Contact:
Dr. Gary L. Stringer, Head, Department of Geosciences,
University of Louisiana at Monroe, Louisiana 71209-0550
Office: 318-342-1898
FAX: 318-342-1879
E-mail: stringer@ulm.edu
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About
The University of Louisiana
at Monroe is the designated site
for administration of the Region 3 Science Olympiad Competition.
The annual competition will be held on Saturday, March 6, 2010, on the campus of the University of Louisiana at Monroe (ULM) in Monroe, Louisiana, a university
serving approximately 9,000 full-time students. This
competition
is the first step for advancement to the State
Tournament
held in April, and ultimately, to the National Tournament held in May.
Region 3 is comprised of middle and high schools located in
these 26 northern Louisiana parishes: Bienville, Bossier, Caddo, Caldwell, Catahoula,
Claiborne, Concordia, DeSoto, East Carroll, Franklin, Grant, Jackson,
LaSalle, Lincoln, Madison, Morehouse, Natchitoches,
Ouachita, Red River, Richland, Sabine, Tensas, Union,
Webster, West
Carroll, and Winn.
Click
on the slide show
link to access a Powerpoint slide show presentation of the
Science Olympiad at ULM. The photos
link will allow you to view photographs of a previous tournament.
What
Is The Science Olympiad?
The Science Olympiad
is an international nonprofit organization devoted to improving science
education, increasing student interest in science, and providing
recognition for outstanding achievement in science education by both
students and teachers. The primary emphasis of Science Olympiad
is the administration of regional, state, and national
tournaments
where middle school and high school students compete in twenty three
science related events for Olympic style medals. The events embrace all
of the traditional science disciplines such as Earth Science, Biology,
Physics, Meteorology, Botany, Forestry, Health Science, Computer
Science, and Engineering.
Competitions vary from students building devices in advance which are
tested at the tournament, to students taking tests at the tournament
with no preparation or experience required. Each school can bring up to
15 students, and the students can pre-select the events in which they
intend to participate. Students are encouraged to participate in more
than one event.
At the regional state competition hosted by ULM, 1st, 2nd,
and 3rd
place medals are awarded to students. Trophies are
presented to schools with the greatest total team
score.
Is
The Science Olympiad For Me?
Ask yourself
these few questions:
- Do you
teach or work with students in grades 6-12?
- Are you
concerned about declining achievement in science classes?
- Would you
like to see student interest in science increase?
- Do you wish
we could capture the kind of interest, enthusiasm, and commitment that
we see exhibited for sports?
- Would you
like to participate in a program that is aligned with the National
Science Standards and the TIMSS recommendations?
- Are
you ready to learn how to increase student success scores and student
interest in science and improve community perception of science
education?
If
you answered yes to two or more of these questions, plan now
to participate in this year's Science Olympiad. We invite
you to become a part of the renaissance in science education by
starting a Science Olympiad team in your school. We would like to share
the excitement and successes that have been experienced at Science
Olympiad Tournaments all across the country. Plan now to join over
14,000 schools that participated in last year's Science Olympiad
Tournaments. For more information about competing in the
Science
Olympiad, call
Dr. Gary Stringer at 318-342-1898.
The
Science Olympiad Mission
The
Science Olympiad Mission is to
promote and improve student interest in science and to improve the
quality of K-12 science education throughout the nation. The Science
Olympiad Vision to accomplish this mission is:
- To
create a passion for learning science by supporting elementary and
secondary Science Olympiad tournaments at building, district, county,
state and national levels with an emphasis on teamwork and a commitment
to excellence.
- To
improve the quality of K-12 science education throughout the nation by
changing the way science is perceived and the way it is taught (with an
emphasis on problem solving and hand-on, minds-on constructivist
learning practices). This goal is accomplished through in-depth core
curriculum training workshops and the distribution of curriculum
materials to thousand of teachers.
- To
celebrate and recognize the outstanding achievement of both students
and teachers in the areas of science and technology by awarding
thousand of certificates, medals, trophies and scholarships.
- To promote
partnerships among community, businesses, industry, government and
education.
The
specific purposes of Science Olympiad tournaments are:
- To
bring science to life, to show how science works, to emphasize problem
solving aspects of science and the understanding of science concepts.
- To develop
teamwork and cooperative learning strategies among students.
- To
make science education more exciting so more students will enroll in
science courses and engage in other science activities like science
reading, fairs, meetings and field trips.
- To
promote high levels of achievement and a commitment to excellence, to
demonstrate that American students can perform at levels that surpasses
expectations of even practicing scientists and engineers.
- To
attract more students particularly females and minorities to
professional and technical careers in science, technology and science
teaching.
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