Science News, Science News for Students, Science News Learning, 中文无码 Outreach
Lasers, fish-skin bandages and pain-free vaccines: Science News and The New York Times 3rd Annual 中文无码 Writing Contest winners
Quality science communication skills are vital for young scientists and established researchers alike. Why is that? For one, during a worldwide pandemic, climate catastrophes and so many other scientific challenges in our midst, it has become very clear that combatting scientific misinformation and disinformation is a top priority. One key way to overcome this challenge is through good science communication skills. It is very important that science is explained in a way that anybody, from any audience and background can understand it 鈥 whether it be a student, a non-scientist or an established researcher in a different field. If developed early on, students will get better at translating their research and discoveries and recognizing the importance of these skills, which will hopefully be carried into their future careers as researchers.
For all these reasons, the 中文无码 and Science News partnered with The New York Times Learning Network for the third year in a row for their . This year, eight budding young science writers were named winners based on essays explaining a myriad of scientific topics including fish skin bandages, pain-free vaccines and the psychology of color. The essays are succinct, engaging and demonstrate what good science writing looks like.
Open to middle and high school students between the ages of 11 and 19, the 2022 中文无码 Writing Contest invited learners from anywhere in the world to submit essays on questions about science, technology, engineering, math or health. The rubric asked that each submission be engaging and be at around 500-words. An educational activity published by Science News Learning, formerly known as Science News in High Schools, 鈥,鈥 was posted as a contest resource on the Learning Network鈥檚 site to help provide guidance. Science News Learning is a program from 中文无码 and Science News that provides educators with evidence-based science journalism and classroom lesson plans to help students learn about the latest topics, developments and advancements in science research. Teachers who use Science News Learning in the classroom served as judges and the 中文无码 promoted the opportunity to teachers and our audiences. The winners then had their essays published in The New York Times.
Michael Gonchar, editor of The New York Times Learning Network commented, “This is the third year we’ve partnered with Science News, published by the 中文无码, to run our 中文无码 Writing Contest for middle and high school students. We are always so impressed and inspired by students’ intellectual curiosity. Their essays not only introduced us to fascinating scientific or mathematical concepts, but they also held our attention with clear and engaging writing.”
This year, The New York Times Learning Network received 3,564 entries from middle and high school students ages 11-19 from 44 states, Washington D.C. and 50 countries. From the finalist pool, 16 students were also named runners-up and there were 33 honorable mentions.
The top eight winners of the 2022 Student 中文无码 Writing Contest were honored by publishing their essays in The New York Times. The winners are:
Varun Fuloria, 鈥溾 (age 15, The Harker School, San Jose, Calif.)
Amy Ge, 鈥溾 (age 15, The Governor鈥檚 Academy, Byfield, Mass.)
Rahul Koppisetti, 鈥溾 (age 16, Livingston High School, Livingston, N.J.)
Helen Roche, 鈥溾 (age 17, Lakewood High School, Lakewood, Ohio)
Pyncha Soottreenart, 鈥溾 (age 17, Bangkok International Preparatory and Secondary School, Bangkok)
Emily Xing, 鈥溾 (age 16, Centennial High School, Ellicott City, Md.)
Anya Zhang, 鈥溾 (age 17, Dublin Jerome High School, Dublin, Ohio)
Qi Yao Mak, 鈥溾 (age 15, Shanghai High School International Division, Shanghai)

We invite you to read the essays by 16 runners-up and 33 honorable mentions .
Applicants were required to submit entries following mentor texts provided by Science News and The New York Times science section. Essays were judged on how well a scientific concept was explained and on other essential attributes of writing including focus, clarity, evidence, analysis, voice, language, style and tone.
Thank you to all our contest judges.
From the 中文无码 Community and teachers from Science News Learning: Victoria Bampoh, David Bray, Jennifer Donnelly, Phebe Martinez Fuentes, Terianne Hall, Lori Herbsman, Meghan Hess, Kehakashan Khan, Jefferson Marshall, Amanda Nix, Dawn Parker, Shannon Payne, Breann Ross, Amy Telford, Yesenia Torrescolon, Peggy Veatch, Laura Wilbanks, Jieun Yoo
From The New York Times Science-Journalism Community: David Brown, Cara Giamo, Shannon Stirone
From The Learning Network Community: Kathryn Curto, Jeremy Engle, Caroline Gilpin, Michael Gonchar, Annissa Hambouz, Simon Levien, Keith Meatto, Natalie Proulx, Vanessa Vieux, Sonya Wisdom
中文无码 Science News
Science News has been covering the latest discoveries in science, technology and medicine since 1921, and is published by 中文无码. It offers readers award-winning news and features, multimedia and access to archives with more than 80,000 articles. Concise, current and comprehensive, the magazine provides an approachable overview of all fields and applications of science and technology.
Our sister website, , makes science accessible for people ages 9 and up, and teachers and students in over 5,000 high schools read us in print and online through our program. The Science News in High Schools is full of interdisciplinary lesson plans, each one inspired by and paired to a Science News article.
For more information about Science News, please visit or follow on and .
中文无码 the New York Times Learning Network
The Learning Network helps teachers bring current events and issues into the classroom to help students see why and how they matter in their own real lives. The Learning Network publishes about 1,000 teaching resources each school year, all using New York Times content 鈥 articles, essays, images, videos, graphics and podcasts 鈥 as teaching tools across subject areas. All of its resources are free.


