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These are pictures of a science demonstration done by a professional in front of young students from across Indiana at Indiana Adventist Academy.
I organized a science demonstration day at a local elementary school. The sincere excitement and wonder of the kids when being able to do experiments on their own was amazing to watch :)
Photographer: Tim Borny
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Lower Columbia College is proud to host the annual Science Olympiad where K-12 and High School students
complete in academic workshops. Students have gone through much preparation, commitment, coaching and
practice all year for this event. Competitions are related to a multitude of studies such as Genetics,
Engineering, Technology, Thermodynamics, Physics, Anatomy, Earth Science, Biology, Chemistry and more.
Pupils engage in a series of physics experiments in a room which is now, probably, the southernmost downstairs art studio. Note the gas lighting; Monmouth had a power station (at the Forge, Osbaston) but gas lighting was so effective there was probably no immediate need to replace it. The photograph is from the first decade of the C20th.
Amazingly, some of the items in this photograph have survived to this day, or nearly. The benches were in laboratory P4 of the new science building until recently. The boy, dead-centre of the photograph, holds a steam generator that is now stored in laboratory P1. The glass-cased balances were left in the attic of this building (now the Art Department) when science moved to its present location in 1983. Many were sold in the 1990s. One remains on the window ledge (see the image below) although it is not the very same one as seen in the old picture.
Shot with the Holga.
Trinity Science Gallery - something about having electric waistcoats, glow-on-breath garments.....that kinda thing.
Bono's "bubble" suit from the POP Tour was on display. On screen (and on Bono) it looked rubber but it was, in fact made from lots of tiddlywinks stitched together.
Looks better viewed large
The main floor of the Science Complex building at the University of Guelph.
Photo By: Agri-Food and Rural Link
Città della Scienza - Fondazione Idis - Foto del Science Centre - Album Bambini
The Science Carnival is sponsored by the CSU Channel Islands science departments under the leadership of Dr. Phil Hampton, Professor of Chemistry. This annual event first started in Fall 2009 with approximately 250 preschool through eighth (PK-8) grade students attending the event. Over 2200 PK-8 students and their families attended the 2016 Science Carnival.
Città della Scienza - Fondazione Idis - Foto del Science Centre - Album Bambini
Photo: Courtesy of Penny O'Connor
Event: Northeastern Ohio Science and Engineering Fair (NOSEF)
Date: March 10, 2015
Location: Cleveland State University, Euclid Avenue, Cleveland, OH, United States
Western Cuyahoga Audubon Society contributes special awards at the Northeastern Ohio Science and Engineering Fair (NEOSEF), held March 14-17, 2016 at Cleveland State University.
NEOSEF is open to students in grades 7-12 in a seven-county area. In 2015, more than 600 students took part. The NEOSEF grand prize winners will go on the International Science and Engineering Fair. Western Cuyahoga Audubon makes special awards by judges Michelle Manzo and Penny O'Connor.
Established in 1953, the Northeastern Ohio Science and Engineering Fair (NEOSEF) is a non-profit, all volunteer organization, whose goal is to get young adults interested in science and engineering by participating in a science and engineering competition. The Fair has been held every year since 1954 and is affiliated with the Intel International Science and Engineering Fair (ISEF).
NOSEF is sponsored by the Cleveland Clinic, Cleveland State University, and the Great Lakes Science Center.
More: www.neosef.org/about.htm
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Science Museum, Kensington, London, May 1979; Lunar Module replica. Shot on tungsten balanced slide film with (probably) a Praktica LLC. Not sure what lens. That's the real Apollo 10 Command Module in the foreground. I'm not sure where all this stuff is now. (update: both are still there, the LM replica has been refurbished and moved to a different part of the museum - a quick Google Image search shows this. The historic CM has not been moved as far as I can see.)