Los Angeles Times

University High wins at JPL’s Science Bowl

Twenty-four teams face off at the regional ‘Jeopardy’-style competitio­n.

- By Paloma Esquivel paloma.esquivel @latimes.com

In the end, it came down to a rematch: Arcadia and University high schools, two teams made up of the brightest young science minds in Southern California who one year ago faced off just like this, armed with nothing more than a small pad of paper and a pencil against a 16minute rat-a-tat-tat of questions like this:

“According to VSEPR bonding theory, if two of the bonded atoms in an octahedral molecule are replaced by two electron pairs, the molecule will assume what geometric shape, such as in XeF4?”

(Answer: Square Planar)

Twenty-four teams of five students each competed Saturday in the 22nd annual JPL Regional Science Bowl, a “Jeopardy”-style competitio­n. The match was organized by and held at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory — so even volunteers keeping score and reading questions had PhDs.

But the focus was on the young men and women from schools in Orange, Riverside, San Bernardino, Santa Barbara and Ventura counties as well as L.A. County (though not L.A. Unified School District, which has its own competitio­n). Winners will compete at the National Science Bowl in Washington, D.C., in April.

Whereas Arcadia and University High, in Irvine, are local powerhouse­s whose teams have won the regional competitio­n multiple times, others like Xavier College Preparator­y High School in Palm Desert were relative newcomers.

Its members wore white lab coats and seemed to be having fun after spending the morning answering questions about chemistry, earth science, biology, energy, physics and math.

“There’s some teams who will dominate,” said senior Carl Maggio. “For us, it’s more about the experience.”

The team’s five members have known one another for years, three of them since kindergart­en, they said. And although they took the event seriously, practicing two to three hours per week, they knew their effort wasn’t quite comparable to that of some of the more experience­d teams.

“For a lot of teams this is like a sports event. They practice every day,” Carl said.

The team from Huntington Beach High School skipped the lab coats and the school T-shirts worn by other teams and came in suits.

Theirs is a young team — made up mostly of sophomores, all of whom were in awe of team member Marlon Trifunovic, 15, who answered the question “What is the fraction for the repeating decimal .13131313…” before the answers had even been read. (Answer: 13/99)

“He did it in his head, he didn’t even write it down,” said Coach Ken Ostrowski.

Then there was Arcadia High School, whose team has won the regional title multiple times.

Team members gave up Friday evenings and Sundays to prepare for this, they said. They practiced not just the science but also skills like using buzzers, improving reaction times.

Each team member was assigned a specializa­tion: for senior Bryan Clement Tiu it was math, for captain Jerry Li, chemistry and physics, for junior Kevin Wang, earth science and physics.

By the afternoon they were undefeated, and during later rounds, they were dominant, beating one team 102 to 22.

Each round lasted 16 minutes, with a two-minute break.

Jerry’s parents, James and Joceline Li, sat on the sidelines, watching the competitio­n.

“My heart is beating, boom boom boom,” said Joceline Li, who held her breath and clutched her husband when the score was close, though both Lis acknowledg­ed being a bit lost by the level of competitio­n.

“I can understand the questions,” said James Li. “But the answers? Forget it.”

In the final round, Arcadia started off strong, racking up 32 points before University could even get on the board. But just as a year ago, the day belonged to University, whose team won, 114-68.

“They were really excited to come back because they won last year,” said University Coach David Knight. “They knew other teams were going to be kind of gunning for them.”

After the loss, team Arcadia gathered together and spent the next few minutes going over the questions they got wrong.

“I’m very proud of them,” said Coach Cherryl Mynster. “They knew their stuff but the other team just outperform­ed them a little bit…. We’ll be back next year.”

 ?? Katie Falkenberg
Los Angeles Times ?? PALOS VERDES HIGH’S Kevin Jiao, right, shares a group hug with Jessica Chen, Zoe Caron and Royce Chen after their team won a match during the event.
Katie Falkenberg Los Angeles Times PALOS VERDES HIGH’S Kevin Jiao, right, shares a group hug with Jessica Chen, Zoe Caron and Royce Chen after their team won a match during the event.

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