736 results found for "16"

 

Press Release

40 of Nation’s Brightest High School Seniors Named Intel Science Talent Search 2016 Finalists

Intel Corporation and the Society for Science & the Public today recognized 40 U.S. high school seniors as finalists in the Intel Science Talent Search, the nation’s oldest and most prestigious pre-college science and math competition.

Blog Post

Volunteer at Intel ISEF 2016 in Phoenix

 

Press Release

Intel Science Talent Search 2016 Announces 300 U.S. High School Semifinalists for 75th Anniversary Year

Three hundred high school seniors will be named semifinalists in the Intel Science Talent Search 2016, a program of Society for Science & the Public. Visit http://student.societyforscience.org/intel-sts at 12:00 p.m. EST to see the list of semifinalists.

Blog Post

Intel STS 2016 Semifinalists Announced

Hayley Bay Barna answers questions at the 2024 STS alumni dinner.
Group photo from Save the Harbor/Save the Bay
2024 Science Talent Search finalist Alexis Li
When the moon passes in front of the sun, the moon casts its shadow on the Earth, blocking the view of our local star. This is a type of eclipse (seen here in an illustration).

Blog Post

Learn about the Great American Eclipse with Society for Science

On April 8, 2024 people in Canada, Mexico, Texas, Oklahoma, Arkansas, Missouri, Illinois, Kentucky, Indiana, Ohio, Pennsylvania, New York, Vermont, New Hampshire and Maine, along with small parts of Tennessee and Michigan will experience a total solar eclipse. This impressive phenomenon occurs when the moon completely blocks the sun, darkening the sky for several minutes.
Science News, Science News Explores and Science News Learning have all developed materials aimed at educating the public on how to safely view the eclipse.

Shanya Gill presenting her project at Public Day 2023

Blog Post

Five Questions with Shanya Gill, winner of the $25,000 Thermo Fisher Scientific ASCEND Award

In 2023, Shanya Gill clinched the prestigious Thermo Fisher Scientific ASCEND (Aspiring Scientists Creating Exciting New Discoveries) Award at the Thermo Fisher Scientific Junior Innovators Challenge (Thermo Fisher JIC). Her achievement not only garnered attention within the scientific community and by the media, but also captured the interest of the U.S. Fire Administrator. Just last week, 12-year-old Shanya Gill, hailing from San Jose, California, along with her father, Binny Gill, received a special invitation to visit the U.S. Fire Administrator’s office (USFA), where they met with distinguished figures like Lori Moore-Merrell and other senior leaders. During the visit, they engaged in discussions about fire suppression, Shanya’s innovative work on fire safety, and had the opportunity to tour the National Emergency Training Center campus and memorials.