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The Concord Consortium's first projects, funded by the National Science Foundation beginning in 1994, focused on guided student inquiry and the use of emerging technologies. A project-based approach to learning physics using inexpensive materials for hands-on investigations (Hands on Physics) [5] was based on the work of MIT professor John G. King.
Singapore Genome Variation Project: 268 individuals from the Chinese, Malay, and Indian population groups in Southeast Asia [4] Italy: SardiNIA Project: 2,000 sequenced Sardinian people [5] Germany: PopGen (German) Genotyping of 10,000 German people [6] Ukraine: GenomeUkraine: Whole genome sequences of 97 Ukrainians from Ukraine [7]
As of 2016, a two-week course at CSHL costs between $3,700 and $4,700 per student and three-day conferences cost about $1,000 per attendee. [22] The DNA Learning Center (DNALC), founded in 1988, was among the early pioneers [23] in developing hands-on genetics lab experiences for middle and high school students. In 2013, 31,000 students on Long ...
Each student is limited to one entry per year. Each team must have no more than 4 students. Students and teachers/mentors complete a Toshiba/NSTA ExploraVision Awards Entry Form, signed by the students, coach and mentor, an abstract of their project, a detailed project description, a list of technology used that is available at present time, a bibliography, and five Web page graphics that will ...
Other projects like AgeGuess [8] focus on the senior demographics and enable the elderly to upload photos of themselves so the public can guess different ages. Lists of citizen science projects may change. For example, the Old Weather project website indicates that as of January 10, 2015, 51% of the logs were completed. [9]
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Let’s Talk Science was founded in 1993 by Bonnie Schmidt, the current president, with contributions from Joan Francolini and the Lawson Foundation. [2] While completing a Ph.D. in Physiology at the University of Western Ontario, Schmidt visited local classrooms with some of her fellow graduate students, bringing them hands-on science activities and presentations.