Introduction to Public Speaking: 1st Place - Cindy Chen; E-Business: 2nd Place - Nihal Thomas, Saanav Somani and Mikey Halim. (2nd Place). On Saturday May 4, three Tesla STEM students participated in the Washington State National History Day contest in an attempt to qualify for the National competition in June. A total of 8 bio club students participated in theUSABOOpen Exam, the first oftwo rounds of challenging exams. Nikhil Mehta, and The award was presented by Congresswoman Suzan DelBene, who congratulated the team at the award ceremony. Please take the time to pass on your congratulations to each of these students when you see them this week. Tesla STEM students represented magnificently at the FBLA State Business Leadership Conference this week. 2 Tesla STEM Scholars named to Top 300 in Regeneron Science Talent Search, Science Olympiad: Results from Four Invitationals, Washington State High School Chess Championships, 2023 Pacific Northwest Regional Science Bowl, American Invitational Mathematics Examination (AIME), Central Sound Regional Science & Engineering Fair (CSRSEF), National Economics Challenge: Washington State Competition, Washington Music Educators Association Honors, 2023 Washington State Technology Student Association Competition, 2023 Washington State National History Day, Wharton School of Business Global High School Investment Competition, Tesla STEM Science Olympiad: Boyceville, Bird & Southern California Invitationals, Tesla STEM High School 2022 Division B Science Olympiad Invitational, 2022 NCWIT Awards for Aspirations in Computing, 2022 National History Day: Regional Competition, 2022 Pacific Northwest Regional Science Bowl, Central Sound Regional Science and Engineering Fair, 2022 Washington Science Olympiad: Northwest Regional, 2022 Washington State National History Day (NHD), 2022 ArcGIS Washington State Map Story Contest, 2022 Washington State Science and Engineering Fair, 2022 International Science and Engineering Fair (ISEF), Tesla STEM student named Seattle Youth Poet Laureate, Seattle Times Features Tesla STEM Student work for Day of Remembrance, AYLUS President's Volunteer Service Award, 2022 USA Astronomy and Astrophysics Olympiad, Giants of the Puget Sound: The Southern Resident Orca Whales (arcgis.com), Seattle area teens that won awards at ISEF, https://drive.google.com/file/d/1bxsn-P1LYP4BsR1X2j33VyyP_BhM53zx/view, Science Olympiad: Four 1st Semester Invitationals (UGASO, Camas, SOLVI, UCSO), 2021 American Mathematics Competition (AMC), 2021 USA Astronomy and Astrophysics Olympiad, 2021 Central Sound Regional Science and Engineering Fair (CSRSEF), 2021 Washington State Science and Engineering Fair (WSSEF), 2021 Future Business Leaders of America (FBLA) State Leadership Conference, 2021 Pacific Northwest Regional Science Bowl, 2021 Washington Science Olympiad: Regional Tournament, Washington Science Olympiad: State Tournament, https://kwhs.wharton.upenn.edu/news/mr-investments-first-place-2021-investment-competition/, Wharton Global High School Investment Competition, https://braininitiative.nih.gov/News-Events/event/announcement-brain-initiative-challenge-winners, https://ninds.ideascalegov.com/a/campaign-home/1110, Future Business Leaders of America Region Winter Conference, 2020 Wash. State Science & Engineering Fair, 2020 Future Business Leaders of America State Leadership Conference, 2020 Pacific Northwest Regional High School Science Bowl, 2020 ArcGIS Washington State Map Story Contest, 2020 NCWIT Awards for Aspirations in Computing, 2020 Holocaust Center for Humanity Contest, https://wssef.org/2020-wssef-first-place-trophy/, https://teslahs.maps.arcgis.com/apps/MapSeries/index.html?appid=d408e68a6b7f4987bdd3186adf1ec0f1, https://holocaustcenterseattle.org/programs-events/writing-art-film-contest, 2019 Pacific Northwest Regional High School Science Bowl, 2019 Wash. State Science & Engineering Fair (WSSEF), 2019 NCWIT Award for Aspirations in Computing, 2019 Tech. School Schedules overview - Tesla STEM High. The top two