Education, Careers & Professional News
2 Goan Students Bag US Awards
2 Goan Students Bag US Awards
Indias Malvika Vinod Tiwari and 40 Indian-American teenage students are among the winners of Grand Awards in various scientific disciplines at the Intel International Science and Engineering Fair, the worlds most prestigious pre-college competition, in the United States.
Suvrata Desai and Mallika Dhillon Desai, both 16, from Goas Jawahar Navodaya Vidyalaya, received the Ashtavadhani Vidwan Ambati Subbaraya Chetty Foundation award in the category of creativity, technological innovation and commercial promise.
They won second award of US $ 500 US savings bond for their project traditional spices as biopesticides.
Malvika of St Marys Convent High School in Kanpur, Uttar Pradesh, won her Grand Award in engineering category for her project Foot-operated vehicle device for the physically challenged.
Forty Indian-American students were also among the winners of Grand Awards that were presented to the finalists of the 2005 Intel International Science and Engineering Fair at Phoenex, Arizona yesterday.
The overall Grand Awards of US $ 50,000 scholarship each were won by Ameen Abdulrasool of Chicago, Ill Gabrielle Alyce Gianelli of Orlando, Florida, and Stephen Schultz of Nordrhein-Westfahlen, Germany for projects on a navigational system for the blind, possible discovery of an ancient coastline on Mars and a lower-cost technology to analyse compounds used to protect against diseases respectively.
In the Grand Awards best of category awards, the top-scoring student in each project category receives a US $ 5,000 scholarship and a laptop computer from Intel. These students schools and fair directors also receive US $ 1,000 to benefit science and mathematics education and encourage more student involvement in science.
In the organisational award category, which is other than Grand Awards at the fair, four Indian students and 26 students of Indian origin were among the winners.
In this category, Mihir Tandon and Riddhiman Yadava, both 15, from New Delhis Modern School (Vasant Vihar) won the national collegiate inventors and innovators alliance/Lemelson Foundation prize scholarship worth US $ 1,000 for improvised artificial limb.
The AVASC award is given for projects that display outstanding creativity, ingenuity and have the potential to alleviate the human condition or mark a substantive advance in the scientific field.
Also, 14 Indian-american finalists at the Intel-ISEF were presented with government and industry awards, which is a separate category.
The Intel-ISEF brings together more than 1,400 students from 45 countries, regions and territories to compete for over US 3 million awards and scholarships.
The Grand Award is highest of all and the most coveted one at the fair. It is open to all finalists.