Concorso Internazionale ThinkQuest®
Anno 1999-2000
Un concorso in Internet per studenti dai 12 ai 19 anni
NEWS ThinkQuest Newsletter
CONTENTS IN THIS ISSUE: 1. A N N O U N C E M E N T S - ThinkQuest Junior Entries Coming! - Four ThinkQuest Participants Chosen for APEC Youth Science Festival - Partners meeting March 23-26, 2000 in White Plains , NY 2. T H I N K Q U E S T I N T H E N E W S - ThinkQuest CD ROM Used in Instruction with Librarians - ThinkQuest and Upcoming Conferences: Look for Us! 3. T H I N K Q U E S T T E A M A C T I O N - "Twisters" Site Spun in Many Directions - "Endangered New Jersey" Team Expands Awareness - "Travel to Oriland" - Travels Beyond Russia 4. E L E C T R O N I C S C H O L A R'S N O T E B O O K You Have the IDEA ---How Do You Find Out More? Teams Tell TQ 1. A N N O U N C E M E N T S - ThinkQuest Junior Entries Coming! The Entry deadline for ThinkQuest Junior 2000 is March 31st. The online ThinkQuest Junior Awards Event is scheduled for Thursday May 18th. Good luck to all the ThinkQuest Junior participants! - American Association for the Advancement of Science(AAAS) Selects ThinkQuest Students for Youth Science Festival in Singapore Four ThinkQuest candidates were chosen by AAAS to be part of the twenty students attending the 2nd APEC Youth Science Festival in Singapore this summer. Students who had participated in ThinkQuest who will be attending include Helen Chang, Joshua Chong, David Mericle, and Andrew Miller. Congratulations to all of you! The official web site for the event is < http://www.2aysf.edu.sg/ > -ThinkQuest Partners Meeting March 23-26, in White Plains , NY The Partners Meeting, chaired by Dr, Grant Beglarian, Director, ThinkQuest Partnerships. This annual meeting brings together ThinkQuest partners from around the world to discuss ways to strenghten ThinkQuest programs. This year sixty participants from 42 organizations will be attending.Look for a feature article on this event in the April 2000 Newsletter. 2. T H I N K Q U E S T I N T H E N E W S - TQ Used in Instruction with Public and School Librarians Pam Berger, the ICONnect Task Chair, American Association of SchoolLibrarians (AASL) < http://www.ala.org/aasl/ >, is the instructor for an innovative program for librarians on collaborative web building. She notes that a librarian will be able to develop a site for their building. "The building may be a school, a home, or a public library". A part of the course was the exploration of the ThinkQuest 2000 CD ROM. The program is a Title III Project, Long Island Educational Enterprise Zone, funded by a New York State Technology Challenge Grant. Librarian-students spoke with the ThinkQuest Cybrarian at the New York State Library Association Convention, saying "Pam helped us know ThinkQuest!". One of her publications,Information Searcher, has past issues that can be read at < http://www.infosearcher.com >. - ThinkQuest at Upcoming Conferences: Look for Us! Mark your calendars to visit the ThinkQuest booth if you are attending the National Science Teachers' Association, April 6 - 9 at the Orange County Convention Center, Orlando Florida. ThinkQuest will be at Booth #672. There will be a ThinkQuest presentation by Nancy Velez, Saturday. April 8, 5:00 P.M. . Check the Conference program for the location. 3. T H I N K Q U E S T T E A M A C T I O N - "Twisters" Site Spun in Many Directions http://tqjunior.thinkquest.org/4232 "Twisters" is a 1998 ThinkQuest Junior entry which didn't win, or even make it to the finals. But this site generated more than 155,000 hits, presently averaging 227 hits daily. Niki Mariskanish and Justin Latta are praised by their peers for the resource which helps their peers in reports and tests. "Twisters" created a place for people to share their fears and incredible tornado experiences. Nelson Publishing Company < http://www.nelson.co.uk > is purchasing the rights to publish one of the interviews for an elementary level text book. -- Thanks to Sarah Mariskanish, Team Coach- "Endangered New Jersey" Team Expands Awareness http://tqjunior.advanced.org/5736/index.htm (Gold Award winner in the 1999 competition) This ThinkQuest Junior site on endangered species in New Jersey, frequently receives technical questions. One biologist contacted the team about a species correction and was amazed to discover that the site was created by three students in sixth grade . "I thought it was the state's official site! I'm very impressed!" he replied. New Jersey put a link to the site on the state's site. "Endangered New Jersey" was featured on New Jersey Search and is included in their search engine database as a "N.J. Proud" site. The site is currently featured in the magazine New Jersey Outdoors' (Winter 2000 ). -- Thanks to Ken Ronkowitz, Team Coach - "Travel to Oriland" - Travels Beyond Russia http://library.thinkquest.org/27152 This team was invited to the French Origami Convention in Paris in the beginning of June as the guests of honor. "Paper Europe" (December 1999) from England featured an article about Oriland, called "Origami Originality". The article focused on the coaches' psychological research and benefits of origami, as well as photos of "Travel to Oriland" and the award in the ThinkQuest Competition. Thanks to Yurii and Katrin, Coaches 4. E L E C T R O N I C S C H O L A R' S N O T E B O O K (C) Copyright 2000 Patricia Libutti, Ph.D., ThinkQuest Cybrarian You Have the IDEA ---How Do You Find Out More? Teams Tell TQ This month, The Electronic