Title: UPA 2nd Science Fair
1UPA 2nd Science Fair
- Thursday, May 27, 2008
- 530 pm 900 pm
2Science Fair Schedule
3Purpose
- The purpose of a science fair is to develop
and/or reinforce the student's interest in
science. The student's effort while working on
the project, meetings with teachers, and the
discussions with other students doing projects
and with the judges, all of these reinforce the
student's interest and are valuable learning
experiences. - The primary purpose of the science fair project
is to teach the scientific method of
investigation. This systematic way to approach
technical problems or problems arising from
student curiosity about a scientific topic, can
help students in approaching any number of
problems in their futures. Systematic thinking
and planning are key to success in tomorrow's
workplace. This effort affords students the
opportunity to experience formal investigation in
a competitive environment while enabling them to
learn from their peers.
4Who Participates
- All students at UPA must participate for extra
academic credit. - There will be some class time emphasis to prepare
students for the science fair. However, most of
the work will take place out of the class rooms. - If assistance and/or guidance is needed, students
are expected to work with their Science teacher
to set the time needed.
5Repetition of Previous Years Work
- Repetition of Previous Year's Work A project
exhibited in the previous Science Fair may not be
done without Science teachers approval. It will
required substantial expansion and development.
6Judging
- UPA successfully utilizes medical doctors and
scientists employed by local industries, teachers
from neighboring schools, or any adults with
science background or interest. - UPA does not have the student's parents or
teachers doing the judging, as this places both
in an uncomfortable position when the winners are
announced. Obviously, teachers, advisors and
parents can be involved in other ways in the fair.
7Science Fair Prizes
- Students will be eligible to win first, second or
third places in one of the scientific categories.
- First place winners in any of the categories will
normally be eligible to participate in County
Science Fair, however the deadline for the County
Fair has pass this school year.
8Planning a Science Fair Project
- The time necessary to develop a good project
varies from project to project and from one grade
level to the next. At the junior high and high
school levels, a time period of two or three
months is usually adequate, although some
students may work on their projects longer. - UPA is allowing students 3 months, however there
are projects that may complete an excellent
investigation in a shorter period of time.
9Planning a Science Fair Project
- This is information to help you with your science
fair project. Through a science fair project you
can learn what it is like to think like a
scientist, to investigate and experiment in an
area of your interest, and to share your results.
- A science fair project must use the "scientific
method" and not be just a demonstration or
comparison. We hope this presentation, will
provide you with information to prepare you for
planning a good project using the "scientific
method". - All student projects will need PRIOR approval
from their Science teacher before any
experimenting can be done.
10Criteria for Success
- Students are to answer a scientific question by
doing an experiment and analyzing the results.
The successful student will be one who thinks of
a clear question, develops an hypothesis
(educated guess) regarding the results of the
experiment to answer the question, documents
clear measurements and observations, and draws
sensible conclusions which refer back to the
original hypothesis. - The hypothesis will preferably contain a cause
(what change did the experimenter make) and an
effect (what happened as a result of the change).
- Example If I reduce the amount of light
(cause), a plant will grow slower (effect). - Judges will carefully look at how the student
controlled the conditions of the experiment to
assure that the results came from the changes
that were made and that control experiments are
done to provide some way to measure the results
against.
11Doing a First Class Project
A first class science fair project has four major
features. All four features are equally
important. The following will help you plan and
do your project.
- It contains an original, high quality experiment.
- The results of your experiment are clearly and
neatly displayed. - The display grabs the attention of the judges
- The project includes a scientific paper that
tells you everything about your project. It also
includes a notebook, journal or log book. It
should be kept by the student and displayed at
their table on fair day.
12Making a Timetable
- Get out or make a calendar you can mark important
information on. - Mark the date of the science fair.
