Keyword: Intel Science Talent Search
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For her senior science thesis, Calhoun High School researcher Emma McNamara studied macaque monkeys to better understand the relationship between the morphology, or structure, of females’ canine teeth and their dominance in the social hierarchy of their troop. By studying teeth molds at New York University’s Anthropology Department and films of macaques in the wild, she found that females with bigger canine teeth equaled or surpassed the aggressiveness of males. more
Lawrence High School students Arielle Bryn Chapin, Andrew Chen and Alexandra Leigh Tse, Jason Michael Kay from Hewlett High School and Avigael Sosnowik, from Stella K. Abraham High School for Girls in Hewlett Harbor were named Intel Science Talent Search 2013 semifinalists. more
Two Oceanside High School seniors have been named semifinalists in the 2012 Intel Science Talent Search. Anoj Ilanges and David Allan Sheynberg were recognized for their projects on oncology and … more
Some students go sledding on a snow day. Others catch up on sleep. But for 17-year-old Ben Hawriluk, a recent snow day was a day of celebration, when the South Side High School senior found out he … more
Calhoun High School senior Jenny Wu is on quite the roll. In the fall, she was named a semifinalist in the prestigious Siemens Westinghouse Science and Technology Competition. Then, in December, she learned that she had been accepted to her “dream school” –– Yale University. This past week, she received word that she was named a semifinalist in the Intel Science Talent Search. more
Kennedy High School senior Josh Cohen spent the summer of 2010 peering into a high-powered microscope at SUNY Stony Brook to study aerosols –– solids and liquids suspended inside gas molecules that were so small they were imperceptible to the human eye. more
Hewlett High School senior Eric Brooks traveled to Washington, D.C., for the Intel Science Talent Search competition March 11-16 not expecting to place in the top 10, but he left the nation's capital having taken fifth place in the prestigious competition. more
Lori Ying, a South Side High School senior, was surprised last month to find out that she had been named a semifinalist in the Intel Science Talent Search. But when she learned last week that she had been selected as one of 40 finalists in the prestigious research competition, she was shocked. more
South Side High School seniors Alyssa Ehrlich and Lori Ying are best friends, and do nearly everything together. So it’s no surprise that they were on a field trip together earlier this month. The pair were at Queens College, on a tour of the various science labs there. more
Nine South Side High school research students have submitted papers to the Intel Science Talent Search this year. A program of Science for Society and the Public, the Intel search is America’s oldest and most prestigious pre-college science competition. The event brings together 40of the best and brightest young scientific minds in America to compete for $1.25 million in awards and scholarships. more
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