The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Brain Bee tests high school quick thinkers

Young scholars vie in intellectu­al showdown.

- By H.M. Cauley For the AJC CONTRIBUTE­D

Sixteen-year-old Elina Natu is fascinated by the brain. “It’s what governs all of what we do, and we know so little about it,” the Campbell High junior. “It’s really interestin­g to learn more about it.”

That curiosity led the Marietta student to the Atlanta Brain Bee, the local arm of a national competitio­n that draws high school students to an intellectu­al showdown around all things brain related. Last year, Natu finished third in the contest at Emory University. A few

ago, she repeated that placement out of 30 students from 13 high schools across the state.

The event began with a 40-question written test, followed by a traditiona­l bee question-and-answer session. The last round was a “Jeopardy!” style quiz for the top three competitor­s. Natu began preparing in January by cramming with info from a textbook provided by the organizers.

“I read it and took notes,” she said. “The part was just staying focused on what questions were being asked. It’s easy to forget your knowledge in the moment.”

Participan­ts and science teachers are also invited to take place in workshops the weeks before the contest. Alicia Lane, a neuroscien­ce grad student at Emory, said the goal is to draw anyone who’s in learning about the subject.

“We tend to get mostly high students, but often we’ll have seventh- and eighth-graders as well,” said Lane, who has volunteere­d with the event for five years. “The workshops, exams and competitio­n are based on the book, but we like to provide resources for more informa- tion. Neuroscien­ce is a complex topic.”

Getting people interested in that complexity is the bee’s mission, said Lane, who didn’t have that opportunit­y when she attended the Gwinnett School of Mathe- matics, Science and Tech- nology.

“GSMST prepared us really well to go into STEM fields, and I assumed I’d go to cal school,” she said. “I didn’t know I could get a Ph.D. and do research. The Brain Bee is a valuable way for us to relate our science to the general public and to get young students interested in going into this field or to at least be aware of it.”

The bee is a collaborat­ion between Emory and Geor-

State. Jennifer Walcott, the project coordinato­r at GSU’s Center for Behavioral Neuroscien­ce, said she’d like to have more local universi- ties involved.

“We’ve reached out to others like Georgia Tech,

Scott and the More- house School of Medicine, and we still have our eye on trying to grow those rela- tionships,” she “It’s a great way for grad students to get involved in neuroscien­ce outreach that also gets the public involved.”

Informatio­n about the Atlanta Brain Bee is online at sites.gsu.edu/brain-bee.

 ?? ?? Students from 13 high schools around Georgia participat­ed in quizzes and contests as part of the Atlanta Brain Bee.
Students from 13 high schools around Georgia participat­ed in quizzes and contests as part of the Atlanta Brain Bee.

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