- Cross off days planned for family, club
activities and trips. - Got your topic picked yet? Now work backwards
from the day your project is due. - Leave at least two weeks to write the final draft
of your paper and to put together your display. - Mark off a week for your first draft and a few
days for your teacher to review it. - Now you need a large block of time to collect
your data. Plants and seeds need weeks to sprout
and to grow. - Are you planning to chart some kind of activity
for a month or more? Then you will know when you
need to start your experiment.
13Presenting Your Project
All of your hard work and your well done
experiment will not be noticed if your project
does not grab the attention of the judges and the
public. Your project will be examined your
efforts appreciated and may be rewarded if your
project is
- Organized
- The Title Is the Beginning
- Eye Catching and Attention Holding
- Correctly Presented, Well Constructed
14Organized
- Arrange the presentation of your project so that
the judges can easily examine and understand your
experiment and your results. With one quick
glance, a viewer should be able to easily find
the four necessary parts of your display - The title, how you did your experiment, your
data, and your conclusions. - Remember, even though you are familiar with your
topic and your work, when the judges see it, they
will have no idea what your project is about.
15The Title Is the Beginning
- Your title is what the judges might see first.
But it should be so much more than just a
beginning. A good title grabs the attention of
the casual observer. It is short, yet it
correctly and completely describes your entire
project. - A good title begs the people looking at your
project to dig deeper. Do not disappoint them. - Make sure that your title tells us what your
project is about.
16Eye Catching and Attention Holding
- Home built equipment, neat and colorful headings,
graphs and tables all draw attention to your
project. The careful use of contrasting colors
will help. - For filling in charts and bar graphs,
construction paper cut-outs look much better than
coloring white paper. For line graphs, use
different colored marker pens instead of pencils.
- One area often needing extra attention is the
labeling of graphs, charts, diagrams and tables.
Each item must have its own very descriptive
title. All columns, axes and data must be clearly
labeled and identified. A person should be able
to understand each graph without having to read
your paper. - Bar graphs, line graphs and pie charts all have
different purposes. Check with your math teacher
to make sure you have the right graph to display
your type of data.
17Correctly Presented, Well Constructed
- When your display is constructed, observe the
size limitations (48), safety considerations and
other rules for presentation of your project. - Build a sturdy display that will not fall apart
before you even have it placed up. You will not
want to construct your display using only poster
board and tape. It will not stand up straight
more than a few hours. - It is okay for adults to help you construct your
display. There are also display boards that can
be purchased at a reasonable cost.
18Not Allowed at Project
- Living organisms (i.e., plants, animals, microbes
- Taxidermy specimens or parts
- Preserved vertebrate or invertebrate animals
- Human or animal food
- Human/animal parts or body fluids (for example,
blood, urine) Exceptions teeth, hair, nails,
dried animal bones, histological dry mount
sections, and completely sealed wet mount tissue
slides. - Plant materials (living, dead or preserved) which
are in their raw, unprocessed or non-manufactured
state Exception manufactured construction
materials used in building the project or display.
19Not Allowed at Project
- All chemicals including water Exceptions water
integral to an enclosed apparatus or water
supplied by the Display and Safety Committee. - All hazardous substances or devices for example,
poisons, drugs, firearms, weapons, ammunition,
reloading devices, and lasers (as indicated in
item 5 in the section of these rules entitled
"Allowed at Project or Booth BUT with the
Restrictions Indicated) - Dry ice or other sublimating solids
- Sharp items (for example, syringes, needles,
pipettes, knives - Flames or highly flammable materials
20Not Allowed at Project
- Batteries with open-top cells
- Awards, medals, business cards, flags,
endorsements and/or acknowledgements (graphic or
written) unless the item(s) are an integral part
of the project - Photographs or other visual presentations
depicting vertebrate animals in surgical
techniques, dissections, necropsies, or other lab
procedures - Active Internet or e-mail connections as part of
displaying or operating the project at the Intel
ISEF
21Not Allowed at Project
- Prior years' written material or visual
depictions on the vertical display board.