entries in each of 5 categories at the State contestgo on to the National competition. Boyceville SO Invitational (out of 148 teams): Raisbeck Aviation Invitational (out of 27 teams): Golden Gate Science Olympiad (out of 53 teams): The Tesla STEM Chess Club/Team finished their regular season Mid-February in the KingCo chess league, finishing in 5th place and earning a bid to the State Team Tournament held this last weekend in Stanwood, Washington. They will present their original science research project to the public and will have the opportunity to meet prominent leaders and scientists through field trips and other special events. All three have thus earned the right to participate in the National competition at the University of Maryland in early June. And Katy Allen-Schmid, thank you for flying the FBLA kids from Seattle to Baltimore so I could fly the kids doing both conferences straight from Atlanta to Baltimore. The team was comprised of. She even makes the fair project 15 percent of the grade in her AP psychology course. Ananya Soni: 10th Grade This year's theme was "Breaking Barriers in History". This years Global Finale judges included: Virgilio Aquino (C07, WG12), investment director at Aberdeen Standard Investments; Linda Cox, a retired business education teacher and former investment professional who previously advised two consecutive winning teams in the competition; Muk Rao (C94, GSE97), senior technologist at Wharton Research Data Services; and Patrick Yung (WG00), senior vice president, corporate development and strategic investments for Independence Blue Cross. The following students received the following awards: Behavioral and Social Sciences (BEHA) 1st place: Christina Goto and Grace von Scheliha, Plant Assisted Learning: The Effects of Epipremnum Aureum on Student Cognition and Neural Oscillations 2nd place: Michelle Yeh, Davina Lau and Katherine Bo, Familiarity of Music and its Effects on Stress Levels on Students 3rd place: Hanna Karpstein, Investigating the Effectivity of Various Behavioral Addiction Prevention Methods Honorable Mention: Rachel Ray, Amelia Sabin and Brenna Schwartz, The Effect of Personality Types on the Success of Group Work Biomedical and Health Sciences (BMED), Bioengineering (ENBM), Translational Medicine (TMED) 1st place: Priyanka Taneja, Anjali Sribalaskandarajah and Prerana Kulkarni, Utilizing Homovanillic Acid and Monoclonal Antibodies as a Novel Diagnostic Method for Schizophrenia and Parkinson's Diagnosis Honorable Mention: Vidha Sudesh, Using an Eye Exam to Detect Parkinson's at an Early Stage Cellular & Molecular Biology (CELL), Computational Biology & Bioinformatics (CBIO), Microbiology (MCRO) 1st place: Neha Hulkund, The Development of Machine Learning Linear Regression Algorithms for Epileptic Seizure Prediction 2nd place: Vaishnavi Phadnis, Computational Analysis of Neurotrophin Receptor Splice Variant Expression Signatures in Multiple Cancer Types Honorable Mention: Rishi Kavikondala, Rayan Krishnan and Sashwatha Shankar, Computational Analysis of Methanogen Metabolism Processes in Autotrophic Cyanobacteria for Carbon-Neutral Photosynthetic Methane Production Earth and Environmental Sciences (ENEV), Biochemistry (BCHM), Chemistry (Chem) 1st Place: Yogitha Sunkara, Comparative Analysis of Total Mercury Concentration in Salmon Species Using Atomic Fluorescence 2nd Place: Justin Qui, Investigating the Effects of Floating Photovoltaic Systems on the Growth of Freshwater Algae Honorable Mention: Sydney Meade, The Analysis of the Effects of Animal Agricultural Runoff on Water Quality Based on Nitrates, pH, Dissolved Oxygen, Total Dissolved Solids and Turbidity Environmental Engineering (ENEV) 2nd place: Silvia Calinov, Water Waves to Light Waves Energy: Chemical (EGCH) and Physical (EGPH) 2nd place: Sandra Militaru and Andrea Dang, Solketal Additive for Aviation Fuel Engineering Mechanics (ENMC) 1st place: Anne Lee and Issac Perrin, Performing Fluid Dynamics Analysis to Develop an Automated Valve to Halt Natural Gas