Nanochemistry Academy participants 2007
Academy student and CBEN graduate student sampling local water.
Offered in July for rising 10th and 11th grade high school students, this two-week all day program focuses on Green Chemistry and Environmental Science. Taught by Dr. Mary McHale, a Rice University chemistry lecturer and water quality expert, students go on field trips to sample water from various local sources and use laboratory techniques to analyze for impurities. CBEN research into the role of nanotechnology in water purification has been integrated into the academy through an experiment using nano-TiO2 and sunlight to break down pollutants in water. Students are selected based on a competitive application process. Promising graduates of the Academy will be invited back in subsequent summers to work in the research labs as assistants or on their own science fair projects under the mentorship of a center researcher. Click here to download the 2009 Application.
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Career and Knowledge Institute student learns about electricity.
Nanochemistry Academy students make liquid nitrogen ice cream.
This partnership is a unique opportunity to provide science enrichment to students who have demonstrated academic talent and achievement, but who might not otherwise make it to college or take interest in and prepare themselves for careers in science and nanotechnology. As a federally recognized organization, Project GRAD is actively engaged in mentoring economically disadvantaged students in a dozen U.S. cities and has provided more than $12 million in scholarships to more than 3000 inner-city students to attend college. Project GRAD has a 10-yr track record that demonstrates that they not only improve high school graduation rates, but also double college graduation rates for this population of students.