Exception the project title displayed in the
Finalist's booth may mention years or which year
the project is (for example, "Year Two of an
Ongoing Study"). Continuation project must have
the Continuation Project Form (7) vertically
displayed. - Glass or glass objects unless deemed by the
Display and Safety Committee to be an integral
and necessary part of the project (Exception
glass that is an integral part of a commercial
product such as a computer screen) - Any apparatus deemed unsafe by the Scientific
Review Committee, the Display and Safety
Committee, or Science Service (for example, large
vacuum tubes or dangerous ray-generating devices,
empty tanks that previously contained combustible
liquids or gases, pressurized tanks, etc.)
22Benefits of Participating
The Competition and Educational Experience
- The science fair project is the culmination of
hard work and persistent investigation. It
affords a young scientist the opportunity to
share their interests with parents, relatives,
neighbors, and teachers as well as the chance to
be interviewed by the judges who are scientists,
engineers, doctors, and others with scientific
interests. - The opportunity significantly contributes to the
education of students in the thinking process of
formulating the project and actually doing the
experiments. It may mean the beginning of a
life-long fascination with science.
23Benefits of Participating
Why Do a Science Fair Project?
- Doing a science project provides an opportunity
for students to - Learn and practice critical thinking, inquiry and
investigative skills - Learn research methods and encourage the
development of research techniques - obtain data,
keep a research log or notebook, learn graphing
and develop conclusions - Foster imagination and creative thought
- Develop organizational skills
- Work independently as well as in a group
- Enhance communications skills
24Benefits of Participating
Why Do a Science Fair Project?
- Meet others interested in science study
- Earn recognition for academic excellence
- Win awards and special awards or earn an expense
paid trip
The future, it is said, lies in science,
mathematics, and technology. For those with the
interest, talent, and ability, there are
opportunities and exciting careers. It is a
future that seeks to improve lives of people, to
increase their productivity, to expand their
minds, and to extend their potentials.
25The Scientific Method Cause and Effect
- Scientists observe everything in the world from
the viewpoint of cause and effect. THERE IS NO
MAGIC! - Scientists believe that all events are the result
of a collection of other earlier events. - Take a split second. Watch something happen, like
fireworks exploding, an alarm clock starts
ringing, or a leaf twisting once in the breeze.
The events that happened before the split second
that you watched are the "causes". The single
event you saw during that split second is called
the "effect". - With the help of your family or classmates, pick
a single, split second event. Try to name twenty
or so other events that helped cause it.
26The Scientific Method Cause and Effect
- Scientific Method Each collection of causes will
produce a predictable event. - Gaining knowledge about our world is simply
understanding how and why the causes create a
particular event. - Over the years, scientists have developed a
step-by-step method to investigate an event. It
is called a "scientific method". The carefully
studied event is called an "experiment". - If care and honesty are used, the scientific
method will help you study your experiment. - You should be able to discover the correct cause
and effect relationships.
27Steps Through the Scientific Method
- Pick a Topic Before an event can be studied you
must have some idea of what it is that you want
to observe. Your topic might be "acid rain. - Limit Your Topic You have very little time and
resources. You will only be able to study an
extremely small collection of events. You must,
therefore, limit your experiment to one or two
specific events. "I will study the effect of
nitrate bearing acid rain on a brick."
28Steps Through the Scientific Method
- Study, Observe and Gather Read about your
limited topic. Observe related events. Gather
existing information concerning your limited
topic. Look for unexplained or unexpected events
or results. Also, you might need to learn
something about the field of mathematics known
and statistics. - Generalize Organize what you know about your
topic. Make lists of known causes for specific
events. Describe what generally happens when you
observe related events.
