Medicine Hat Kiwanis Club 50/50 raffle will support the Regional Science Fair
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The Medicine Hat Kiwanis Club is selling tickets for its online 50/50 cash raffle in support of the Kiwanis Regional Science Fair. The winning ticket can win a grand prize of $5,000 or a minimum of $2,000.
The 2021 science fair is over, which included Debasri Jena, a Grade 10 student at Medicine Hat High School, winning with her dehydration sensor project where she took extracts from different fruits and vegetables. Jena took part in the virtual national science fair this week, which would normally take place in Ottawa.
Barry Finkelman, a Kiwanis club member, says the success students in the Hat have at science fairs shows the importance of supporting them.
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The 67th Annual Greater San Diego Science And Engineering Fair took place virtually last month. Here is a look back at the first fair in 1955.
From The San Diego Union, Saturday, April 16, 1955:
PRIZES AWARDED AT SCIENCE FAIR
Girl, Boy Will Get Trip to Cleveland
An Escondido boy who built a machine to take the salt out of ocean water and a San Diego girl who made a series of models of microscopic animals won grand prizes last night in the opening of the Greater San Diego Science Fair in the Institute of Aeronautical Science building.
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The boy is David Smith of Escondido Union High School. The girl is Evelyn La Heist of Kearny High School. By winning first places in the senior division of the fair they become eligible for an all-expense trip to the National Science Fair in Cleveland May 12, 13, and 14.
2021 Northern B.C. Regional Science Fair logo. (Facebook)
FORT ST. JOHN, B.C. – The Northern B.C. Regional Science Fair submissions have been received, and voting for the People’s Choice award ends Wednesday at noon.
A total of 97 students from School Districts 59, 60, and 81 worked on 89 projects in a virtual science fair this year.
Chairperson Jennie Copeland says a team of dedicated volunteers have worked countless hours to provide excellent learning opportunities for students.
“As a committee, we are very grateful to the wonderful sponsors who step up year after year to donate funds to keep this fair going, as well as many of their employees volunteer to take time out of the busy schedules to help with judging over the past week,” says Copeland.
Master of All Trades, Jack of None: Mrinal Chaudhury
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Have you ever met a person who is as diligent as she is helpful? A weird blend of hard work, dedication, innovation, creativity and approachability is precisely what makes this story worth admiring. One such person for whom even the above description sounds modest is
Mrinal Chaudhury, a final year student of the Department of Industrial Design. From being a designer, a writer, an editor, a leader, and now a mentor, she has the rare ability to be great at everything she sets her foot in, be it the kind of commitment she displayed while spearheading Monday Morning or being one of the very few to break all stereotypes of the Industrial Design department with an exemplary academic profile.
CCISD Science Fair goes completely virtual this year
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Kaffie Middle School, eighth grader Temoc Zamora has been competing in science fair since sixth grade. This year is not different.
and last updated 2021-01-28 09:39:44-05
CORPUS CHRISTI, Texas â When you think back to those days of participating in science fair, you will recall looking for that tri-fold board, doing some research and nervously presenting to a group of judges.
This year those nerves can be calmed as students do things virtually.
âEverything is virtual, they submit their boards virtually there are no more of the trifled boards, we even had our secondary students submit recorded presentations,â said Wendy Devoe, a secondary science specialist for the Corpus Christi Independent School District.