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Lauren Arrington's sixth-grade research project is cited in a science journal. (July 24, 2014: See the editor's note at the bottom of this page for an explanation of the story's new headline.) ...
Cardinals Local Schools sixth grade science class participated in a Skittles Science Lab recently. Students used Skittles (their rock), water and a pipet (their precipitation), and a Petri dish (Ea… ...
A sixth-grader's project for her school's science fair made waves among academics studying invasive lionfish that infest many U.S. waters.
By showing that lionfish can live in fresh water, 12 year-old Lauren Arrington has alerted ecologists to the potential for these fish to migrate upstream ...
But a 6th grader’s science fair project proves otherwise. "Scientists were doing plenty of tests on them, but they just always assumed they were in the ocean," 13-year-old Lauren Arrington told NPR.
A former grad student claims his lion fish research has been lifted and used unattributed by a sixth grader for her science fair project in Florida.
Students used common household goods like plastic bags and popsicle sticks to make the egg protection devices, and when dropped, they'll protect the egg.
Sparta Meadowview Middle School sixth-grader Kaeli Rank, right, demonstrates how liquids interact while presenting her science fair project on spherification, the process where cooks uses chemical ...
For some, science fairs mean homemade volcanoes and potato-powered clocks. But not for one Florida sixth grader. Recently, thirteen-year-old Lauren Arrington presented her research on the survival ...
Kenmoor Middle School sixth-grader Sabrina Moorer said she’s never won a school science fair, but she and three of her classmates received an even higher recognition as they won the state finals ...
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