General17.05.2011

SA teens strike gold at international science fair

Danielle Boer (17), a matric pupil from St. Dominic’s Academy in Newcastle, was awarded a special award  in the sociology subcategory with a project that investigated how playing music could lead to increased productivity in factories.

Another South African learner, Alessio Giuricich (16) from Bishops Diocesan College in Cape Town, received R 7 000  in prize money for winning the special award in the Behavioural Sciences subcategory with a project that studied sugar dependence among adolescents and went on to win second place of R10 500 in the Intel Grand Awards the very next day.

Boer and Giuricich were among nine South Africans who travelled to ISEF to compete with more than 1 500 young scientists from around the world. In all, more than 400 finalists received awards and prizes for their work.

“This global competition features youth trying to solve the world’s most pressing challenges through science, and we’re very proud of the South African learners who excelled in the international stage of the competition, especially in the Behavioural Sciences category,” said Parthy Chetty, Head of Corporate Affairs at Intel South Africa.

“The hard work and grueling hours of research evident in these learners’ projects paid off in the end.”

The two first prize winners hailed from California and received $75 000 along with the Gordon E. Moore Award, in honor of the Intel co-founder and retired chairman and CEO, for developing a potentially more effective and less expensive cancer treatment that places tin metal near a tumor before radiation therapy.

ISEF is owned and administered by the Society for Science & the Public, a nonprofit organisation dedicated to public engagement in scientific research and education. The Society’s president, Elizabeth Marincola, hailed the winners as “proof of what students can accomplish when they are inspired to pursue inquiry-based research.”

Intel has been committed to the International Science and Engineering Fair for the past 15 years because it believes that fostering a passion for math and science in today’s youth is imperative for the global economy and the future of innovation.

The Intel International Science and Engineering Fair is just one element of Intel’s commitment to education, which includes extensive teacher training and employee volunteer programs to help improve education around the world.

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