Blowouts Physics and Astronomy (PHYS), Mathematics (Math) 1st place: Rashida Hakim, Particle Simulation of Phase-Dependent Fields Using Geometric Algebra Special Awards: Washington State Science and Engineering (WSSEF) Award: Richard Halbert and Daniel Hoffman, Political Tribalism Inspiring Excellence in Scientific Research and Engineering Awards: Christina Goto and Grace von Scheliha, Plant Assisted Learning: The Effects of Epipremnum Aureum on Student Cognition and Neural Oscillations and Yogitha Sunkara, Comparative Analysis of Total Mercury Concentration in Salmon Species Using Atomic Fluorescence American Psychological Association for Achievement in Research in Psychological Science: Christina Goto and Grace von Scheliha, Plant Assisted Learning: The Effects of Epipremnum Aureum on Student Cognition and Neural Oscillations Association for Women Geoscientists Award, Honorable Mention: Sydney Meade, The Analysis of the Effects of Animal Agricultural Runoff on Water Quality Based on Nitrates, pH, Dissolved Oxygen, Total Dissolved Solids and Turbidity People's Choice Award: Katrine Bjorner and Emily Spencer, Mobilizing the TENS Unit Stockholm Junior Water Prize: Sydney Meade, The Analysis of the Effects of Animal Agricultural Runoff on Water Quality Based on Nitrates, pH, Dissolved Oxygen, Total Dissolved Solids and Turbidity Ricoh Americas Corporation Award: Stuart Brown and Eric Fan, Generating Biogas from Waste American Chemical Society (ACS) Prize: Yogitha Sunkara, Comparative Analysis of Total Mercury Concentration in Salmon Species Using Atomic Fluorescence American Institute for Aeronautics and Astronautics Award: Sandra Militaru and Andrea Dang, Solketal Additive for Aviation Fuel Supernova Awards: Sana Fatima, The Combined Effect of Music and Running on Fluid Intelligence and Olivia Blevins and Audrey Tseng, Designing a Cost-Effective and Customizable 3D Printed Tongue, for the Purpose of Gaining Sufficient Unsupported Synthetic Tongue Muscle Articulation for Use in Speech and Swallowing, Comparable to Organic Tongue Muscle Articulation Grand Prize Winner, Best in Fair : Neha Hulkund, The Development of Machine Learning Linear Regression Algorithms for Epileptic Seizure Prediction. Please congratulate these students if you see them! Advice from my seat in investing: maintain the discipline of your investment process and be flexible when things dont work out.. They recorded presentations, took tests online, mailed projects, Skyped interviews, submitted portfolios into drop boxes. Whether they placed or not, they carried themselves respectively. The winner is chosen by a panel of members from the local art community. One of our students, Evan Kim, scored 9thin the nation on the NAC and will represent the US as part of the guest team at the 15thIOAA in Kutaisi, Georgia. This competition was held virtuallyit was a long day of Zoom that began at 5:30am local time. Visit thewebsitefor all the key dates in next years competition, as well as to read aboutexciting changesto the rules. The AMC is one of the largest mathematics competitions in the nation with roughly 160,000 students participating, and we spend most of the year in Math Club preparing for it. All of our scholars brought their best work to their events and made their school proud. Here are the students who scored in the top ten ranking at the State Leadership Conference (March 13th-19th): Rankings 1 -3 have the opportunity to participate in the HOSA Virtual International Leadership Conference starting June 23rd. The contest has students predict the evolution of a technology (for my class, a biomedical tech) into ten years in the future. FBLA continued the successful streak started by TSA. They are stack-ranked in each event and the team with the lowest sum of rankings in the 23 events wins. Since then, over 650,000 high school students have participated nationwide. And in the observational round, the most studied for round, contestants must identify various astronomical objects by sight, on both star charts