29Steps Through the Scientific Method
- Theorize, Form a Question and Predict Write a
sentence that predicts what will happen if you do
your experiment. This statement is called a
"theory". Your theory must agree with
observations already studied. From your theory
put together the exact question that you want to
answer with your experiment. State what you think
would happen if some of the causes of your event
were changed. Causes that can change are called
"variables". Some variables are turned on or off
like a light switch, others change in size like
the temperature setting of an oven.
30Steps Through the Scientific Method
- Experiment Design, and do, a series of
experiments. You must design each experiment so
you can observe the results if one and only one
variable is changed. By changing just one
variable, you can determine that variable's
effect on your chosen event. To see the real
effect, you may need to change the size of a
single variable several times. Be sure to include
one or more experiments when none of the
variables are changed on purpose. This is called
the "control experiment". The control is very
important. It shows the normal results from your
experiment if you don't try to change anything.
Be careful, you may be able to keep many
variables from changing, but some you usually
can't do anything about. Some variables you have
control over are room temperature, time of day,
how far you stretch a spring, relative humidity
and how hungry your human or animal subject is.
Some variables that you can't do anything about
are atmospheric pressure, how bright the sunshine
is, the mood skill, reflexes or previous dietary
habits of yourself and/or subjects
31Steps Through the Scientific Method
- Examine Your Result Did your experiments give
you the expected results? Why or why not? Be very
honest! Reexamine your experiments. Was more than
one variable changed at one time? Was your
experiment done with the exact same steps each
time? Are there other causes that you had not
considered or observed? Were there errors in your
observations? How large were the errors? If your
physical skills were involved, how much better
did you get at doing your job with each repeat?
Remember that understanding errors and reporting
that a suspected variable did not change the
results can be valuable information.
32Steps Through the Scientific Method
- Draw Conclusions What variables are important?
Was your theory correct? Did you collect the
proper data? Did you collect enough data? Does
more work need to be done or is your experiment
finished?
33The Research Paper
- A research paper consists of (A) the written
presentation of your investigation and
experimentationInvestigative Research, or (B) a
Library Research. The Library Research should not
be "A Book Report", but should be an
investigation and comparison of divergent
theories collected. - Separate judging criteria are established for
both categories of papers. - Scientific thought and procedures will receive
major credit in the judging. Judging criteria for
library research papers will heavily stress the
analysis and application of the research data and
the depth of the research effort (quality and
quantity of the references).
34The Research Paper Requirements
Length of paper The body of the paper
(introduction, materials, methods and procedures,
results and discussion and conclusions) is
limited to eight (8) pages, double spaced, in
type no smaller than 10 characters per inch
(elite type). These 8 pages exclude the abstract,
bibliography, graphs, and appendices.
- Binding
- Cover Page
- Abstract
- Judging
35The Research Paper Requirements
- Binding The Research Paper must be stapled with
no other binding no plastic cover, folder or
three ring binders allowed. - Cover Page The cover page states the student's
name, school name and address, title of the
research, grade in school, name of the advisor
and category of the research. Make your title
concise but also descriptive. Your title should
indicate the nature of your research, not the
entire content. The best titles are usually ten
(10) words or less. - Abstract An abstract of no more than 250 words
must be included before the title page. - Judging Papers will be judged solely on this
year's work. Be sure that it is clear to the
judges what this year's work is.
36Category Descriptions
- ANIMAL SCIENCES Study of animals - animal
genetics, ornithology, ichthyology, herpetology,
entomology, animal ecology, animal anatomy and
physiology, circadian rhythms, animal husbandry,
histology, animal physiology, invertebrate
physiology, studies of invertebrates, animal
development, animal pathology, population
genetics, systematics, etc. - BEHAVIORAL AND SOCIAL SCIENCES Human behavior,
social and community relationshipspsychology,
sociology, anthropology, archaeology, ethology,
ethnology, linguistics, learning, perception,
urban problems, reading problems, public opinion
surveys, educational testing, clinical and
developmental psychology, etc.
