blog posts

Arcadia High Comes in First as JPL Marks 30 Years Hosting Regional Science Bowl – NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory

Arcadia High School’s victorious Regional Science Bowl team after winning the JPL-hosted event on Jan. 22, 2022, clockwise from top left: coach Cherryl Mynster with students Sonia Zhang, Jeshwanth Mohan, Brian Lam, Xing Liu, and Selena Zhang.
The team heads to the national championship after an intense virtual competition that also marked a milestone for the Lab.
After months of training till midnight and hours of anxiety amid fast-paced competition, five Arcadia High School students took back their crown and are headed to the National Science Bowl in Washington, D.C.
The Arcadia team was victorious at the Jan. 22 regional competition, which marked the 30th year NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Southern California has hosted the tournament. The event brings together science- and math-minded high schoolers from across Los Angeles, Orange, Riverside, San Bernardino, and Santa Barbara counties. Arcadia last won the bowl in 2015; this year marked its eighth victory since the competition began.
The San Gabriel Valley school narrowly defeated Irvine’s University High School, which came in second after winning for the past four years; another former winner, Troy High School in Fullerton, placed third. Twenty-two teams competed.
Get the Latest JPL News
“It was pretty intense throughout,” said Arcadia senior Sonia Zhang, who has competed in the bowl alongside her twin sister Selena since they were sophomores. “It was just a lot of hard questions. … The pacing was really quick.”
The team credits their victory in part to the “power of friendship,” which regularly led to an extra hour of chatting after study sessions that ended at midnight. That closeness showed up on competition day.
“After every round, we were complimented about our teamwork,” said Jeshwanth Mohan, also a senior.
Regional Science Bowl tournaments take place across the country in the lead-up to the National Science Bowl, which is coordinated by the U.S. Department of Energy and includes an all-expenses-paid trip to Washington for participating teams. The first national competition took place in 1991; JPL has been hosting the regional annual event since 1993.
“It’s like the Super Bowl of science,” said Arcadia High coach Cherryl Myster, who teaches advanced placement chemistry.
Since the beginning, Kim Lievense, who manages the Lab’s Public Services Office in the Communications and Education Directorate, has been at the helm for JPL. She coordinates some 35 volunteers, largely from JPL and Caltech, which manages JPL for NASA, to run the tournament.
“I love this competition. I love interacting with the students, and I love interacting with the volunteers,” Lievense said. “It’s just fun.”
The questions have gotten harder over the years, she said.
The students are quizzed at a first-year college level in biology, chemistry, Earth and space science, energy, math, and physics in a fast-paced verbal format. Teams have just seven seconds to answer questions like this sample from the chemistry category:
Dr. Ecniecs, who loves riddles, gave the following riddle about the periodic table: Element A is left-right adjacent to element B. Element A never shares what it holds. Element B is always taking from other elements. Both elements are a clear gas. Both elements are nonmetals. Combined, they have a mass less than that of gallium. What are the identities of elements A and B?
The answer: neon and fluorine.
Students, who competed from home, had two cameras on them: one showing their faces and another monitoring their workspace in an effort to ensure they’re not cheating. Each team joined with three volunteers in a private virtual Zoom “room” for individual rounds of the event, and – unlike the in-person tournament – never went head-to-head with other teams.
Competing remotely increased the pressure, members of the Arcadia High team said.
“In this format, you’re under more pressure to know the information well because you can’t rely on the other team to screw up,” Sonia Zhang said.
And you don’t have the fun of interrupting, her sister Selena said.
It’s not quite the same when the events are online only, Lievense agreed, but it’s still a unique challenge for the students. Next year, she hopes, the competition will be held in person.
The Arcadia High team will face dozens of teams from other high schools at the national championship competition, which may also end up being virtual and is currently slated to begin in late April. Before that, there is plenty of time for more studying and late-night chatting.
Melissa Pamer
Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif
626-314-4928
melissa.pamer@jpl.nasa.gov
2022-006
JPL Life .
JPL Named Among ‘Best Places to Work in 2022’
JPL Life .
Where Ideas Go to Grow
JPL Life .
NASA Scientists Named AGU 2021 Union Honorees
JPL Life .
NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory Adds New Stops to Its Virtual Tour
JPL Life .
Mars Perseverance Team Members to Be Recognized at Hispanic Heritage Awards
JPL Life .
NASA Helps Celebrate Star Trek Creator Gene Roddenberry’s Centennial
Mars .
Aviation Week Awards NASA’s Ingenuity Mars Helicopter With Laureate
JPL Life .
JPL Director Michael Watkins to Return to Academia
JPL Life .
National Space Society Honors Bobby Braun, Rob Manning
Mars .
NASA’s Ingenuity Mission Honored by the Space Foundation
JPL Life .
Must Watch: Screening of JPL and the Space Age’s ‘Explorer 1’
About JPL .
Who We Are
Universe
Lecture Series .
March 2022 – Moon Dance: Dynamics of the Moons of the Outer Solar System
Slice of History
Image .
Slice of History – Polio Vaccinations at JPL
Lecture Series .
January 2022 – SWOT: Looking at the Earth’s Water
Von Kármán Lecture .
The von Kármán Lecture Series: 2022
Lecture Series .
February 2022 – Roving with Perseverance: Findings from One Year on Mars
Image .
Slice of History – Happy 25th Anniversary, Mars Pathfinder!
JPL is a federally funded research and development center managed for NASA by Caltech.

Thank you for reading this post, don't forget to subscribe!

source

×
QWHI
×
QWHI
Skip to content