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Intel ISEF Rewards Students For Cancer, Environment Research

Huffington Post   |  Jonathan Montgomery First Posted: 05-13-11 10:05 PM   |   Updated: 05-13-11 10:09 PM

The auditorium was filled with cries of excitement and waving flags -- the tension was thick. High school students sat eagerly on the edge of their seats while a loudspeaker read off the names of young scientists whose research has contributed to noble causes such as potential cures for cancer or new ways to convert car exhaust into oxygen.

After five days of grueling competition, the winners of this year's Intel International Science and Engineering Fair (Intel ISEF) were announced today during an award ceremony held at the Los Angeles Convention Center.

Intel ISEF, a program affiliated with Society for Science and the Public, is the largest pre-college science competition in the world. The competition enables students in grades 9-12 to showcase their independent research in fields such as animal sciences, engineering, mathematical studies and physics.

This year brought more than 1,500 young entrepreneurs, innovators, and scientists from 65 countries, regions and territories, who all earned their spots by winning top prizes at local, regional, state or national science fairs across the world.

The top prize, the Gordon E. Moore Award, was given to Matthew Feddersen and Blake Marggraff from Lafayette, California. According to Society For Science's website, in addition to international recognition, Feddersen and Marggraff also received $75,000 for their research which helped develop a cost-efficient cancer treatment that places tin metal near a tumor before radiation therapy.

Other prizes included the Intel Foundation Young Scientist Award, Nobel Prize Ceremony Trip, Grand Awards (judged first through fourth across 17 scientific categories), and awards for the "Best Of" in each category.

Michael Zaiken, 18, from Rochester, Minn. expressed his overall experience at ISEF:

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"Indescribable. Absolutely incredible. I've been competing in science fairs for six years and this is my first time getting here. So getting the award and competing here is a highlight of my life."

Zaiken received a third-place grand award for discovering a mechanism that made certain cancer cells resistant to any form of treatment:

"I measured the amount of two different proteins that were produced in cancer cells after treating them with a chemotherapy drug, this allowed me to figure out that one of the signals was manipulating the other one of the signals as a method to suppress a natural cell death."

Zaiken said understanding this mechanism will give scientists an advantage in finding ways to combat cancer.

Smita Shukla, 18, from Rutland Mass., said it was her second year at ISEF and competed with a three-year project focused around a chemotherapeutic drug. Shukla said so far her research has saved the lives of three people.

"It's great because I have green color blindness and I know what kind of issues I endure. And I mean, people have much more serious genetic disorders than that, like Hemophilia or Lesch-Nyhan Syndrome, so, for me, it's great to be able to help those people out."

See highlights from the ISEF Award Ceremony below:

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The auditorium was filled with cries of excitement and waving flags -- the tension was thick. High school students sat eagerly on the edge of their seats while a loudspeaker read off the names of youn...
The auditorium was filled with cries of excitement and waving flags -- the tension was thick. High school students sat eagerly on the edge of their seats while a loudspeaker read off the names of youn...
 
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6 minutes ago (12:38 AM)
Unbelievab­le what these students are doing already at their age. Great things can be hoped for.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
beau taylor
one piece at the time
16 hours ago (9:10 AM)
The comments I see are coming from a liberal following. Conservati­ves seem happy with the "dumbing down of America". These kids are shining examples of what education is all about.
21 hours ago (4:02 AM)
Bravo to these American students and all their friends back home who participat­ed in the local competitio­ns. With all the anti-educa­tion caterwauli­ng in our country, the hardworkin­g students and the equally hardworkin­g teachers who inspire them are rarely in the headlines. Making achievemen­t the norm will happen when our whole society comes together to praise such efforts.

We need to make it possible for more students to have significan­t math and science achievemen­ts. That happens with stable funding in schools, well-funde­d teacher profession­al developmen­t, and jobs for the students' parents. Unlike high achieving countries, we do not honor the work of teachers and students. The insecurity of jobs for talented teachers and the uncertainl­y of funding for good k-college programs make both teachers and students less efficient in their focus on gaining knowledge. We need to encourage instead of disparage. The end result will be many more well-educa­ted students and a future for our country.
21 hours ago (3:23 AM)
IN 1963 my PUBLIC high school produce two National Science Fair national winners. one took first in his category and another took fourth! One went on to get two PHDs from CalTech. Physics and Math...the other went in to aerospace. Endeavors
21 hours ago (3:19 AM)
If only half our governors(­republican­s) were paying attention and realizing how much their draconian cuts to education will adversely affect the future of such accomplish­ments by AMERICAN students. mazing what the American kids cited are doing.
11:35 PM on 5/14/2011
Young people like this are my heroes. If the world is to be made a better place, two parts of the solution will be social and economic justice. The third part will be science and all the yet undreamt wonders that it can provide. These kids will be in the vanguard.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
isis
A midwestern chemist called Granny by some
10:15 PM on 5/14/2011
Good job kids!
06:15 PM on 5/14/2011
Holy smoke! Good news about kids and nobody's talking.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Artanis71
Colbert Super PAC unleashed in 2012
05:20 PM on 5/14/2011
A good story about the next generation­, well done kids, your rewards are well deserved.