vacant for over half a century, the structure undergoes a complete historic rehabilitation and the construction of a new floor level inside. A new two-story addition projects from the east side, containing a lobby, classrooms, offices and a cafe. A 110-seat planetarium is prominently on display with a zinc-clad hemispheric dome rising above the building’s mass. As representation of our place in the universe, the facade and building mass is sectioned by multiple planes, creating continuous vector lines that extend across the building and site. From satellites to world landmarks, the lines form connections with local and global points of interest.
The original PG&E Power Station B was designed in 1912 in the Beaux Arts Style by architect Willis Polk and was formally closed in 1954. It is on the National Register of Historic Places, California Register of Historic Places and the Sacramento Register of Historic & Cultural Resources. The Powerhouse Science Center is designed to achieve a USGBC LEED Rating of Silver.
On behalf of iLearn STEAM Crew, I would like to congratulate the participants of the 6th Annual North Jersey Science Olympiad. This year’s 300 Olympians worked in 20 teams to complete 14 challenges in science, technology, engineering and problem solving. It was a wonderful tournament with full of energy and enthusiasm. The four highest scoring teams were awarded trophies and individual students received 1st to 6th place medals.
The Regeneron International Science and Engineering Fair (ISEF), founded and produced by Society for Science, is the world’s largest international high school science competition, providing an annual opportunity for nearly 2,000 students from all over the world to showcase their independent research and compete for approximately $5 million in prizes
In 2019, Regeneron became the title sponsor of ISEF to help reward and celebrate the best and brightest young minds globally and encourage them to pursue careers in STEM as a way to positively impact the world.
Alumni of Regeneron ISEF have gone on to have world-changing careers in science and engineering and earn some of the most esteemed honors, including National Medal of Science recipients, MacArthur Foundation Fellows, National Academy of Sciences and National Academy of Engineering Inductees and a range of entrepreneurs.
Founded by the belief that advances in science are key to solving global challenges, Regeneron ISEF works to support and invest in young scientists who are generating ideas and acting as catalysts for the change needed to improve the well-being of all people and the planet.
Society for Science and Regeneron engage young people as active change agents and support the hard work and cutting-edge discoveries of promising young leaders who are motivated by curiosity and inspired to improve the world with STEM. Regeneron ISEF reinforces this potential and invests in the best and brightest young minds by continuing to nurture all fields of scientific research to foster transformative innovations.
Longfellow Middle School students attended a “Stay All Day” event where they got to compete with other teams in science ed activities after they competed at the Science Bowl at Jefferson Lab in Newport News, Va., on Saturday March 2, 2024. (Emily Perdue | Jefferson Lab).
Longfellow’s goal for this Science Ed Activity was to hold a tennis ball up with tape and straws.
Colvin Run Elementary School students attended a “Stay All Day” event where they got to compete with other teams in science ed activities after they competed at the Science Bowl at Jefferson Lab in Newport News, Va., on Saturday March 2, 2024. (Emily Perdue | Jefferson Lab).
The goal of this Science Ed Activity was to make the longest extending spaghetti structure with dry spaghetti and tape.