and in the night sky. Excused/Unexcused Absences. Please join us in congratulating our nine scholars and our colleague Melissa Wrenchey who were honored this weekend at the NCWIT Washington: Seattle & West Affiliate Award Celebration. Wehadtwostudents take home ISEF bids and place in the top six best projectsof the whole fair and they will begoing to Phoenixfor the International Science and Engineering Fair in May. Home. Team 3, consisting of Colin Xie, Danyuan Wang, Vignesh Srinivasan, Anshu Aggarwal, and Arihant Singh, finished in the Top 12. We're so proud of all our students who worked really hard on these projects and came up with some really great games. The test is a 75-minute, 30-question multiple choice test. They have qualified to participate in the state conference in Spokane in April.Business Plan: Dhruv Talwar 2nd placeDigital Video Production: Team of Varun Vennkatesh and Sashu Shankar 6th place; Patrick Mao 3rd placeE-Business: Team of Jack Tribolett, Yukito Shida and Lucian Petriuc 6th place; William Wang 4th placeBusiness Calculations: Rashida Hakim 6th placeBusiness Communication: Vaishnavi Phadnis 1st placeBusiness Law: Isha Murali 5th place, Vidha Sudhesh 2nd placeComputer Problem Solving: Fred Qin 6th place; Lawrence Atienza 1st placeCyber Security: Lawrence Atienza 1st placeDatabase Applications: MacQuarrie Thomson 4th placeFBLA Principles and Procedures: Ila Sharma 6th placeHealthcare: Christine Lee 6th place; Vaishnavi Phadnis 2nd place, Salil Kanade 1st placeInsurance and Risk Management: Rishi Ramesh 5th place; Fred Qin 3rd placeIntroduction to Business: Maxwell Wang 2nd placeIntroduction to Business Communication: Sonika Tayade 2nd placeIntroduction to Business Procedures: Lauren Kim 3rd place; Aashna Sheth 1st placeIntroduction to Information Technology: Rishi Kavikondala 3rd placeIntroduction to Parliamentary Procedure: Toma Itagaki 2nd Management Information Systems: Team of Salil Kanade and Prerna Kulkarni 2nd place; Team of Lawrence Atienza, Fred Qin and Larry Wang 1st placeNetwork Design: Team of Katie Chalmers and Amulya P 2nd placeNetworking Concepts: Shruti Kompella 5the place; Amulya P 3rd placeSecurities and Investments: Tyler Warden 5th place; Neha Nagvekar 3rd place, Rashida Hakim 1st placeEntrepreneurship: Dhruv Talwar 6th place; team of Aashna Sheth and Claire Yang 3rd placeEmerging Business Issues: Team of Shruti Kompella and Rafia Khatri 5th place; team of Audrey Tseng and Fred Qin 2nd placeJob Interview: Apoorv Khandelwal 4th place; Afeef Sheikh 2nd placeBusiness Ethics: Team of MacKenzie MacLauchlin, Pooja Senapati and Aivy Tran 5th place; Rashida Hakim 2nd placePublic Speaking I: Rishi Kavikondala 1st placePublic Speaking II: Sarah Tarta 5th place, MacQuarrie Thomson 2nd placeImpromptu Speaking: Kamran Badh 2nd place, Maxwell Wang 1st placeIntroduction to Business Presentation: Team of Christine Lee, Eric Yin, Toma Itagaki 5th place; team of Aashna Sheth, Ila Sharma and Sonika Tayade 4th place. The following students received the following awards: Behavioral and Social Sciences (BEHA) Note: there were two second places due to high number of competitors in this category, 1st place: Catherine Benson, The Effects of Changing Behavioral Tendencies Toward a Person with Schizophrenia or Psychosis NOS, 2nd place: Claire Whiteside, Perceived Credibility of Political Advertisements on Facebook, 2nd Place: Kyra Bethune, Incorporation of Self-Esteem Enhancement Strategies in Social Media, Honorable Mention: Toma Itagaki and Eric Yin, Determining the Effects of Psychological States on High Schooler's Performance in Chess, 1st place: Sarah Suhy, Siderocalin and Its Interactions with Adipocytes, 2nd place: Eudoxie Hudry and Nisha Thottam, Improving the Production of the Anti-Cancer Drug Paclitaxel Through Biosynthesis in Bacteria, Biomedical Engineering, Material Science (ENBM), 1st place: Ishika Mukherjee and Eesha Murali, Viability of Urinary Polyamine levels as a Preliminary Test for Cancer, Honorable Mention: Sarah Berg, Dielectric