Scholar's Notebook article features ways teams focused on content research for the sites. Often, the research paths influenced the design. Read the variety of ways that ThinkQuest Internet Challenge winners discussed their research styles. All teams were asked: "How did you do your research for the site? What kinds of information sources seemed most important?" Laughing Out Loud to Good Health < http://library.thinkquest.org/25500/ >replied: "I was responsible for the whole stress section, bits of the emotions section and also I did quite a bit of the laughter section. For stress and emotions, I used mainly books from my coach (she's a health psychologist), mom (studied psychology) and from various libraries (including that of the University of Cape Town). Because laughter is a very new healing method, most of the information for that is on the Internet. For me, the most useful and important research sources were the people that I interviewed and consulted. They varied from a stress management professional, to a micro-biologist, to a professional stand-up comedian and to university lecturers (and of course my family and coach!) Their opinions and expertise in their fields gave me a much better understanding of what I was researching (and they also pointed out inaccuracies of my writing and gave me more books/sources to look for more information)." Diving: Human Contact With the Underwater World < http://library.thinkquest.org/28170/ > wrote: "The coaches used their contacts with professional divers and provided the team with text material and pictures. The students, on their part, searched in libraries and surfed the net for additional information.The photos, taken both from the personal archives of Bulgarian divers and those found on the net, seemed essential because of the diversity of the underwater world which contributed to the colorful design of the site. The books, given by divers, turned out to be the most important source of information for they were complete and had in details everything about diving. The team had to sort out that information, understand it, carefully to translate it and make it comprehensible for the general reader." ES2000 [Endangered Species 2000] < http://library.thinkquest.org/25014/ > had one researcher: "Helen Cheng was the primary content researcher, she used online as well as traditional resources. She also lives in San Diego,home of the San Diego Zoo and CRES (Center for Reproduction of Endangered Species) where she was able to visit and ask questions, as well as take photos and video for the site." Globenext < http://library.thinkquest.org/50033/ > noted similar sites: "We searched the web for similar or related sites. This took awhile because there was quite a bit to wade through. We, also, looked into different texts on Julius Caesar and Shakespeare. I think the interviews with the directors and actors are also part of our research. I think it was all important. The other web sites helped us see what contribution we could make to the topic. We did not want to be redundant. The reading offered us additional information." Radical Times < http://library.thinkquest.org/27942/indexf.htm > found personal witness crucial: "We obtained research materials from the library, the Internet, online bookstores, and from people. I think the personal experiences we heard from the real people of the antiwar movement were the most most revealing about the Antiwar Movement. The Antiwar Movement is not readily covered in the textbooks, and one can really learn about the movement from the voices of the witnesses themselves." Sleep from A to Zzz < http://library.thinkquest.org/25553/ >went to the experts: " I went to Arizona during spring break which gave me the opportunity to speak with Dr. Bootzin at the University of Arizona, who has done a lot of sleep research. I also attended one of his lectures about insomnia. I also interviewed Dr. Kiley, the Director of the National Center for Sleep Disorders Research, which is part of the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Association, and attended a workshop put out by them and one of their meetings. I went to a sleep lab to interview the technicians at John Hopkins' Bayview Medical Center. Other research was done by reading various books. A few sites online provided information as well. The most important part about my research was definitely my primary research: attending meetings, visiting labs, and making interviews. It gave a first hand account of the information and made it more real." These pathways show all of us that creativity is part of every part of web work, not only the design segment. The many and often ingenious pathways to interessting and important information show we can learn from many sources. The teams then faced the major challenge of arranging their information and conveying their research in comprehensible, readable (and interactive) styles. Next month: What did teams experience during that section of their work? This issue of The ThinkQuest E-Newsletter was written and edited by Patricia Libutti, assisted by Andrea Papa.Technical assistance was provided by Paris Treantafeles. ThinkQuest is a program of Advanced Network & Services, a non-profit corporation whose mission is to advance education by accelerating the use of computer network applications and technology. (C) Copyright 2000 Advanced Network & Services, Inc. All rights reserved. |
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