Surf zone study earns young scientist first place

Top prizes awarded in Broadcom MASTERS science competition for middle schoolers

A typical 14-year-old goes to the beach to play in the waves. But Daniel Feeny went to a beach near Pescadero, Calif., to study them. Using a homemade rig of springs and balls set up in a tide pool, he showed that the force of the waves there doesn’t dictate the diversity of marine life close to shore.

“I discovered that nature doesn’t work that way, it’s not that simple,” says Feeny, who ran his experiment as an eighth-grader at Woodside Elementary School. “There are so many variables that can affect diversity, like the terrain and drying out.”

For his original research and his performance in a series of team-based contests, Feeny has won first place in the inaugural Broadcom Math, Applied Science, Technology and Engineering for Rising Stars, or MASTERS, program. Winners and finalists in this national competition for sixth-, seventh- and eighth-graders were honored October 4 at a black-tie gala held at the Carnegie Institution for Science in Washington, D.C.

“It’s all about getting more kids to touch science and to have a hands-on experience with science,”, says Scott McGregor, chief executive officer of Broadcom Corp. and president of the Broadcom Foundation, which sponsors the competition. Feeny’s prize, a $25,000 education award, was funded by the Samueli Foundation, a private nonprofit organization based in Corona del Mar, Calif., begun by Broadcom’s cofounder Henry Samueli.

In its first year, the competition received 1,476 entries submitted by students from 45 states, Puerto Rico and Washington, D.C. Each student had been nominated by a local science fair affiliated with Society for Science & the Public, the nonprofit organization that sponsors the Broadcom MASTERS program and publishes Science News. Thirty finalists flew to the nation’s capital in October to present their research projects, meet with members of Congress and compete in contests that tested their aptitude in science, technology, engineering and mathematics.

“We want to reinforce a scientific mindset in students whether or not they end up going into science,” says Elizabeth Marincola, president of SSP and publisher of Science News.

The international team of scientists and engineers that judged the students’ performances awarded second place and $10,000 to Benjamin Hylak, 14, of West Grove, Penn. Inspired by a visit to his grandmother in a nursing home, he built and programmed a robot that can be operated remotely over the Internet for people who live far from their relatives.

“We’ve all run out of time in our culture, and I was seeing a lot of people staring at walls,” says Hylak, who made the robot out of a Roomba, a trash can and a total of $500 in parts.

Third place and a $5,000 award went to I-Chun Lin, 14, of Plano, Texas, who studied cheap, easy-to-manufacture solar cells coated with organic dye. Lin tested new ways to improve their efficiency using natural dyes from raspberries and blackberries.

Other finalists earned a combined $20,000 in prizes for outstanding performances in individual disciplines. Fourteen-year-old Samantha Rowland of Tipp City, Ohio ― who counted Christmas tree needles to test whether some colors of decorative lights cause more needles to fall off than other colors ― took home the award for the Science category. Robert Heckman, a 14-year-old snorkeler from Hawaii who investigated why tumors form on corals, won in the Technology category. For her tests of whether higher salt concentrations have an impact on mudsnails, Katherine Landoni, 14, of Sequim, Wash., placed first in Engineering. The Math award recipient, 14-year-old Crystal Poole of San Diego, drew on her experience frosting cakes with her grandmother to show that adding cornstarch helps prevent icing from melting.

Two competitors chosen for the Rising Stars award will travel to Pittsburgh in May to observe the Intel International Science and Engineering Fair, a competition organized by SSP in which more than 1,500 high school students present their research. Carolyn Jons, 13, of Eden Prairie, Minn., impressed judges by showing that bubbles can improve the insulation provided by a liquid. Chad Campbell, 12, of Hampstead, N.C., developed a way to test for antibiotics in meat samples from local supermarkets.

Finalists’ schools will receive $1,000, and their teachers get a $125 Walmart gift card, provided by Elmer’s Products, Inc., the classroom sponsor. The students themselves return home with an assortment of prizes including $500, as well as new experiences and friendships that may serve them well in the future. More than half of the finalists say they want to become scientists, and nearly all the rest hope to pursue careers in medicine or engineering.

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