Elastomers in 3-D Printed Prosthetic Fingers, Biomedical and Health Sciences (BMED), Translational Medicine (TMED) and Chemistry (Chem), 2nd place: Sashwatha Shankar, Generating a Machine Learning Model to Determine the Metastatic Potential of Lung Cancer Tumors, Computational Biology & Bioinformatics (CBIO), 3rd place: Amrita Narasimhan, Applying Machine Learning Techniques for Identification of Discriminative Biomarkers, Earth and Environmental Sciences (ENEV) Note: there were two honorable mentions due to high number of competitors in this category, Honorable Mention: Ritika Iyer, The Application of Infrared Thermography to Architecture to Identify Heat-Emitting Building Materials, Honorable Mention: Betty Park and Emma Draper, The Study of Air Quality Conditions in Relation to Renal Transplants Through a Data Analysis Approach, Embedded Systems, Robotics and Intelligent Machines (ROBO), 1st place: Neha Hulkund, MRI Multiple Sclerosis Lesion Segmentation Using Deep Learning, 3rd place: Jack Tribolet and Yukito Shida, Generating Haptic Feedback Based Upon Calculated Data and User Information, Engineering Mechanics (ENMC), Environmental Engineering (ENEV), 2nd place: William Wang, Drones Optimized Through Neural Networks for Reconnaissance and Imaging of Martian Environments, Honorable Mention: Niranjan Sahi and Aditya Balasubramanian, Augmented Malleability in Pipeline Joints for Improved Resistance to Seismic Ground Forces, Physics and Astronomy (PHYS), Mathematics (Math), 1st place: Aashna Sheth, The Application of Microwave Satellite to the Statistical Hurricane Intensity Prediction Scheme (SHIPS), Tableau Award: Claire Whiteside, Perceived Credibility of Political Advertisements on Facebook, Excellence in Scientific Research ($500): Ritika Iyer, The Application of Infrared Thermography to Architecture to Identify Heat-Emitting Building Materials, NASA Earth Systems Science Award: Betty Park and Emma Draper, The Study of Air Quality Conditions in Relation to Renal Transplants Through a Data Analysis Approach, Recipient of $1000 Bellevue College scholarship: Sam Thornton, Making Self-Regulation Tools Available to All Students, Association for Women Geoscientist's Award: Aashna Sheth, The Application of Microwave Satellite to the Statistical Hurricane Intensity Prediction Scheme (SHIPS), Intel Award, Excellence in Computer Science ($200): Neha Hulkund, MRI Multiple Sclerosis Lesion Segmentation Using Deep Learning, American Chemical Society (ACS) Prize: Ishika Mukherjee and Eesha Murali, Viability of Urinary Polyamine levels as a Preliminary Test for Cancer, American Institute for Aeronautics and Astronautics Award: William Wang, Drones Optimized Through Neural Networks for Reconnaissance and Imaging of Martian Environments, Supernova Awards: Claire Maurer, Encoding Quantifiable Data for Nose-to-Finger Test with Essential Tremor, American Meteorological Society Award: Aashna Sheth, The Application of Microwave Satellite to the Statistical Hurricane Intensity Prediction Scheme (SHIPS), US Metric Associations Award: Niranjan Sahi and Aditya Balasubramanian, Augmented Malleability in Pipeline Joints for Improved Resistance to Seismic Ground Forces. You can see these awards and project titles listed below. There are 15 members on each team and we have nearly four full teams. 9) also had a very strong Senior Individual documentary on Nikola Tesla, but unfortunately did not qualify to move on to the state final competition. In addition to the team award, Yuchen Li won a medal for answering the 3rd-most toss-up questions. The Tesla STEM seniors who placed were: For this national competition, the students write an essay predicting how a current technology will evolve in ten years. The Youth Poet Laureate also publishes a poetry collection, released in May by Poetry NW Editions, when the next Youth Poet Laureate of the following year is announced. Wow. With a significant amount of creativity, teamwork and determination, these teams were able to rise to the top. They earned