37Category Descriptions
- BIOCHEMISTRY Chemistry of life processes -
general biochemistry, metabolism, structural
biochemistry, protein chemistry, food chemistry,
hormones, etc. - CELLULAR AND MOLECULAR BIOLOGY Cellular
biology, cellular physiology, cellular and
molecular genetics, immunology, molecular
biology, etc. - CHEMISTRY Study of nature and composition of
matter and laws governing it - general chemistry,
organic chemistry (other than biochemistry),
inorganic chemistry, materials, plastics,
pesticides, metallurgy, soil chemistry, physical
chemistry, etc.
38Category Descriptions
- COMPUTER SCIENCE Study and development of
computer hardware, software engineering, Internet
networking and communications, databases,
graphics (including human interface), simulations
/ virtual reality or computational science,
artificial intelligence, networking, operating
systems, etc. - EARTH AND PLANETARY SCIENCE Geology,
mineralogy, physiography, geochemistry,
oceanography, meteorology, climatology, weather,
speleology, seismology, geography, geophysics,
planetary science, tectonics, etc. - ENGINEERING Electrical and Mechanical
Technology projects that directly apply
principles to practical uses - electrical,
computer engineering, controls, mechanical,
thermodynamics, solar, robotics, etc.
39Category Descriptions
- ENGINEERING Materials and Bioengineering
Technology projects that directly apply
scientific principles to manufacturing and
practical uses - civil, construction, mechanical,
industrial, chemical, processing, material
science, etc. - ENERGY TRANSPORTATION Aerospace and
aeronautical engineering, aerodynamics,
alternative fuels, fossil fuel energy, vehicle
development, renewable energies, etc. - ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT Bioremediation,
ecosystems management, environmental engineering,
land resource management, forestry, recycling,
waste management, etc.
40Category Descriptions
- ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES Study of air pollution
and air quality, soil contamination and soil
quality, water pollution and water quality, etc. - MATHEMATICAL SCIENCES Development of formal
logical systems or various numerical and
algebraic computations, and the application of
these principles - calculus, geometry, abstract
algebra, number theory, statistics, complex
analysis and probability, etc. - MEDICINE HEALTH SCIENCES Disease diagnosis
and treatment, edipemiology, dentistry,
pharmacology, pathology, ophthalmology,
nutrition, sanitation, dermatology, allergies,
speech and hearing, genetics, molecular biology
of diseases, etc.
41Category Descriptions
- MICROBIOLOGY Biology of microorganisms -
bacteriology, virology, protozoology, fungi,
bacterial genetics, yeast, antibiotics,
antimicrobials, etc. - PHYSICS AND ASTRONOMY Theories, principles, and
laws governing energy and the effect of energy on
matter - solid state, optics, acoustics,
particle, nuclear, atomic, molecules, solids,
plasma, superconductivity, fluid and gas
dynamics, thermodynamics, semiconductors,
magnetics, quantum mechanics, biophysics,
electromagnetics, optics, lasers, masers,
theoretical physics, basic astronomy, theoretical
astronomy, computational astronomy, etc. - PLANT SCIENCES Study of plant life -
agriculture, agronomy, horticulture, forestry,
plant physiology, plant pathology, plant
genetics, hydroponics, plant ecology,
photosynthesis, plant systematics, evolution, etc.
42Project Display Board
43Resource websites
http//school.discoveryeducation.com/sciencefairce
ntral/ http//www.all-science-fair-projects.com/
http//scienceclub.org/scifair.html (On this
site, you can e-mail other students
with your questions.) http//www.usc.e
du/CSSF/ http//www.societyforscience.org/isef/
http//www.stemnet.nf.ca/sciencefairs/ http//www
.scifair.org/ http//sciencefairproject.virtualav
e.net/ http//www.californiasciencecenter.org/ h
ttp//www.sciencebuddies.org/science-fair-projects
/teacher_resources.shtml http//www.sciencebuddie
s.org/science-fair-projects/project_guide_index.sh
tml