the highest score in three of the five events and earned 1st place in the competition! George Zhang 2nd place Please congratulate our young scholars who participated in the 64th Annual Washington Science and Engineering Fair (WSSEF) which was held remotely on Friday and Saturday, March 26-27th. The USA Astronomy and Astrophysics Olympiad (USAAAO) test is the first test in a series of tests leading to representing the United States in the International Olympiad in Astronomy and Astrophysics (IOAA). Please join Ms. Zebrack and me in congratulating these students on their achievements. On Saturday 5 March, 36 teams participated in the Northwest Regional of the Washington Science Olympiad, with great results: Science Olympiad is played by teams of 15 students who compete in pairs and trios across 23 total events. Please take opportunity to congratulate the following students and perhaps offer your expertise based upon your knowledge of their topics. Arjun Mahesh: 11th Grade (Eastlake HS) Last week, we hosted the 3rd Annual STEM Expo and the first one that was a joint, in-person event for the Startup Track (STEM Startups students) and the Research Track (Kate Allenders students). Typical learning pathways at Tesla STEM include the computer science pathway (AP CS Principles (9), AP CSA (10), Data Structures (11), Advanced Projects in Java (12)), the engineering pathway (Engineering, Engineering 2, Engineering 3), and the life sciences pathway (AP Biology (10), AP Psychology (11), Biomedical Engineering and Additionally, of the 75 T-STEM students that competed at WSSEF, we had 27 1st place winners!! The AMC is one of the largest mathematics competitions in the nation, and we spend most of the year in math club preparing for it. Learn how to create and use STEM bins. Those advancing to the semi-finals: Josh Shergill, Leonardo Ribeiro de Brito, Alexander Potra, Mohammed Mendahawi, Alex Mineeva, Anisha Vaish. They had to navigate trying to finish their project and create their trifold plus prepare for virtual judging and judge questioning all in a matter of weeks. Past Senior Celebrations 2021 Activities: Drive through Cinnabon /Hot Cocoa in January Escape Room in February Improv Comedy in March Escape Room in March Murder Mystery in April Distribution of Class of 2021 graduate yard signs generously donated by Tesla STEM High School (Thanks Ms Duenas!) 3D Animation: 1st Place Samarjit Kaushik, Arjan Singh, Brayden Brackett, Varun Wescott, 1st Place Samarjit Kaushik, Aran Punniamoorthy, Arjan Singh, Oleg Ianchenko, Parum Misri, Sahil Kancherla, 4th Place (tie) Samarjit Kaushik, Archit Patankar, 5th Place Roshni Srikanth, Vidhi Jain, Tarini Srikanth, Lahari Nidadavolu, Aditi Joshi, 4th Place Oleg Ianchenko, Pinakin Kanade, Aran Punniamoorthy, Arjan Singh, Shrey Srivastava, 3rd Place Edward Zhou, Druhin Bhowal, Pranav Teegavarapu, Harish Krishnakumar, 1st Place Adi Gottumukkala, Parum Misri, Brayden Brackett, Varun Wescott, 3rd Place Harish Krishnakumar, Pranav Teegavarapu, Druhin Bhowal, Edward Zhou, 4th Place Deepayan Sanyal, Samarjit Kaushik, Sahil Kancherla, Brayden Brackett, Archit Patankar, 1st Place Lahari Nidadavolu, Jakob Bjorner, 2nd Place Harish Krishnakumar, Pranav Teegavarapu, Druhin Bhowal, Edward Zhou. In what can best be described as a year of uncertainty, the 2020-2021Wharton Global High School Investment Competitionoffered high school students worldwide something they could count on: the 9thstraight year of collaborating with teammates and teachers, building creative investment strategies, analyzing industries and companies, trading stocks in real time, and learning a lot about finance. The Tesla team won the JV Division by winning the History Bowl titles, and Maxwell also had a victory in the JV History Bee. Students worked in teams of 5 or 6 to create their own version of Hunt the Wumpus (one of the earliest computer games). andcongratulationsto two of the five GRAND PRIZE WINNERS who won the extraordinary honor of competing at ISEF.Druhin Bhowal and Arihant Singhfor their project onIt's Flaming Out: Using Artificial Intelligence to Emulate Critical Aspects of Wildfire Growthand Anjali Sreenivasfor her investigation onA Machine Learning Approach to Identifying Blood-Based Biomarkers for Differential Diagnosis of Alzheimer's Disease. Please congratulate these students: This past Saturday (March 4) was the Regional National History Day competition, held at Evergreen Middle school, and attended by 23 of our students who produced 12 different projects. Congratulations to Ms. Sheffels's AP Language students who entered and won prizes in the Holocaust Center for Humanity contest! The team earned its place in NOSB by winning the ORCA Bowl, which is the regional ocean sciences bowl for Washington. Only the top 10% of AMC scores in the nation are invited. To see those concepts being applied in presentations just blows my mind. NHD is an annual competition where student conduct primary source research on a topic of their choosing, but in conjunction with a specific annual theme. After each startup and research project presented, the judges deliberated extensively and awarded prizes to the following winners. Congratulations to Rui and Naman!! On a rainy Thursday in March, a six-student team of Tesla STEM students competed outdoors (and got wet) in the King County Envirothon. Performing Fluid Dynamics Analysis to Develop an Automated Valve to Halt Natural Gas Blowouts, Prerana Kulkarni, Anjali Sribalaskandarajah and Priyanka Taneja. Tesla has shifted the auto industry toward electric vehicles, achieved consistently growing revenues, and at the start of 2020 was the highest-performing automaker in terms of total return, sales . 4thplace Uma Paul and Emma Shi, This was the largest competition ever, with 972 entries from 35 countries. You can use STEM activities in a wide variety of ways with these cool bins. Examples of Excused Absences. Places 5 10 have the potential to move up if competitors who placed above them cannot attend. Wehad four students take home ISEF bids and place in the top seven best projectsof the whole fair!! The Regeneron International Science and Engineering Fair (ISEF) will be held in Atlanta, GA from May 7-13. The highlight was winning the Best Large Delegation Award, which goes to the entire team. Writing: Maybe some day they will thank you when they are giving their acceptance speech at the Oscars. For ExploraVision, the students predict what a current technology will be like 10+ years in the future. Congratulations to all of these students. Below I have listed all the finalists and semi-finalists from our school some of whom will attend the National Competition in Louisville, Kentucky at the end of June. Please congratulate these students when you see them around. Tesla STEMwon all 9 matches they played to capture their second straight Orca Bowl championship and qualify for the National Ocean Sciences Bowl in May! Yuchen likes rocks, big floating rocks, and fizzy bubbles. Conduct an egg drop. This is a huge accomplishment! Tesla STEM sent three teams to the Department of Energys Regional Science Bowl Championships in sunny Pasco, WA. Additionally, we had a great showing of 1st place award winners (24) and additional special category awards, which are listed below. Please congratulate Rui Meng, Alexander Peev, and Reese Long. Jessica Singh brought home a silver metal for the Barbara James Service Award. A huge thank you to Michael Ivers and Matt Travis for their help chaperoning. Congratulations to the LWSD and Tesla STEM High School students who won awards at the International Science and Engineering Fair (ISEF) andwere featured on Geekwire in May: Seattle area teens that won awards at ISEF. We also had more students participate in the test this year than ever before, including Nikhil Mehta, Ethan Liao, Jolie Chan, Emma Shi, David Soto, George Zhang, Barath Saravanan, Jerry Chen, Navaneet Girikumar, Natalie Qiu, Boaz Wu, Atharv Dixit, and Jhet Cooperrider Young.
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